The Philadelphia Phillies have spent stretches of this season waiting for the lineup to fully come alive. Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper and Brandon Marsh have done plenty of the heavy lifting, but the rest of the order hasn’t always matched that pace.
Lately, though, that picture has changed. The supporting cast has started to chip in, and on this night it was strong enough to flatten one of baseball’s biggest names in Paul Skenes.
With the series split at one win apiece entering Game 3 of the four-game set, Skenes got the ball for Pittsburgh against Zack Wheeler. It looked like a premium pitching matchup on paper. Instead, the first five innings turned into a slugfest, with the two offenses combining for 12 runs, 11 earned, against the star starters.
Philadelphia wasted no time taking advantage of a costly mistake in the second inning. Justin Crawford hit into a force out, but Nick Gonzales’ error allowed him to reach second base. That turned what should have been a clean out in a bases-loaded spot into a two-run swing for the Phillies.
Then Trea Turner kept rolling. He has been heating up over the last two weeks, and he stayed locked in by launching his 10th home run of the season to push Philadelphia out to a 5-0 lead.
The Pirates answered in the third. Henry Davis went deep for his seventh homer of the year off Wheeler, and Bryan Reynolds followed with an RBI single to trim the deficit.
Philadelphia responded right back. Marsh added his 15th home run of the season with a solo shot, and then Harper delivered a double in the fourth that brought home Gabriel Rincones Jr. and Turner.
By the time Skenes exited after the fourth inning, his night had gone sideways. The reigning National League Cy Young Award winner gave up six hits and two walks, and he was charged with eight runs, seven earned.
Home runs have usually been one of the areas where Skenes has kept hitters in check, but that hasn’t held true in 2026. After Philadelphia left the yard twice against him, he’s now allowed 11 home runs, matching the most he’s given up in a single season of his career.
When the Phillies’ offense looks like this, they are a tough lineup to slow down.
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Pirates Dream Trade Comes With One Massive Catch
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The catch is that this is not the kind of trade to treat as a simple star-for-prospect swap. Rutschman is still in arbitration, which means his value does not stop at this summer, and any deal would likely come with a steep cost in young talent. The Pirates also have their own catching picture to sort through, with Endy Rodrguez offering offense and Henry Davis still searching for more at the plate, so adding Rutschman would reshape the depth chart even before the price tag comes into focus. [Read more 🡒]
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Paul Skenes has gone from overpowering opposing lineups to looking alarmingly human, and the latest stumble only sharpened the concern inside a Pirates rotation that has leaned on him heavily. In his most recent start, he was tagged for eight runs in four innings, a harsh line for a pitcher whose fastball has long been the headline. Even more jarring, the velocity has backed up from the premium power he showed earlier in the season, the kind of drop that immediately gets attention in Pittsburgh.
The Pirates now have to decide how seriously to treat what they are seeing and how much risk they want to take on with one of the most important arms in the organization. A closer look at his workload and condition is clearly on the table, and any delay in finding answers only increases the pressure on the rest of the staff. If Skenes cannot get back on track quickly, the ripple effects could be felt by Bubba Chandler, Jared Jones, Braxton Ashcraft and Mitch Keller, all of whom would suddenly matter even more. [Read more 🡒]
Pirates Are Sending A Big Message With Konnor Griffin At Shortstop
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Manager Don Kelly said there is a plan to build Griffin back toward playing every day at shortstop, which makes these starts about more than just filling a spot for the night. Griffin has already chipped in with a leadoff homer and other useful contributions since coming back, and the next step is seeing whether the Pirates are ready to lean on him more consistently as the season moves on. [Read more 🡒]
