PHILADELPHIA — Aaron Nola took a no-hitter into the seventh inning.
The Detroit Tigers looked completely helpless as another right-handed pitcher carved up their offense. The pitiful performance resembled the underwhelming results from the previous series in matchups with Chicago White Sox right-handers Mike Clevinger, Dylan Cease and Michael Kopech.
Nola couldn’t complete the no-hitter, thanks to Nick Maton’s three-run home run with two outs in the seventh inning, but the Tigers lost, 8-3, in the first of three games against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park . The Tigers (26-32) have dropped four games in a row.
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While the Tigers failed to get a hit, the Phillies crushed left-hander Joey Wentz for five runs on seven hits and five walks across 4⅔ innings, forcing him to throw 108 pitches. Trea Turner homered in the third and fifth innings.
Wentz owns a 7.49 ERA in 12 starts this season.
Entering the seventh inning, the Tigers had scored just six runs in 41 innings since 22-year-old center fielder Riley Greene landed on the injured list, with three of those runs coming in the three-game series sweep by the White Sox.
But Maton — Nola’s former teammate — broke up the no-hitter and matched that run total with one swing, with two outs and two strikes in the seventh. Nola refused to throw a fastball to Maton, but when he hung a fourth-pitch curveball in an 0-2 count, Maton didn’t miss his opportunity.
He flipped his bat and held his right hand in the air as he watched the ball fly.
Maton, hitting .167 in 54 games this season, sent the curveball 408 feet to the second deck in right field and cut the Tigers’ deficit to 5-3. Before the homer, Zach McKinstry and Javier Báez reached safely on a walk and a fielding error, respectively, to start the inning and apply pressure.
Six of Maton’s 25 hits are home runs.
Nola, who finished fourth in National League Cy Young voting last season, allowed three runs (all unearned) on one hit and three walks with 12 strikeouts in seven innings, throwing 68 of 108 pitches for strikes.
He primarily relied on his four-seam fastball and knuckle curve, and he registered 21 whiffs with 10 fastballs, eight curves, two changeups and one sinker. He also had 13 of his 18 called strikes with his fastball.
Nola lowered his ERA to 4.30 in 13 starts.
Answering the howl
The Tigers’ burst of momentum from Maton’s three-run home run was brief, as the Phillies stole it back in the bottom of the seventh with three runs off right-handed reliever Mason Englert.
Englert needed 51 pitches to get six outs.
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In the seventh inning, also Englert’s third inning of work, the Phillies collected three consecutive hits from Bryce Harper (single), Turner (single) and JT Realmuto (two-run double).
With two outs, Edmundo Sosa added an RBI single to make it 8-3.
Left-handed reliever Chasen Shreve recorded the third out in the seventh inning and retired all three batters he faced in the eighth inning.
Wentz wiped out
Before Maton’s home run, Wentz surrendered five runs without completing the fifth inning.
He walked Kyle Schwarber to begin his outing.
The Phillies scored one run in each of the first three innings, then added two runs in the fifth inning. The damage, however, could have been significantly worse. Wentz escaped a bases-loaded jam in the first inning and stranded a runner on second base in the second inning.
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Turner launched Wentz’s full-count cutter for a 420-foot solo home run to left-center field in the third inning. He tagged a second-pitch four-seam fastball for a 424-foot solo homer to left in the fifth.
Those were Turner’s sixth and seventh homers of the season. Wentz was replaced by Englert after he walked Bryson Stott with two outs in the fifth inning. He walked two batters in the first and fifth innings, plus one batter in the fourth.
Facing the Phillies, Wentz threw 44% four-seam fastballs, 28% cutters, 19% curveballs and 10% changeups. He got nine of his 14 whiffs with his cutter. The cutter, considered his best pitch, was effective at times.
Contact Evan Petzold at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter @EvanPetzold.
This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers lose 4th straight, 8-3, to Philadelphia Phillies