Phillies Lose to Nationals, 8-1

Stephen Strasburg's precious, expensive right arm is hurting again.

Strasburg was injured for the second time in a month and exited early, this time wincing with a strained tendon in his right forearm, as the Washington Nationals beat the Philadelphia Phillies 8-1 Saturday night.

Strasburg left with one out in the fifth inning. Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo said the young ace would have an MRI exam Sunday in Washington.

“You're always concerned when your pitcher leaves in the middle of the game, but we'll see what the MRI says and we'll react accordingly,'' Rizzo said.

“We're going to view it on Monday and we'll get back to you,'' he said.

Strasburg was making his third start since returning from a stint on the disabled list with inflammation in the back of his right shoulder. He grimaced and shook his right wrist after a pitch to Dominic Brown and was removed without any warmup tosses - the
Nationals were taking no risks.

Nationals pitching coach Steve McCatty slapped the dugout wall in anger after Strasburg was yanked, another setback for a pitcher with so much promise.

Strasburg was in control until he got hurt, striking out six in 4 1-3 innings while allowing two runs and a run.

Craig Stammen relieved Strasburg with the Nationals leading the Phillies 5-1. Doug Slaten (3-1) pitched 1 2-3 shutout innings for the win.

Roger Bernadina hit a three-run homer, Ian Desmond had four hits and Ivan Rodriguez and Adam Kennedy each had two RBIs.

For the last-place Nationals, the win was overshadowed by the sight of Strasburg leaving the mound.

Manager Jim Riggleman immediately left the dugout to check on his ace almost as soon as the ball landed in catcher Ivan Rodriguez's mitt.

“You hate to see anybody show some signs that they're a little tender out there,” Riggleman said. “Certainly with Stephen, we're going to be a little careful.”

Strasburg's first pitch of the game was a 97 mph fastball to Jimmy Rollins. Four pitches later, Strasburg struck out the former NL MVP looking on a buckling 83 mph curve.

Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said before the game he couldn't wait to get his first live look at the super-hyped prospect.

“I didn't want to see him leave that way,” Manuel said. “He's got tremendous stuff and command.”

Strasburg was staked to a 3-0 lead before he threw a pitch. Phillies starter Kyle Kendrick (8-6) was hit hard all night. He walked Kennedy with the bases loaded, and allowed a two-RBI single to Rodriguez that made it 3-0.

Kennedy added an RBI single in the third and Strasburg hustled down the line on a force play to beat Rollins' throw, avoid a double play and drive in a run for a 5-0 lead Kendrick's erratic season as the No. 5 starter continued with a nine-hit, five-run outing over 5 2-3 shaky innings. He was loudly booed several times by the Phillies fans.

Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard singled off Strasburg in his first at-bat following a three-week layoff with a sprained left ankle. Howard's RBI groundout in the fourth was the only run scored against Strasburg.

Howard said he hoped Strasburg had a ``speedy recovery.''

Howard was robbed of an extra-base hit in the ninth on a way-up-there against the wall catch by Beradina in left. Bernadina jumped as if he was trying to dunk a basketball _ and snagged the ball.

Bernadina’s eighth homer was a liner to right off Chad Durbin in the ninth.
      
 

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