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Phillies vs. Braves highlights, score: Bryce Harper hits two of Philly's six homers, pushes Atlanta to brink

The Philadelphia Phillies are one win away from the National League Championship Series. Wednesday night at Citizens Bank Park, the Phillies rode two Bryce Harper home runs and six homers overall to an 10-2 win (box score) over the Atlanta Braves in the Game 3 of the Division Series. Philadelphia leads the best-of-five series 2-1. They can punch their ticket to the NLCS on Thursday.

Truth be told, the Phillies have been the better team throughout the NLDS outside the final four innings of Game 2. Those last four innings in Game 2 count and they won the Braves that game, but Philadelphia has played very well this series, and the 2-1 lead is well-earned. Here now are our takeaways from Philadelphia's Game 3 win.

1. Bryce Harper is inevitable

It did not take Harper long to atone for what can be called overly aggressive baserunning on the final play of Game 2. In his second at-bat of Game 3, Harper launched a go-ahead three-run home run that brought that house down. He stared down Orlando Arcia as he rounded the bases too. To the action footage:

That is about as aesthetically pleasing as a home run can get. A hanger from Bryce Elder, a sweet swing from Harper, a great call from Brian Anderson on TBS, and camera work that made it look like the ball was going to land halfway up the upper deck. Sorry, Braves fans, but that is pretty much the perfect baseball highlight.

Harper's home run was the big blow in Philadelphia's six-run third inning -- Nick Castellanos clubbed a solo home run and J.T. Realmuto doubled in two runs -- and he added a second homer in the fifth. That was a solo shot. Through three NLDS games, Harper is 5 for 11 with three homers, three walks, and one strikeout.

This is Year 5 of Harper's 13-year, $330 million contract and he has been worth every penny to date. He's won an MVP and, more importantly, he's come up huge in the postseason. Last year Harper hit the series-winning home run in the NLCS. In Game 3, he had the dagger against the best team in baseball. Harper is, always and forever, That Dude.

2. Castellanos had two homers, too

Brandon Marsh and Trea Turner went deep as well. The Phillies became the second team ever to hit six home runs in a postseason game, joining the Chicago Cubs in Game 3 of the 2015 NLDS against the St. Louis Cardinals. Kyle Schwarber went deep that night but not Wednesday night.

Philadelphia has eight home runs in the NLDS. The Braves have two. Remember, Atlanta led baseball with 307 home runs during the regular season, 58 more than the second-place Los Angeles Dodgers. They've yet to find their long ball stroke in the NLDS. Credit to the Phillies and their pitching staff for keeping the game's best home run team in the ballpark.

3. Nola gave the Phillies exactly what they needed

It was not the best regular season for Aaron Nola, who had a 4.46 ERA with his lowest strikeout rate in six years. He was terrific against the Miami Marlins in the Wild Card Series though (seven scoreless innings), and, in NLDS Game 3, he held the highest scoring offense in baseball to one run in 5 2/3 innings. Nola struck out nine.

Nola came one out short of completing six full innings -- only 38 starters completed six innings against Atlanta during the regular season -- and that allowed manager Rob Thomson to avoid dipping too deep into his bullpen, All the high leverage guys will be fresh behind Ranger Suárez in Game 4. Expect Thomson to be very aggressive with his bullpen Thursday.

Getting back to Nola though, his stellar postseason comes after a so-so regular season and before he hits the open market. His free agency will be fascinating. Nola's a legacy Phillie, but he's endured a huge career workload and there are red flags (declining velocity, declining strikeouts, etc.). For now, Nola's been fantastic in the postseason. He was excellent in Game 3.

4. Smith-Shawver saved the Braves' bullpen

Because of that six-run third inning, Elder went only 2 2/3 innings in Game 3, so Atlanta needed 5 1/3 innings from their bullpen. Rookie AJ Smith-Shawver soaked up 2 2/3 of those innings and, even while surrendering three solo homers, he saved the rest of the bullpen. That puts the Braves in the best position to win a must-win Game 4 on Thursday. Nice job by the 20-year-old in his postseason debut. Smith-Shawver started this season in High Class-A.

5. The Phillies are in the driver's seat

Philadelphia leads the best-of-five series 2-1 and can punch its ticket to the NLCS on Thursday. Because of the unusual schedule -- off-days after Games 1 and 2 -- each team can bring their Game 1 starter back in Game 4 on normal rest. That means Spencer Strider for Atlanta and Suárez for the Phillies. The Braves won 104 games and had the best record in baseball. Now they're one loss away from going home for the winter.


Below is our running commentary and analysis from Game 3.

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Live updates
 

That said, still a lot of innings to go and the Braves can put runs on the board real quick.

 

Boat race is on

Realmuto doubles to left-center field and it's now 6-1 in the bottom of the third.

 

A notable Harper statistic

Courtesy of CBS Sports HQ's research team, here are those individuals with the most career postseason home runs in Phillies franchise history:

  • Jayson Werth: 11
  • Chase Utley: 10
  • Bryce Harper: 8*
  • Ryan Howard: 8
 

Harper takes full advantage of hanger

Elder went slider-heavy against Harper in the first inning before elevating a four-seam fastball for the swinging strikeout. This time around, he worked him with sinkers before turning to the slider. Unfortunately for Elder, he hung the decisive pitch and golly did Harper make him pay for it.

Take a look:

According to Statcast, Harper's home run had a 109.5 mph exit velocity and carried 408 feet. 

Harper, by the way, appeared to give the eye to Orlando Arcia as he trekked around the bases. Arcia reportedly joked about Harper's game-ending out on the basepaths in Game 2. Harper, evidently, took umbrage to such a thing.

The Phillies have since added a pair of additional runs on a J.T. Realmuto double:

It's 6-1 Phils heading into the fourth.

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Harper homers, it's 4-1 Phillies

Elder hung a slider and Harper crushed it.

 

Elder went slider-heavy before elevating for the strikeout the first time he faced Harper.

 

Turner keeps the inning alive with an infield single

Riley couldn't corral it and Arcia got it on the grass but had no play. Runners on the corners, two out, Harper up.

 

Castellanos home run ties the game

The Braves' 1-0 lead in Game 3 was short-lived. Phillies right fielder Nick Castellanos went deep to start the bottom of the third.

If that looks familiar, it's because Castellanos went deep twice off of Bryce Elder on Sept. 20. 

Castellanos homered 29 times in the regular season, but his power is an added dimension to the Phillies' offense compared to last year. Remember, last season he hit only 13 homers with a career-low .389 slugging percentage. In his 17 playoff games, he hit .185/.232/.246 with zero homers. 

This was the second career home run of Castellanos' playoff career. His other one? Game 2 of the 2014 ALDS off of Wei-Yin Chen. 

 

Braves bullpen is already up, so Snitker is at least aware of the limitations.

 

One concern of Elder's start is Snitker trying to get too much from him. Too early to describe this in that manner, but Phillies are making some hard contact this inning.

 

Nick Castellanos' son is here

 

Castellanos hops the fence

It's 1-1.

 

Nola gets Ozuna swinging

Tripled-up on curves with two strikes. Third one got the desired result. Still, it's 1-0 Braves.

 

Braves strike first

For the first time this series, the Braves drew first blood. In the top of the third inning with one out, leadoff man Ronald Acuña Jr. shot a liner to right field and it was far enough away from Nick Castellanos that Acuña was able to make it to second. Call it a "hustle double." Ozzie Albies followed with a single to right field that easily plated Acuña for the first run of the game.

The Phillies won Game 1 by a count of 3-0 and had a 4-0 lead going to the sixth inning in Game 2, so seeing the Braves jump on top here in the third inning is a first for the NLDS. 

Braves starting pitcher Bryce Elder had been terrible down the stretch, but he has struck out four through two perfect innings so far in Game 3. 

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Nola may have gone to the sinker down one too many times versus Acuña. Peppered him with it to start the game. Threw three more that at-bat. The last one went to right for a double.

 

Acuña doubles

That's his first hit of the postseason.

 

On Sept. 20, Elder faced 18 Phillies and struck out zero. He's struck out four of six so far today.

 

Through two innings

Nola and Elder both look sharp through two frames. The hardest hit ball so far is just 93.9 mph. Eight of the 12 outs in the game have been strikeouts. The two weakest-hit balls in play (from Austin Riley and Matt Olson) are the game's only two hits. Baseball!

 

Elder does indeed match Nola

We're through two innings. Both starters dealing.

 

Nola tears through the second

Including consecutive strikeouts on his curve. We'll see if Elder can match him.

 

Orlando Arcia gets the loudest boos of the day

So far. Arcia, who reportedly laughed about Bryce Harper's base-running mishap to end Game 2, struck out to end the top of the second to the delight of the Philly faithful. Aaron Nola has four Ks through two innings. He only had three strikeouts in seven innings against the Marlins in the Wild Card Series.

 

Elder elevates a heater to get Harper swinging

Clean first for him, which has to be an encouraging sign for the Braves.

 

Atlanta's first inning numbers this year were bonkers

 

For whatever it's worth, I had several talent evaluators I trust tell me they preferred Nola to Blake Snell. 

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Nola with a scoreless first inning

Allowed a bloop single to Austin Riley and an infield single to Matt Olson, but nothing more. This might be Nola's final start with the Phillies. He'll be a free agent after the season. It will be a fascinating free agency. He's a legacy guy with the Phillies but there are some red flags (declining velocity, declining strikeouts, huge workload, etc.).

 

Nola has been using his curveball to keep batters honest and to steal strikes.

 

As my dad likes to say, "looks like a line drive in the box score!" The Braves have two of those.

 

Olson follows it up with a pool-shot single to third base

Nola now in a bit of a pickle despite not making bad pitches or giving up hard contact.

 

Riley golfs an inner sinker to center

We have our first baserunner of the day.

 

Hey guys, is game 3 underway?

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