NO-NAME PITCHER GIVES THE PHILS A LIFT AND A WIN OVER MARINERS

By Sam Bush

Journeyman pitcher Jerome Williams threw seven-plus innings of one-run ball and Andres Blanco hit a three-run homer to power the Phillies to a 4-1 victory and halt the streaking Mariners on Monday night at Citizens Bank Park.

“Obviously my game plan wasn’t really working early in the year. That’s why I’m on my third team,” Williams said. “So we’re just using the same weapons that I have but just moving the ball everywhere and anywhere.”

Williams allowed three hits and three walks while striking out four. He has a 2.19 ERA through his first two starts as a Phillie, less than a month after posting a 9.90 ERA in two outings with Texas.

“Pretty stress-free outing for him,” Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said. “He was able to move the pitches around. Second, third time through the lineup, mixed in some offspeed pitches. Threw strikes with all his pitches. Outstanding job.

“He spots his fastball real well. He has movement on his fastball on both sides of the plate. Mixes pitches well with his secondary stuff. But he’s got good movement on the ball. He can pitch to contact with that, resulting in some ground balls and fly ball outs.”

When asked about his recent success in Philly compared to the woes he’s endured elsewhere this year, Williams attributed it to the player giving him the signals.

“With [Carlos Ruiz] behind the plate, I’m not shaking [him off] at all,” Williams said. “I’m trusting him and he’s been around a lot and I’m just going to trust him.”

Williams tempted fate by walking the leadoff man in three innings, but in each instance, the runner never advanced past first base. Williams’ counterpart, Roenis Elias, was even more generous in his issuing of bases.

Elias walked six batters and hit another, needing 90 pitches to get through four innings. Still, the Phillies only cashed in once — a Marlon Byrd RBI double in the third — against Seattle’s starter, but their patience at the plate spelled an early exit for Elias.

After stranding nine runners through the first four innings, the Phillies finally broke through with a big hit against the Mariners’ bullpen. Reliever Dominic Leone allowed a double and a walk with one out in the fifth, and Blanco followed with his fourth homer in 622 career at-bats to make it 4-0. It was Blanco’s first home run since July 1, 2011.

“It was a changeup. Just a bad pitch,” Leone said. “It’s just one pitch, honestly. Notoriously, that guy — I don’t know his stats off the top of my head — but it’s his first homer in three years or something. But it just goes to show you, you leave one over the middle and someone is going to make you pay and that’s just how it was.”

Blanco was making a spot start in place of Jimmy Rollins, who was given the day off.

 

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