SAN DIEGO — Cole Hamels
knew if he was patient, the wins would come. He
never figured it would take this long.
Hamels pitched eight sharp innings to snap a
seven-start winless drought, Pat Burrell hit a go-ahead
homer and the Phillies beat the San Diego Padres, 2-1,
on Sunday night.
Hamels (10-8) limited the Padres to one run on seven
hits as he won for the first time since a 4-1 victory
at Atlanta on July 3 and helped the Phillies stay two
games back of the Mets in the NL East. The Mets were
4-0 winners at Pittsburgh.
“Every one of us on the starting staff tries to
put up good innings and quality starts and hope for the
best,” Hamels said. “We have been able to
do that but, unfortunately, it hasn't gone my way.
That's baseball.”
Hamels stayed in control of San Diego by throwing
strikes and getting ahead in the count. The left-hander
didn't worry about Philadelphia's recent offensive
struggles.
“I think when you really try to be extra fine,
you get yourself in trouble,” he said.
“That's when you put too much pressure on
yourself. That's something that I learned over the past
month.”
Although the Phillies scored three runs or less for
Hamels for the sixth time in his last eight starts,
Burrell came through again with a big home run. Burrell
hit his 29th homer of the season, a solo shot with an
out in the sixth that proved to be the difference. He
also homered on Friday night in the Phillies' 1-0 win
over San Diego.
“This team will hit because we've all done it
before,” Burrell said. “But until we pick
it up, we'll have to make sure we are at least getting
the clutch hits.”
Philadelphia has hit just .197 with seven homers and 32
runs scored in its last 11 games.
“It's nice to win two of three especially when
you score six runs,” Phillies manager Charlie
Manuel said. “We battled, it was a
standoff.”
Hamels was 0-3 with a 3.61 ERA during his career-high
winless skid despite solid outings. Hamels has allowed
two or less runs in seven of his last nine starts and
10 of 14.
“He was due to win one because he's pitched some
real good ballgames,” Manuel said. “This
guy has had some tough luck in getting some decisions,
getting some wins. He's pitched much better than his
record.”
Brad Lidge struck out the side in the ninth — and
gave up a walk — to pick up his 30th save in 30
chances. Lidge has 33 consecutive saves dating to last
season.
San Diego lost its ninth consecutive home series since
winning two of three against the Los Angeles Dodgers,
June 10-12. Since then, the Padres have dropped 20 of
27 at home.
Jimmy Rollins got the Phillies going in the first
inning with a single off Cha Seung Baek (4-7). He stole
second and continued to third on catcher Luke Carlin's
throwing error. Jason Werth followed with a sacrifice
fly.
Burrell then homered off Baek to give Philadelphia a
2-0 lead in the sixth. The RBI tied him with Greg
Luzinski (811) for eighth place on the Phillies'
all-time list.
“It was supposed to be a slider away but it was
up,” Baek said. “It should have been
down.”
The Padres strung together consecutive one-out singles
by Kevin Kouzmanoff, Adrian Gonzalez and Chase Headley
to cut the lead to 2-1 in the sixth.
“(Hamels) was throwing three pitches for
strikes,” Headley said. “I looked up one
time and he was throwing three strikes for every one
ball.”
Hamels threw 97 pitches, 73 for strikes.
Baek allowed two runs, one earned, on four hits over
six innings. He dropped to 0-7 at home with a 5.86 ERA
in eight starts.
(phillyburbs.com)