Phillies hit reset button, start June with renewed mindset and refreshing win

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The Phillies opened a pivotal month of June with a rare offensive outburst and a much-needed victory on Tuesday night.

The Phils belted a season-high seven home runs, including three in the sixth inning to break open a one-run game, and rolled past the Cincinnati Reds, 17-3, on the banks of the Ohio River.

Seventeen runs was a season-high for the Phils, who had scored just 13 runs in their previous six games.

The Phillies' offensive fiesta included a season-high 18 hits.

The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for the Phillies and was just their fourth in the last 14 games.

Could a win like this ...

"Yes," manager Joe Girardi said with a laugh as he anticipated the rest of the question. "God, I hope so."

Clearly, this was a cathartic win for Girardi and the team. Frustration had mounted after Monday's 11-1 loss to the same Cincinnati club.

Struggling third baseman Alec Bohm had three of the Phillies' hits, including an RBI single in the fourth inning. He entered the game hitting just .203 with only one hit in 19 at-bats on the trip.

"It's refreshing," Bohm said of the victory. "For everybody. The team, myself, everybody."

Monday's loss dropped the Phils four games under .500 and five games back in the NL East to close the month of May. Before Tuesday's game, Phillies players talked about using the fresh page on the calendar as a complete reset.

"That was the mood today," Bohm said. "New month. Deep breath. Let's go.

"Whatever happened the first two months is behind us. That's the mindset here. We're moving forward. Go out and dominate this month."

The win improved the Phillies to 26-29. They are just 3-5 on the road trip but can close it out with a series victory with a win over the Reds on Wednesday afternoon.

Aaron Nola, who was denied a victory by poor run support and even worse defense in a start at Miami earlier on the road trip, was backed by plenty of both in earning his first win since May 4. The Phillies had been 0-4 in his previous four starts.

Nola was not particularly sharp, but he managed to grind his way into the sixth inning before handing off to the bullpen. He was personally backed by three double plays and the Phillies' often-shoddy defense turned five in all. Offensively, the Phillies scored double-digit runs for just the second time in 55 games. 

Nola (4-4) scattered eight hits and three runs. He walked two and struck out two. His second strikeout of the game was a big one on two levels. It came against Jesse Winker with a man on second base and it ended the fifth inning, preserving a one-run lead. Winker had entered the game ranked second in the majors with a .348 batting average.

"That strikeout was a momentum shift for us," Girardi said. 

The strikeout was the 1,000th of Nola's career and it came in his 913th inning of work. No Phillie has ever reached 1,000 Ks faster. Previously, Cole Hamels had been the fastest Phillie to 1,000. He did it in 1,046⅔ innings.

Nola, who will turn 28 on Friday, is just the third Phillies pitcher to reach 1,000 strikeouts before turning 28, joining Hamels and Steve Carlton.

Big round numbers have been a thing lately for the Phillies.

On May 22, Rhys Hoskins slugged his 100th career homer. He stroked his 100th career double in the fifth inning of this one to drive in a run.

Hoskins was also one of three Phillies to homer in the sixth inning. He and Odubel Herrera both smacked two-run shots in the inning. Andrew McCutchen opened the inning with an important solo homer to extend a one-run lead. Two innings later, McCutchen made it a two-homer night with a three-run shot in the eighth.

After the game, McCutchen revealed the secret behind the Phils' outburst.

"The first couple innings, we had a bird poop on a couple of us," he said. "That has be some type of luck."

Cincinnati used two position players on the mound to close out the game. Matt Joyce hit the Phillies' seventh homer of the night, a grand slam, in the ninth against infielder Alex Blandino.

In the third inning, the Phillies got solo homers from Ronald Torreyes and Herrera in tying the game at 2-2.

Fifteen runs later ...

Maybe this was the game that will get the Phillies right. They went 12-16 in May and lost six games in the NL East standings, going from first place and a game up on May 7 to five back entering Tuesday. The Phils play 14 games against division opponents in June and will also make a six-game trip to the West Coast to play the Dodgers and Giants.

Rookie Spencer Howard gets the ball in the series finale Wednesday afternoon.

Did the Phils save any runs for him?

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