Lucas Giolito gives up three home runs in Phillies’ comeback win over Angels
PHILADELPHIA — Trea Turner keeps hitting homers — all the Phillies have of late, really — with his seven this month for a team that has socked 52 in August.
Turner wants the NL champions to keep going deep, all the way back to the World Series.
“These guys made a great run last year,” he said. “I’ve played my fair share. That’s the goal. That’s when it’s really fun. You’ve got to play well for 162 to get there.”
Turner homered twice, Bryce Harper hit a two-run shot and streaking Philadelphia beat Shohei Ohtani and the Angels 6-4 on Monday night.
Griffin Canning gives the Angels seven strong innings, but Shohei Ohtani and the offense can’t provide much support in a 3-2 loss to the New York Mets.
Turner, who won a World Series with Washington in 2019, hit a tying solo homer in the second and the go-ahead shot in the fifth that made it 5-3 and sent the NL wild-card leaders to their fourth straight win.
Angels starter Lucas Giolito (7-11) allowed all three homers and five runs over 5⅔ innings. Taijuan Walker (14-5) struck out six and gave up three runs in his 5⅔ innings.
After four months of fits and starts from the Phillies’ high-priced sluggers, the bats went wild in August. Harper lined his sixth homer in the last 11 games into the right-field seats.
“When they’re good hitters, they’re going to hit good pitches sometimes,” Angels manager Phil Nevin said.
Kyle Schwarber has nine homers this month while Harper and Nick Castellanos have eight apiece.
Harper was intentionally walked with two outs and nobody on in the seventh with the Angels trailing 5-4. Ohtani drew an intentional walk with two runners on in the fourth and the Angels ahead 3-1.
Ohtani ripped a single up the middle in the first inning and went one for four with a strikeout. Harper went one for three in the anticipated matchup between two former MVPs.
Turner, though, stole the show. He made a run-saving play at shortstop in the first and has a hit in 17 straight home games. Turner is hitting over. 300 in August while establishing himself — finally — as the kind of player worthy of his $300 million contract.
“It just makes the lineup very dangerous when he’s doing what he’s doing right now,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said.
Ohtani was cheered during introductions by most of the 38,142 fans at Citizens Bank Park. He had one more fan at first base — Harper, who was effusive in his praise for the two-way star.
“He gives everybody at a young age the opportunity to strive to be like that,” Harper said. “Hopefully one day we’ll have multiple players in the league doing what he’s doing, because it is very special. He’s one of the guys that can do it because he does have the body that he does and the mindset that he does.”
Shohei Ohtani has another standout game, but Angels starting pitcher Chase Silseth leaves early after taking a throw to the head in a 5-3 win over Mets.
Ohtani, though, is sidelined from pitching the rest of the season because of a torn ligament in his right elbow. The Angels, their playoff chances all but gone, have lost six of eight.
Craig Kimbrel worked the ninth for his 21st save.
Mickey Moniak returns
Angels CF Mickey Moniak went three for four with an RBI in his first game against the Phillies since he was traded last August to the Angels. Moniak was selected by Philadelphia with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2016 amateur draft but never quite panned out as a starting outfielder.
“He went through some rough patches here,” Thomson said. “We knew that he was a good player. It wasn’t like we didn’t think he was going to be the player he is. And he’s going to get better.”
Up next: The Angels send LHP Tyler Anderson (5-5, 5.35 ERA) to the mound against Phillies RHP Michael Lorenzen (7-8, 3.69).
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