Phillies make history with bizarre walk-off, extra-inning win vs. Red Sox

Phillies make history with bizarre walk-off, extra-inning win vs. Red SoxNew Foto - Phillies make history with bizarre walk-off, extra-inning win vs. Red Sox

ThePhiladelphia Philliesearned a historic walk-off win against theBoston Red Soxon Monday, July 21 in the most absurd possible way. With the score tied 2-2 after nine innings and theRed Soxfailing to score in the top of the 10th inning, thePhilliesbegan the bottom of the frame with Brad Marsh, who had made the last out in the bottom of the ninth, on second, per Major League Baseball's extra-inning rules. Otto Kemp, who squared up to bunt Marsh to third, instead took first base on a four-pitch walk. Red Sox pitcher Jordan Hicks then threw a wild pitch to move the runners to second and third before the Red Sox intentionally walked Max Kepler to try to set up a force out at home. That brought Edmundo Sosa to the plate with the bases loaded and nobody out. On the fifth pitch of Sosa's at-bat, the Phillies second baseman appeared to check his swing on a ball outside, but the Phillies dugout immediately challenged. Not the check swing or the ball-strike call, but for something entirely different – catcher's interference. Moments later the catcher's interference was confirmed, giving thePhillies a walk-off 3-2 winto the delight of the Philadelphia crowd at Citizens Bank Ballpark. BASEBALL IS AMAZING!pic.twitter.com/DejHWQJpFA — Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies)July 22, 2025 According to MLB's Sarah Langs, it marked just the second walk-off catcher's interference in at least the divisional era (1969), joining a Los Angeles Dodgers victory over the Cincinnati Reds onAug. 1, 1971– with Hall of Famer Johnny Bench behind home plate for the Reds. The Phillies on Monday night achieved their victory with no balls put in play, only making contact once in the bottom of the 10th when Sosa fouled off the fourth pitch of his at-bat, right before the catcher's interference. Max Lazar earned the win for Philadelphia after striking out two in a scoreless 10th. Zach Wheeler started for the Phillies and struck out 10 in six innings, while giving up both Red Sox runs. Walker Buehler started for Boston, going seven innings and allowing two runs, though one was unearned. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Phillies top Red Sox on catcher's interference in walk-off win in 10th

 

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