
Dateline: Cincinnati
Kyle Schwarber lined his 31st home run into the right field stands with a man on to stake Zack Wheeler to a three-run lead he never relinquished in the Philadelphia Phillies 4-1 win over the Reds.
Andrew Abbott retired the first seven Phillies hitters but was touched by a one out double by Derek Hill. Justin Crawford singled to right but Hill did not want to test right fielder Spencer Steer's arm and stopped at third.
Trea Turner hit a slow ground ball to Elly De La Cruz at short for the second out. De La Cruz had only one play and threw Turner out at first as Hill scored easily. Abbott fell behind 3-0 to Schwarber, the Middletown, Ohio and University of Indiana grad. Schwarber was swinging 3-0 and belted his 27th home run against the Reds, the most against any opponent and 13th at Great American Ball Park. He missed the Reds when they visited Philadelphia in May with a gastrointestinal illness.
The Reds could do nothing with veteran Zack Wheeler. He allowed a single to JJ Bleday but struck out three in the first inning and two of three in the second.
"He's really good," Terry Francona said of Wheeler. "He maintained his velocity through out and spun the ball with a change up."
Abbott left after six innings, allowing three runs on five hits, no walks and a season-high eight strikeouts. It is his seventh quality start of the year.
"I thought he threw the ball real well. He gave up the home run 3-0. I think he was trying to throw one off the plate and missed," Francona said.
"I kept a pretty good offense pretty quiet," Abbott said. "Schwarber is a good hitter. With a 3-0 count we're going to live or die by the sword. The fastball is one of my best pitches. Hindsight is 20/20 obviously you throw him another breaking ball sure. I told (acting pitching coach) Matt Tracy, I'm going to attack with my best stuff."
"I was trying to go away from him. That's the attack. It was too much over the middle. That's the mistake. I didn't walk anybody. You guys know I hate to walk people. I made them earn what they got and tried to keep us in the game," Abbott continued.
Pierce Johnson pitched a scoreless seventh.
Eugenio Suarez led off the seventh inning with his ninth home run to cut the lead to 3-1. It is his 198th home run as a Red, tying Barry Larkin for 11th place on the Reds' list.
Wheeler pitched seven innings for the fifth time this season. He gave up a run on four hits and no walks. He tied a career-high with 14 strikeouts.
"He has really good stuff. Today he mixed it really well," Suarez said. "He made a mistake and I was ready for that one. He doesn't make a lot of mistake."
Turner and Schwarber started the eighth with singles against Caleb Ferguson. Bryce Harper grounded out as the runners moved up. Julien Garcia replaced Ferguson to face Alec Bohm.
Bohm walked to load the bases. Edmundo Sosa hit a sacrifice fly to center to score Turner. JT Realmuto grounded out to end the inning.
Orion Kerkering replaced Wheeler to start the eighth inning.
Pinch hitter Ivan Johnson and De La Cruz walked with one out. Stewart hit a ground ball to Bohm at third. He threw to second to try to force De La Cruz at second and he beat it the throw according to second base umpire Mike Estabrook. Manager Don Mattingly challenged the play. Turner was able to throw Stewart out at first base. Infield coach Bobby Dickerson was ejected by Lance Barrett. Caleb Cotham was ejected by Malachi Moore.
The Phillies could only challenge the out of safe call on De La Cruz.
"The only thing that could be challenges is the safe/out — they wanted abandoning of the base path, but that is not challengeable. On the field you can't abandon if you're safe and you return to the bag," crew chief, Alfonso Marquez said.
JJ Bleday walked to load the bases. Jonathan Bowlan came in to pitch to Suarez, who won a challenge on a 2-2 pitch but he struck out swinging to end the inning.
Sam Moll started the ninth for the Reds.
Jhoan Duran gave up an infield hit to Steer but struck out Nathaniel Lowe, Tyler Stephenson and TJ Friedl for his 22nd save in 23 chances.
The Reds tied a season low eight games under .500 at 41-49 with 72 games left.
"It has been like this for a month and a half," Suarez said. "We can't take it for granted. We have to come out every day and play our best. Have fun. We have to give 100 percent and see what happens after the game."
"We try to show up every day. It's a new day. I don't want these guys coming in dragging," Francona said. "That's not going to help. They care. I care. The coaches care. We will have early hitting tomorrow, like we always do. We will try to keep after it. We want to do better. We need to do better."


Sal Stewart hit a ground rule double off Brandon Young and scored on Eugenio Suarez single to center. TJ Friedl tripled to tie the game. Elly De La Cruz put the Reds ahead.