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Diamondbacks botch easy Phillies popup during horrific NLCS Game 2 moment

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Things were already going poorly for the Diamondbacks, but one play in the seventh inning Tuesday night in their 10-0 blowout loss to the Phillies in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series might’ve truly tipped the scales in the wrong direction.

Already down 6-0 heading into the bottom of the seventh, Arizona yielded two more runs before botching a routine popup that made matters worse.

With one out and a runner on second base, reliever Ryne Nelson jammed Phillies infielder Bryson Stott with an up-and-in fastball that he popped up down the third-base line.

It didn’t appear to be the most difficult popup in the world as Nelson, third baseman Evan Longoria and catcher Gabriel Moreno all went after the ball.

Longoria appeared to have the best angle on the ball, but as it plummeted back toward Earth, the veteran seemed to defer to either Nelson or Moreno.

However, neither camped under the ball, which dropped on the grass.

Evan Longoria, Gabriel Moreno and Ryne Nelson of the Diamondbacks react to a pop up that drops in for a hit in the seventh inning of their 10-0 Game 2 loss to the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park.
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Diamondbacks third baseman Evan Longoria Bryson Stott’s pop-up in front of teammate Gabriel Moreno that fell in for an infield single in the seventh inning of the Phillies’ win.
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Stott was credited with a single and later scored the Phillies’ 10th run of the game on a Nick Castellanos sacrifice fly.

It was a head-scratching decision from Longoria, a three-time Gold Glove winner with the Tampa Bay Rays.

“Longoria was content to let Nelson catch it,” TBS play-by-play announcer Brian Anderson said. “Pitchers are almost always told to evacuate the premises. And Longoria just let him ease over and that one falls.”

Evan Longoria (right) and Ryne Nelson reacts to a ball that Bryson Stott’s pop up drops in for a hit in the seventh inning.
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It’s been a difficult series for Arizona, who have been outscored 15-3 heading into the eighth inning of the second game.

“Look, we could be playing on the moon. Everybody is talking about coming into this (loud Philadelphia) environment, and I don’t care,” manager Torey Lovullo said after the game. “We have to play better baseball. Everybody has to be better. You can start with the manager and then trickle all the way down through the entire team.”

The Diamondbacks swept both the Brewers and the Dodgers before running into a Phillies team that has lost just one game in these playoffs thus far.

— with AP

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