SAD NEWS: Phillies Best Player Jimmy Rollins Got Seriously Injured After…

The game was played in front of a crowd of 15,119, the majority appearing to cheer for Philadelphia in Miami’s first home game since trading two-time batting champion Luis Arraez to the Padres on May 4. Before the game, a handful of longtime Marlins fans gathered outside loanDepot Park to protest the state of the franchise.

Suárez (7-0), whose 1.50 ERA is the second-lowest in MLB, allowed just three hits while striking out nine and walking two.

“I just try to focus as I always do,” Suárez said. “It doesn’t matter if it’s a good team or bad team. We’re in the big leagues. All teams are dangerous.”

Suárez has allowed just nine runs through 54 innings this season, including a career-high 32-inning scoreless streak in April that tied for the fifth-longest in franchise history. He’s the first MLB pitcher to reach seven wins this season.
I think this is the best run he’s been on, no doubt about it,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said. “He’s really been focused and locked in. Very consistent.”

Gregory Soto replaced Suárez in the eighth and allowed a two-run double to Josh Bell that ended the shutout bid.

Rojas and J.T. Realmuto each had three of Philadelphia’s 15 hits. Bryce Harper had two hits, including an RBI double. Kyle Schwarber and Cristian Pache had two apiece.

Castellanos opened the scoring in the second when he hammered starter Trevor Roger’s first-pitch changeup 400 feet to right-center for his third home run of the season. Rojas hit an RBI single off Rogers later in the inning, then homered off reliever Eli Villalobos in the seventh to put Philadelphia up 7-0.
The Phillies built a five-run lead in the fourth against Rogers (0-6). Pache doubled to drive in leadoff hitter Whit Merrifield, who reached on a fielding error by third baseman Jake Burger, and Schwarber drove in two with a grounder to right. Rogers was lifted after intentionally walking Harper a couple batters later, a move that was met with a host of boos.

The Marlins 26-year-old left-hander gave up nine hits, five runs — four earned — walked two and struck out three.

A frustrated Rogers could be seen slamming his glove on the ground, throwing his cap and swatting at some cups in the dugout following the outing.
We’re a good group of guys in there,” Rogers said. “We’re all just (upset) at how things have gone. When we hit, we can’t pitch. When we pitch, we can’t hit. Me going out there and laying an egg doesn’t help any. What (upsets) me the most is I can’t give my team a chance.”

Bryan De La Cruz doubled off Suárez in the first, and Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Christian Bethancourt added Miami’s other hits against Suárez. Chisholm moved to 300 career hits with his double in the seventh.

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