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Phillies rally for 6 runs in 9th to beat Mets

Philadelphia Phillies' Greg Dobbs, left, and Shane Victorino, right, celebrate scoring runs with Jimmy Rollins (11) on an RBI double hit by So Taguchi during the ninth inning of the Major League Baseball game against the New York Mets, Tuesday, July 22, 2008 at Shea Stadium in New York. Philadelphia Phillies' Greg Dobbs, left, and Shane Victorino, right, celebrate scoring runs with Jimmy Rollins (11) on an RBI double hit by So Taguchi during the ninth inning of the Major League Baseball game against the New York Mets, Tuesday, July 22, 2008 at Shea Stadium in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Howie Rumberg
AP Sports Writer / July 22, 2008

NEW YORK—So Taguchi and Jimmy Rollins had two-run doubles in a six-run ninth, and the Philadelphia Phillies rallied against the New York Mets' makeshift bullpen for an 8-6 victory Tuesday night, taking over first place in the NL East.

After Johan Santana pitched eight dominant innings, the Mets had to make do without closer Billy Wagner, who had an MRI on his shoulder earlier Tuesday.

Manager Jerry Manuel said Wagner, who has a muscle spasm around the joint, would be a midgame decision based on how the left-hander felt.

Dauner Sanchez gave up three straight hits to start the ninth. Joe Smith (1-2) relieved and Carlos Ruiz drove in a run with a high bouncer that shortstop Jose Reyes fielded but he missed stepping on second base.

Pedro Feliciano came on and Taguchi, a pinch-hitter, stroked a two-run double to tie it. Rollins followed with a double that made it 7-5. After an intentional walk to Pat Burrell, Ryan Howard hit a ball back to Feliciano but he had trouble fielding it and could only get one out allowing another run to score.

Chad Durbin (3-2) pitched a perfect eighth, and Brad Lidge gave up a run in the ninth but finished for his 22nd save in as many chances.

The Phillies, who entered hitting just .248 over the last 13 games when they went 6-7, could have had a much bigger deficit to make up had they not made two big defensive plays in the seventh.

Right fielder Jayson Werth threw out Endy Chavez at home on a hit by David Wright, and second baseman Chase Utley made a diving grab of pinch-hitter Fernando Tatis' liner with the bases loaded to end the inning.

The last time Santana faced the Phillies on July 4, he gave up two runs in eight innings but the Mets lost 3-2. On Tuesday, he allowed an RBI single to Werth in the first and Shane Victorino's homer in the seventh after he retired 15 of 16 batters. He had four strikeouts, including the 1,500th of his career.

The Mets took a 5-1 lead against Joe Blanton behind Carlos Delgado's 450th career homer, a two-run shot, Raul Castro's two-run homer and Wright's RBI double in the second. Chavez was thrown out at home on a nice relay started by left fielder Burrell.

Blanton was making his first start for the Phillies since being acquired from Oakland last week to solidify a shaky rotation. He took the spot of Adam Eaton, who was 3-8 with a 5.71 ERA.

Blanton came in having thrown 15 shutout innings against the Mets in two starts for the A's and he looked as if he were pitching to form until he walked Jose Reyes on four pitches to open the third. He gave up five runs and eight hits in six innings.

Phillies manager Charlie Manuel was ejected by third base umpire Marty Foster after the third inning. Manuel started yelling at Foster when he ruled Delgado did not go around on a half-swing before his homer and carried on with the argument after the final out. It was his third ejection this season.

Notes:@ The Mets announced the start of their greatest moments at Shea Stadium promotion Tuesday. Fans can go online to select their 10 favorite moments at the stadium, which is closing after 45 seasons. On Aug. 15, the Mets and sponsor Nikon will trim a list of 75 moments -- not all baseball related -- to 10, then fans will vote on their favorite. The top 10, in ascending order of popularity will be revealed during the final homestand, Sept. 22-26. ... A cat ran into the Phillies dugout during the top of the sixth inning. It wasn't black.

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