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Syndergaard strong for 7 innings, Phillies beat Reds 4-1

Philadelphia Phillies v Cincinnati Reds

CINCINNATI, OH - AUGUST 15: Noah Syndergaard #43 of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches during the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on August 15, 2022 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images)

Getty Images

PHILADELPHIA - Noah Syndergaard pitched seven strong innings to stay unbeaten with Philadelphia, Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott homered and the Phillies defeated the Cincinnati Reds 4-1 on Monday night.

Alec Bohm added three hits, a day hitting a pair of three-run homers, as Philadelphia moved ahead of idle San Diego for second place in the NL wild-card race. The Phillies rebounded from a disappointing four-game weekend home series against the NL East-leading Mets in which they dropped three of four.

“Noah threw the ball well like he’s been doing for us, and we hit the ball,” Stott said.

Austin Romine homered for the Reds.

Syndergaard (8-8) allowed one run on three hits with one strikeout and two walks. The 29-year-old right-hander is 3-0 with a 3.60 ERA in four starts with Philadelphia since being acquired from the Los Angeles Angels early this month at the trade deadline.

“My time here so far has been amazing,” Syndergaard said. “I feel like I’m on cloud nine.”

The Phillies got a boost before the game with news that slugger Bryce Harper will begin a rehab assignment at Triple-A Lehigh Valley on Tuesday.

The NL MVP hasn’t played since breaking his left thumb on June 25. Lehigh Valley is hosting Gwinnett for a six-game series, and Harper is expected to play there through Saturday, take Sunday off and possibly return to the Phillies’ lineup on Monday when they begin a three-game series at Arizona.

The Phillies improved to 29-20 since Harper last played. He is batting .318 with 15 homers and 48 RBIs in 64 games.

Andrew Bellatti pitched a scoreless ninth for his second save.

The game was delayed for 57 minutes at the start due to rain.

Castellanos extended his hitting streak to 12 straight games by leading off the second inning with a drive off Luis Cessa (3-2) into the batter’s eye in center. It was the 12th home run of the season for Castellanos, who got a five-year, $100 million contract this past offseason from Philadelphia after compiling 34 homers and 100 RBIs in his second season with the Reds last year.

It has taken Castellanos some time to get comfortable in Philadelphia, and he has heard some boos from Phillies fans this season. But he’s starting to get in a groove.

“For me, everything is about familiarity and comfort,” he said. “Feeling good in my surroundings and where I’m at, and everything else usually follows.”

Reds manager David Bell, who was at the helm druing Castellanos’ time in Cincinnati, sees a similar player.

“He’s always been able to hit,” Bell said. “I haven’t seen him as much as people here, but he definitely looks like the same guy. He’s in great shape. It looks like he’s swinging the bat well.”

Stott followed Castellanos’ shot with a long drive into the second deck in right field to make it 2-0, marking the seventh time this season the Phillies have homered in consecutive at-bats, to give Syndergaard plenty of cushion.

“He comes to compete, pounds the strike zone and is fun to play defense behind,” Castellanos said.

After Castellanos’ RBI double in the third made it 3-0, Cincinnati got on the board in the fifth when Romine went deep for the first time this season and 29th in 1,373 career plate appearances.

Philadelphia got the run back in the bottom of the frame on J.T. Realmuto’s RBI double to the gap in right-center.

Cessa, making his second start of the season following 34 consecutive relief appearances, gave up two runs on three hits in two innings.

HITS KEEP COMING

Reds lefty Art Warren plunked Jean Segura with one out in the sixth inning to set a franchise record with 81 hit batters by Cincinnati pitchers this season.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Reds: After throwing a bullpen session on Sunday without issue, RHP Hunter Greene (strained right shoulder) will throw another one on Wednesday. Greene, who last pitched on Aug. 1, could face live hitters on Sunday. . INF Matt Reynolds was not in the lineup on Monday after leaving in the seventh inning of Sunday’s 9-5 win at Pittsburgh due to hip soreness.

Phillies: An MRI on RHP Seranthony Dominguez (right triceps tendinitis) revealed no structural damage. Dominguez is eligible to return from the 15-day IL on Sept. 2.

UP NEXT

Reds LHP Nick Lodolo (3-4, 4.12) opposes Philadelphia LHP Ranger Suarez (8-5, 3.31) in the second contest of the four-game series on Tuesday night.