King Cole Puts Phils 4 Games Up on Braves

Hamels goes 8 strong, Phillies beat Atlanta

King Cole wore his crown on the mound Monday night.

Cole Hamels had another outstanding outing, and the Phillies took advantage of an error by Jason Heyward to beat the Atlanta Braves 3-1, increasing their lead in the NL East to four games.

The two-time NL champion Phillies won their eighth straight game and improved to 42-15 since July 21, when they trailed the Braves by seven games.

Hamels (12-10) allowed one run and six hits, striking out six in eight innings to win his fifth straight start -- a career-best. Brad Lidge finished for his 24th save in 29 chances.

Brandon Beachy (0-1) gave up three runs -- one earned -- and four hits in 4 1/3 innings in his major league debut. He was a late fill-in for Jair Jurrjens, who is still nursing a sore right knee.

Shane Victorino led off Philadelphia's fifth with a hard liner to right-center. He hustled into third after the ball glanced off Heyward's glove. Heyward made a long run and seemingly had trouble with the wind or the curve of the ball, but it was ruled an error.

Placido Polanco's RBI grounder to shortstop drove in Victorino with the go-ahead run.

Chase Utley followed with a single. He stole second and advanced to third on catcher Brian McCann's throwing error. Eric O'Flaherty entered and walked Ryan Howard and Jayson Werth to load the bases. Raul Ibanez grounded out to shortstop to score Utley for a 3-1 lead.

A crowd of 45,256 was the 118th straight sellout at Citizens Bank Park. A fan wearing a red spandex costume and mask ran onto the field and briefly eluded security guards during the seventh inning before Braves left fielder Matt Diaz helped tackle him.

The Phillies adjusted their rotation so their three aces would pitch this series. Next up are Roy Halladay and Roy Oswalt.

Hamels did his job. The 2008 World Series MVP is pitching better than he did when he led Philadelphia to its second championship two years ago.

Hamels has a 0.49 ERA in his last five starts, and a career-low 2.93 ERA this season. Hamels would have a better record with some more run support. He allowed two earned runs or less in five of his losses.

Despite a slew of injuries this season, the Phillies are primed to win their fourth straight division title and are trying to become the first NL team in 66 years to capture three consecutive pennants.


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