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Bryson Stott - Phillies - Philadelphia Baseball Review
PHILADELPHIA -- Bryson Stott has spent most of this season trying to dig himself out of a hole. On Monday night at Citizens Bank Park, he delivered another reminder that the Phillies might finally be seeing the version of Stott they expected all along.

Stott crushed a go-ahead two-run home run into the right-field seats with two outs in the eighth inning, lifting the Phillies to a 5-4 win over the Cincinnati Reds and extending their winning streak to five games.

The swing came after the Phillies watched another late lead disappear.

José Alvarado had surrendered a two-out RBI double to Spencer Steer in the top of the eighth inning, giving Cincinnati a 4-3 lead and threatening to waste another strong outing from rookie Andrew Painter. But the Phillies answered immediately.

Edmundo Sosa opened the bottom of the eighth with a single off Graham Ashcraft. Alec Bohm followed with a ground ball that nearly turned into a double play, but Garrett Stubbs — running for Bohm — broke it up with a hard slide at second base to keep the inning alive.

One out later, Stott attacked an 0-1 slider and launched it high into the Philadelphia night.

Citizens Bank Park barely had time to track it before the ball disappeared beyond the right-field wall.

For Stott, it was his second home run in as many games and his fifth homer this month after he failed to homer at all through March and April. His OPS, which sat at .534 entering May, has climbed to .678 during one of the hottest stretches of his season.

The Phillies needed every bit of it Monday.

Without Kyle Schwarber in the lineup, the offense labored for much of the night against Reds left-hander Nick Lodolo. The Phillies managed just three hits off Lodolo across 5 2/3 innings, though they forced him to work by drawing five walks.

They scratched out two runs in the first inning on sacrifice flies from Sosa and Adolis García before Bohm briefly gave the Phillies a 3-2 lead in the sixth inning with a solo home run to left-center field. The homer extended Bohm’s hitting streak to nine games.

But the bigger story for much of the night was Painter.

The rookie right-hander continued his recent rebound by delivering six efficient innings while allowing two runs on three hits. He struck out three, walked one and needed just 69 pitches to complete his outing.

Painter looked composed from the start, mixing his fastball effectively and keeping Cincinnati from generating much hard contact. Outside of a softly hit RBI single by Tyler Stephenson and a sacrifice fly by TJ Friedl in the second inning, the Reds rarely threatened him.

It marked the second straight encouraging outing for Painter after a difficult stretch earlier this month.

The bullpen, however, nearly undid it.

Brad Keller surrendered a game-tying leadoff homer to Sal Stewart in the seventh inning before Alvarado gave up the lead in the eighth. That set the stage for Stott’s latest swing.

Jhoan Duran closed the door with a clean ninth inning to secure the Phillies’ fifth consecutive victory.

At 25-23, the Phillies are now two games over .500 for the first time since early April. They are also 16-4 since Don Mattingly took over managerial duties for Rob Thomson — a stretch that has steadily begun to reshape the feel of their season.

Monday was another example why.

Not because the Phillies dominated. They didn’t.

But because lately, they keep finding another punch after taking one.




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