Phillies shut down by pitcher they passed over in 2017 draft

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The Phillies boast one of the top trios in baseball at the front end of their starting rotation.

A quarter of the way into the season, Aaron Nola, Zack Wheeler and Zach Eflin sport a combined 3.29 ERA in 27 starts.

Not too shabby.

Yet, the Phillies are not capitalizing on enough of those starts. They are 14-13 in games started by Nola, Wheeler and Eflin.

On Wednesday night, the Phils wasted a good outing from Eflin on their way to a 3-1 loss to the Miami Marlins at Citizens Bank Park.

Eflin allowed just six hits and two runs over six walk-free innings. He was done in by a solo homer, a broken-bat single through a drawn-in infield and a lack of offensive support.

Andrew McCutchen's sixth homer in 17 games this month — a solo shot in the sixth inning — represented the extent of the Phillies' offense.

The Phillies finished the night with just seven hits and two came in the ninth inning. They went 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position (the hit they got did not score a run) and reached their obligatory threshold of 10 strikeouts.

One night after rallying for seven runs in the eighth inning to erase a 3-1 deficit, the Phils put runners on the corners with one out in the ninth, but Miami reliever Yimi Garcia struck out Alec Bohm and retired Andrew Knapp on a fly ball to deep right-center to end it.

"We had chances to win tonight, we did," manager Joe Girardi said. "We needed a couple of hits. Just a game of inches tonight, a couple of plays here or there and none of them went our way."

The loss dropped the Phillies to 22-21. They are 4-8 against the Marlins since the start of last season. The series concludes Thursday night with Vince Velasquez opposing Sandy Alcantara. 

If Alcantara is as sharp as rookie Trevor Rogers was Wednesday night, the Phils could be in trouble.

Rogers, a 23-year-old lefty, continued his brilliant work this season for Miami. He pitched 7⅔ innings, allowed five hits, walked two and struck out eight. He is 6-2 with a 1.74 ERA in nine starts this season. 

The Marlins selected Rogers out of his Carlsbad, New Mexico high school 13th overall in the first round of the 2017 draft, five picks after the Phillies took Adam Haseley.

"He's a special arm," Eflin said. "Really young kid, keeps his composure out on the mound. He's one of those guys that's fun to watch, you know? We'll see how it all pans out, but he's got some good stuff." 

In addition to pitching a gem, Rogers stroked his first big-league hit in the top of the seventh inning to load the bases against Brandon Kintzler. Rogers' hit went through the left side as the Phillies were in a bunt defense. The Marlins got the run home on Jazz Chisholm's dribbler up the third-base line. Garrett Cooper, running from third, eluded catcher Knapp's lunging tag attempt. Cooper appeared to leave the base line. Girardi stated his case to the umpires to no avail. Base line plays are not reviewable, as the Phils learned a couple of weeks ago when McCutchen was the victim of a blown call.

"We're 0 for 2 on those calls this season," Girardi said. 

That run gave the Marlins a 3-1 lead.

Eflin allowed a solo homer to Brian Anderson on a hanging sinker in the second. The Marlins built their lead to 2-0 in the top of the sixth. Miguel Rojas stroked a double down the third base line, moved up on a fly ball and scored on a broken-bat single by Adam Duvall that tipped off the glove of a lunging Bohm at third. The infield was in at the time. It's tough to say definitively whether Bohm should have made a play on Rojas' leadoff double or Duvall's broken-bat hit that came off the bat at 81 mph. It's a game of inches and the Phillies came up several inches short several times on defense.

Eflin is 2-3 with a 3.77 ERA in nine starts. The Phils are just 4-5 in his starts.

"We don't look at stuff like that," the right-hander said of the team's inability to parlay good starts by the top of the rotation into wins. "Our job is to go out every fifth day, put up innings and keep the other guys off home plate."

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