2010 Game Recaps

Dice-K Nearly No-Hits Phillies

Daisuke Matsuzaka was four outs away from tossing a no-hitter against the Phillies.  Juan Castro broke up the no-hit bid with a bloop single over the head of Marco Scutaro.  For the Phillies, it was appropriate that the only hit came on a blooper since the Phillies hit the the ball hard most of the night.

Dice-K didn’t exactly dominate.  He had a high pitch count, walked four, and struck out five.  Yes — the Phillies weren’t able to collect hits off him, but they did scorch the ball.  The Red Sox made several incredible defensive plays.  Dustin Pedroia made a leaping catch to rob Chase Utley.  Jayson Werth lined a shot right back at Matsuzaka, who made an insane catch.  Adrian Beltre dove to take a hit away from Carlos Ruiz, and turned it into a double play.  Overall, the Phillies were hitting the ball hard, just right at fielders.

While Dice-K was literally unhittable, Kyle Kendrick was the complete opposite.  He surrendered five runs, all earned.  Kendrick cruised through the first couple of innings, but hit a rock in the fifth.  The Red Sox already led 1-0 at the time, thanks to a sacrifice fly in which Raul Ibanez failed to nail David Ortiz at the plate.  Kendrick was one out away from keeping it a one-run game, however J.D Drew, Ortiz, and Beltre each knocked in runs.

The Red Sox took a 5-0 lead, and did not look back.  Matsuzaka got a lot of luck on Saturday, and perhaps things will come easier tomorrow for the Phillies with Roy Halladay on the mound.

Phillies Nation has been bringing Phillies fans together since 2004 with non-stop news, analysis, trade rumors, trips, t-shirts, and other fun stuff!

Browse the Archives

Browse by Category

Copyright Phillies Nation, LLC 2004-2024
Not Affiliated with Major League Baseball or the Philadelphia Phillies

To Top