PHILLIES 8, BRAVES
6
PHILADELPHIA -- Bryce Harper homered
deep into the second deck in right-center field for his first hit with
Philadelphia and celebrated with an emphatic curtain call, highlighting the
Phillies' 8-6 win over the Atlanta
Braves on Saturday.
Hitless over five at-bats this season after signing a $330
million, 13-year deal, Harper crushed Jesse Biddle's
fastball 465 feet with two outs in the seventh. Fans gave Harper a standing
ovation and chanted "MVP! MVP!"
After getting high fives in the dugout, Harper climbed out
for a curtain call, throwing both fists in the air and shouting "Let's
go!"
Maikel Franco and J.T. Realmuto also
went deep for Philadelphia. The game was tied at 4 in the fifth when Realmuto
lined a two-run drive off Wes Parsons (0-1).
Adam Morgan (1-0)
faced one batter in the fifth inning.
Dansby
Swanson and Charlie
Culberson homered, and Freddie
Freeman had four hits and drove in two for the Braves.
BREWERS 4, CARDINALS 2
MILWAUKEE -- Christian
Yelich became the first MVP to homer in the first three games
of the following season, Josh Hader closed
things out with an immaculate inning and Milwaukee beat St. Louis.
Travis Shaw and Mike
Moustakas also homered off Cardinals starter Dakota Hudson,
and Brandon
Woodruff (1-0) struck out five while pitching five innings of
two-run ball.
Yelich made a sliding catch in right field in the top of the
first inning, and then took Hudson deep for a solo shot in his first at-bat.
Hudson (0-1) allowed seven hits and two walks, striking out
six over 4 1/3 innings in his first career start.
MARINERS 6, RED SOX 5
SEATTLE -- Jay Bruce hit
his first home run for Seattle, a three-run shot to center field, and the
heavy-hitting Mariners continued to dominate Boston's starting pitching.
The Mariners have hit a home run in every game this season
and continued to batter Red Sox starters, with Bruce helping to chase Eduardo
Rodriguez (0-1) in the fifth inning. Eight Seattle batters have
hit 13 combined home runs, with nine coming against the defending World Series
champions.
Red Sox starters Chris Sale, Nathan Eovaldi and
Rodriguez have given up 20 hits and 18 earned runs in the series.
Bruce's homer gave the Mariners 24 runs in their first 22
innings of the series. They've scored 21 of 42 runs this season on homers.
Seattle starter Mike Leake (1-0)
allowed two runs in six innings, striking out seven.
RANGERS 8, CUBS 6
ARLINGTON, Texas -- Joey Gallo hit
a three-run homer in the eighth inning and Texas rallied long after
Chicago's Yu Darvish flopped
in the former Rangers ace's return to his first home in the majors.
Gallo's homer to center field came off reliever Carl Edwards
Jr. (0-1), who didn't retire any of the four batters he faced in the
first win for new Rangers manager Chris Woodward.
Texas closer Jose Leclerc pitched
the ninth for the save, getting Willson
Contreras on a fly out to center after Kyle
Schwarber bunted away from the shift for a hit to bring the
tying run to the plate.
Darvish walked seven of the first 13 batters in his first
outing against his former team, failing to make it out of the third inning.
Shawn Kelley (1-0)
got four outs.
RAYS 3, ASTROS 1
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Tyler Glasnow and
four relievers shut down Houston after Alex Bregman's
first-inning homer.
Bregman went deep on his 25th birthday, but Glasnow (1-0)
was otherwise excellent, striking out four and allowing six hits over five
innings. Ryne Stanek followed
with two hitless innings, and Jose Alvarado pitched
a perfect ninth for his second save.
Astros starter Collin McHugh (0-1)
struck out nine and allowed two runs over five innings in his return to the
rotation. A 19-game winner in 2015, McHugh was moved to the bullpen last season
due to Houston's rotation depth.
The Rays struck out 13 times, raising their total to 38 in
the first three games of the series.
GIANTS 3, PADRES 2
SAN DIEGO -- Reyes Moronta struck
out five in two innings of lights-out relief work, including Manny Machado and Fernando
Tatis Jr., and San Francisco beat San Diego for its first victory
this season.
The Giants were at risk of going 0-3 for the first time
since 2012, when they won their second of three World Series in five seasons
under manager Bruce Bochy, who is retiring after this season. The Padres were
denied their first 3-0 start since 1984, the season they went to their first
World Series, with Bochy as a backup catcher.
Nick Margevicius (0-1) pitched five-plus innings of one-run
ball in his major league debut for San Diego but was the hard-luck loser. He
was making the jump from Class A.
Giants starter Dereck
Rodriguez (1-0) allowed two runs in five innings.
ATHLETICS 4, ANGELS 2
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Mark Canha hit
a two-run homer in the fourth that held up for Brett
Anderson, and Oakland beat Los Angeles.
Stephen
Piscotty added a two-run single in the third. Anderson (1-0)
pitched six scoreless innings in his first start of the year after the lefty
signed as a free agent for his third stint with the A's. Anderson, who also
pitched for Oakland last year and from 2009-2013, allowed three hits, struck
out four and walked two.
Including solid outings from Mike Fiers and Marco Estrada,
Oakland starters have three consecutive scoreless outings of at least six
innings for the first time since Aug. 24-26, 2005, by Kirk Saarloos, Barry Zito
and Joe Blanton.
Canha's first homer of the year chased starter Felix Pena (0-1).
DODGERS 18, DIAMONDBACKS 5
LOS ANGELES -- Cody Bellinger hit
two homers and drove in a career high-tying six runs, Justin Turner added
five RBI and Los Angeles rebounded splendidly from a 13-inning loss.
Bellinger had four hits and Joc Pederson had
three after leading off the game with his third homer for Los Angeles, which
pounded out 19 hits to shake off its 5-4 loss early Saturday morning in the
longest regular season game in Dodger Stadium history.
Arizona backup catcher John Ryan
Murphy gave up seven runs in mop-up relief, including homers by
Bellinger and Austin Barnes.
It was Murphy's first career outing on a big league mound.
Dodgers backup catcher Russell
Martin also made his first pitching appearance, closing things
out with a perfect ninth inning.
Kenta Maeda (1-0)
gave the Dodgers 6 2/3 innings of five-hit ball. Maeda even chased Arizona
starter Zack Godley (0-1)
in the sixth with a bloop double over the head of a badly fooled David Peralta in
left.
ORIOLES 5, YANKEES 3
NEW YORK -- Brandon Hyde earned his first win as Baltimore's
manager when slow-footed catcher Jesus Sucre was
aggressive on the bases to score the go-ahead run, then added three late RBI.
Jimmy
Yacabonis (1-0) allowed one run over three innings for his
first win since September 2017. Mike Wright struck
out Miguel
Andujar with two on for his first pro save in nine seasons.
James Paxton (0-1)
gave up one earned run and four hits in 5 2/3 innings of his Yankees debut.
INDIANS 2, TWINS 1
MINNEAPOLIS -- Greg Allen hit
a go-ahead sacrifice fly in the top of the ninth inning, and then Cleveland
reliever Brad Hand escaped
a bases-loaded jam. It was 34 degrees for the start at Target Field.
Hand retired C.J. Cron on
a flyball to end it for a save, completing a combined two-hitter.
Jon Edwards (1-0)
got two outs for his first career victory. Blake Parker (0-1)
threw two wild pitches that set up Allen's fly.
BLUE JAYS 3, TIGERS 0
TORONTO -- Aaron Sanchez and
four relievers combined to pitch Toronto's second straight shutout.
The Blue Jays threw just three shutouts all of last season,
the second fewest in the majors. Detroit was last with two.
The Tigers were blanked an MLB-leading 18 times in 2018.
They've scored in only one of 28 innings so far this season.
Tigers slugger Miguel
Cabrera left after being hit on the right hand by a pitch from
Sanchez to begin the sixth. X-rays were negative.
Sanchez (1-0) allowed three singles, struck out six and
walked three. Ken Giles got
his first save.
Justin Smoak homered
off Spencer
Turnbull (0-1).
METS 11, NATIONALS 8
WASHINGTON -- J.D. Davis delivered
a tiebreaking two-run single in the eighth inning and rookie Pete Alonso contributed
three hits and two RBI for the new-look Mets.
Jeff McNeil had
four hits for the visitors. Alonso doubled twice and also had a couple of nice
stretch plays at first base in the second game of his major league career. He
is one of the young components of a reconstructed roster under agent-turned-GM
Brodie Van Wagenen.
Another offseason acquisition, former Nationals
catcher Wilson Ramos,
added two hits and two RBI and scored three runs. And to top it off, new
closer Edwin Diaz picked
up his second save with one pitch.
Justin Wilson (1-0)
threw a perfect seventh for the win. Washington reliever Trevor
Rosenthal (0-1) was booed off the mound after entering a 4-all game
in the eighth and allowing all four batters he faced to reach base in his
return from Tommy John surgery.
ROYALS 8, WHITE SOX 6
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Jorge Soler had
three hits and three RBI, Alex Gordon scored
three runs despite not getting a hit and Kansas City used its speed to win.
Billy
Hamilton got three hits and scored twice for the speedy Royals,
off to a 2-0 start for the first time since their World Series-winning season
in 2015.
The first pitch was delayed 30 minutes because of rain. When
the game began, it was 38 degrees and felt like 28, whipped by 18 mph winds.
Jakob Junis (1-0)
gave up Jose Abreu's
three-run homer. Ian Kennedy pitched
the ninth for the first save of his career.
Reynaldo
Lopez (0-1) took the loss. Prized Chicago rookie Eloy Jimenez got
his first two big league hits.
MARLINS 7, ROCKIES 3
MIAMI -- Miguel Rojas and Martin Prado each
had three hits and Miami won for the first time this season.
Rockies first baseman Daniel Murphy said
after the game he will be out indefinitely with a broken left index finger.
Limited to a total of six hits in a pair of losses to
Colorado earlier this week, the Marlins broke loose for 16 hits against
starter Tyler
Anderson (0-1) and four relievers.
Lewis Brinson,
who scored twice, and Rossell Herrera and Chad Wallach each
had two hits. Rojas doubled twice and drove in three runs.
Pablo Lopez (1-0)
allowed five hits and three runs and struck out a career-high seven in 5 1/3
innings. He was lifted after retiring Trevor Story on
a flyball that ended an 11-pitch at-bat.
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