PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Shane Victorino
isn’t known for his plate discipline. Even
he couldn’t swing when Sean Green
lost his control.
Victorino’s bases-loaded walk off Green with two outs in the 10th inning lifted the Philadelphia Phillies to a 6-5 victory over the New York Mets on Saturday.
Green (0-2) retired the first batter he faced before Pedro Feliz
reached on
an infield single, bringing up three straight pinch-hitters. Green hit Matt
Stairs
with a pitch, but retired Greg Dobbs
on a fly ball.
After Chris Coste
walked to load the bases, Victorino walked on a 3-2 pitch
to give the Phillies a split in the first two games of the series against their
rival.
“I was taking a strike because I haven’t seen him,” Victorino said. “Once he got one, I wanted to get a hit. You tell yourself to be patient. He has as much pressure as you. I saw the ball down and he called it a ball.”
Daniel Murphy
and Ramon Castro
hit consecutive homers for the Mets off Jamie
Moyer
in the sixth. Raul Ibanez
connected off Pedro Feliciano
to tie it in the
bottom half.
Jack Taschner
(1-0) pitched out of trouble in the 10th, retiring Carlos
Beltran
on an inning-ending double-play grounder with runners at first and
third. Third baseman Feliz started a nice turn with a quick toss to second
baseman Eric Bruntlett
.
“He could’ve thrown home, but we wanted a double play,” Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said.
After the Mets scored three runs to take a 5-4 lead in the sixth, Ibanez hit a shot off the “Drive ‘em Outta Here” automobile dealership billboard that hangs off the facing of the second deck in right field. The “Ra-uuuuul” chants for the new fan favorite drowned out all the boos from the Mets fans among the sellout crowd of 45,069 at Citizens Bank Park.
Phillies right fielder Jayson Werth
threw out pinch-runner Omir Santos
at
the plate with a perfect one-hop strike to end the eighth after Beltran ripped a
single off Ryan Madson
.
Moyer took a 4-2 lead into the sixth and retired the first two batters. But the Mets tied it when Murphy and Castro connected back-to-back.
After pinch-hitter Alex Cora
tripled, Scott Eyre
replaced Moyer. Jose Reyes
walked and Luis Castillo
hit an RBI single to give New York its first lead, 5-4.
Moyer gave up five runs and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings. The 46-year-old Moyer needs one victory to become the oldest player to record 250 wins.
Mets starter Oliver Perez
allowed four runs and five hits, walking six in 2
1-3 innings. Perez, who has a 9.97 ERA, could be in danger of losing his job in
the rotation, despite signing a $36 million, three-year contract in the
offseason.
“I feel embarrassed,” Perez said.
Perez won 25 games for the Mets over the last two seasons, but the lefty has been awful this season. Manager Jerry Manuel wanted to give him a chance to face the Phillies before making a decision on removing him from the rotation. Perez was 1-0 with an 0.35 ERA against Philadelphia in four starts and 26 innings last year.
“I really have to think about it,” Manuel said. “His confidence is shot.”
Notes
: Phillies ace Cole Hamels
tested his injured left ankle in the bullpen.
General manager Ruben Amaro Jr. said the results were encouraging, but indicated
that Hamels could miss his next start at St. Louis on Tuesday. … Manuel was
fined an undisclosed amount for failing to comply with pace-of-game regulations
during the Mets’ game against Florida on Wednesday. Manuel said he was trying to
stall the action when he called on Santos from the bullpen to bat for Castro
with two outs and the bases loaded in the ninth. Santos popped out. … Mets 1B
Carlos Delgado
(hip) wasn’t in the lineup for the fifth straight game, but
walked as a pinch-hitter. … Phillies closer Brad Lidge
pitched a scoreless
ninth in his first appearance since last Saturday. He was bothered by
inflammation in his right knee. … Phillies 2B Chase Utley
(leg) didn’t start,
but flied out as a pinch-hitter.

Amazin' Avenue
The Good Phight