Walker Buehler slipped on red pinstripes for the first time and looked as if he’d been here forever. Five innings, one run, one walk, three strikeouts. No panic, no drama, no sweat. Just the kind of steady debut that reminded everyone why the Phillies scooped him up the second Boston cut him loose.
And then there was Bryce Harper. Because of course there was Bryce Harper. One inning after Rafael Marchán’s sacrifice fly tied the game, Harper got a 1-0 sinker he could tattoo and sent it soaring into the left-center seats. Two-run homer. No. 26 on the year. And another reminder that when the Phillies need ignition, the face of the franchise is still their lightning rod.
But this night was more than Harper. It was six different hitters collecting multiple hits, an offense turning every at-bat into another body blow. Harrison Bader? He’s become a machine — five straight multi-hit games now, batting .342 with a .945 OPS since arriving. Bryson Stott? He capped the night with a two-run homer in the seventh, his 17th of the season. Otto Kemp? Back in the big leagues this week and already driving in runs, adding an RBI single in the third.
And the doubles parade? That’s what broke Kansas City’s will. Marchán opened the fourth with a two-bagger, Bader followed with another, and Kyle Schwarber thundered in with a third. Three straight doubles. Three jolts of thunder. Suddenly it was 6–1, and the Royals were finished.
By the time the dust settled, the scoreboard read Phillies 8, Royals 2. Fourteen hits. Thirty-four runs in their last four games. And win No. 27 since the calendar flipped to August — more than any team in baseball.
And one more number, the one the crowd could almost taste: three. That’s the Phillies’ magic number to clinch the NL East.
So Friday wasn’t just about Buehler’s calm debut. It wasn’t just about Harper’s homer, Stott’s exclamation point, or Bader’s torrid streak. It was about a club that looks every bit October-ready, with the clinch line now just three steps away.
Quotable
“He fits right in; fits into that mold of being a Philadelphia baseball player,” Harper said of Buehler, per MLB.com. “Obviously, he’s pitched in big situations, big moments, deep into the postseason. So getting a guy like that in our clubhouse is huge for us.”Loading Phillies schedule...
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