Philadelphia – Edmundo Sosa sieges out of first base after his Philadelphia Phillies teammates beat the Boston Red Sox 3-2 on Monday night.
At this moment, it doesn't matter if he gets there due to the receiver's interference call.
“To be honest, it felt like a home run,” Sosa said through an interpreter. “The most important thing is that we ended up winning the game and that's what we're going to do.”
When the base loaded and there was no knockout in the 10th inning, Sosa won the game, and his check hit the glove of catcher Carlos Narvaez on the court 2-2. The Phillies called for a review that showed the link to allow Sosa to get the score of first and automatic runner Brandon Marsh.
“I felt like my barrel was a little late on the court,” Sousa said. “I felt like I was hitting the catcher's gloves as I walked through the swing path. I told UMP, I guess how I felt, and I started signaling in the canoe. ”
This is the first instance of a hiker intervention in a major league game since August 1, 1971, the Los Angeles Dodgers won on a call with Cincinnati Reds receiver Johnny Bench. Willie Crawford is the batsman and Joe Gibbon is the pitcher.
Boston Red Sox catcher Carlos Narvaez was asked to intervene in Philadelphia Phillies second base Edmundo Sosa, which put the Phillies in the Citizens Bank Park. Eric Hartline-Imagn Images
The drama is Narvaez's sixth place this season and is second in the Grand Slam season. Narvaez also scored his fifth goal in the fourth inning, which brought Nick Castellanos to the scoring position after driving in the Phillies' first game. Castellanos scored on JT Realmuto's single.
“I don't feel like I'm close to the batsman,” Nalvas said. “Everything has gotten so fast. It's really hard to pay our losses in that moment. I have to take responsibility. I have to get better. It's impossible.”
This is the Phillies' third victory this season. The first match against Washington on April 29 gave Bryson Stott a score. Walking on June 6 at the Chicago Cubs through the 11th Swamp Single.
Patrick Bailey lost a game in San Francisco on July 8 when Patrick Bailey hit three of the three games.
“There are two things this year that I've never seen before 40 years ago,” said Philadelphia manager Rob Thomson. “One is a walk in the park and one is a disturbance from the watchman.”
The Phillies won the game and did not shoot the ball in the tenth game. The swamp started the game at second base. Otto Kemp tried to put him in third place, walking on Boston reliefist Jordan Hicks.
Hicks' first delivery to Max Kepler is a wild court that lifts runners to second and third. The Red Sox deliberately left Kepler. Sosa dropped 0-2, fouled, then waved with an 86 mph slider, hitting only Narvaez's glove thumb to decide the game.
“It’s weird,” said Phillies starting pitcher Zach Wheeler. “People always say, I've never seen it on a baseball field. It's just another. I want to know how many times can I say that.”