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SpaceX launches first flight of cross-country Starlink doubleheader

SpaceX ended January with and will begin February with two Starlink missions. These launches will occur two days apart from separate launch sites.

The first such mission — Starlink Group 2-6 — lifted off from Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, on Tuesday, Jan. 31 at 8:15 AM PST (16:15 UTC) after a delay from Monday “to allow additional time for pre-launch checkouts.” This will be followed by the Starlink Group 5-3 mission, which will launch from the historic Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, which is currently scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 2 at 2:37 AM EST (07:37 UTC).

These two missions will serve as the sixth and seventh Falcon 9 launches of the year, and the seventh and eighth overall launches for SpaceX in 2023. Both flights will utilize flight-proven Falcon 9 boosters and feature booster recovery attempts.

Starlink Group 2-6 from Vandenberg used Falcon core B1071-7, which previously supported the launches of two missions for the United States National Reconnaissance Office (NROL-87 and NROL-85), SARah-1 for Airbus, SWOT for NASA and CNES, and two other Starlink flights. Following its launch on Tuesday morning, the first stage landed on the autonomous spaceport drone ship (ASDS) Of Course I Still Love You, stationed approximately 647 km downrange in the Pacific Ocean. The ship NRC Quest was also in position to retrieve the fairing halves for reuse.

Starlink Group 5-3 from Kennedy Space Center will utilize Falcon booster B1069-5, which has launched the CRS-24, Starlink Group 4-23, Hotbird-13F, and OneWeb #15 missions. ASDS A Shortfall of Gravitas will be on hand for first-stage recovery at an approximate downrange distance of 665 km within the Atlantic Ocean.

The launch from California — Group 2-6 — will see the deployment of 49 Starlink satellites into an orbit inclined 70 degrees with respect to the equator, at a final altitude of 570 km. The initial parking orbit was 327 km by 339 km, with Falcon 9 flying a south-southeastern trajectory.

The 570 km final orbit corresponds to the Starlink constellation’s “second shell”: an eventual grouping of 720 spacecraft spread across 36 planes, with 20 spacecraft per plane. Tuesday’s launch was only the third launch to target this second shell, as the Group 2-2, 2-3, and 2-5 missions have yet to launch. The first launch to Shell 2, Group 2-1, was deployed in September 2021.

Rendering of an ION Satellite Carrier vehicle in the midst of deploying CubeSats into low Earth orbit. (Credit: D-Orbit)

The Starlink spacecraft was not alone in the fairing for the Group 2-6 mission. An ION Satellite Carrier orbital transfer vehicle (SCV009 Eclectic Elena), developed and operated by the Italian company D-Orbit, served as a rideshare payload on Tuesday’s flight.

The ION Satellite Carrier platform features a customizable dispenser capable of hosting a combination of CubeSats of varying sizes. Throughout a mission, the vehicle can release its payloads individually, changing orbital parameters between one deployment event and the next. This adds a level of flexibility for missions that cannot be served by standard rideshare launches.

Following the launch of Starlink Group 2-6, SpaceX turns its attention to the East Coast for the launch of the Group 5-3 mission. It is expected that this mission will deploy a batch of Starlink satellites into an orbit with an inclination of 43 degrees. This means that Falcon 9 will head on a southeastern trajectory out of Florida — a common practice in the winter months as rougher seas to the north tend to complicate recovery efforts.

The satellites themselves are expected to be similar to the version 1.5 satellites that have been launched in the past few years.

A typical Starlink mission begins with the liftoff of Falcon 9 from its launchpad. The first stage’s nine Merlin 1D engines begin their ignition sequence at the T-3 second mark in the countdown, allowing them to achieve maximum thrust and pass final checks before committing to launch.

A previous mission, Starlink Group 4-37, lifts off from LC-39A in December 2022. (Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF)

After liftoff, Falcon 9 climbs away from the launch site, pitching downrange as it maneuvers along its pre-programmed trajectory. Approximately 72 seconds into the flight, the vehicle passes through Max-Q — the point of maximum dynamic pressure, where mechanical stresses on the rocket are the greatest.

The nine first-stage engines continue to power Falcon 9 for the first two minutes and 27 seconds of the mission, until the time of main engine cutoff (MECO), at which point all nine engines shut down near-simultaneously. Stage separation normally occurs four seconds later, with the ignition of the second stage’s Merlin Vacuum engine coming about seven seconds after staging.

While the second stage continues onward to orbit with its payload, the first stage coasts upward to apogee — the highest point of its trajectory — before beginning its trip back to Earth. The booster refines its course toward the landing zone before attempting to softly touch down on the deck of one of SpaceX’s three drone ships. Using a drone ship for booster recovery allows SpaceX to launch a more massive payload on Falcon 9 than it would be able to on a return-to-launch-site mission.

In the meantime, the second stage carries on with the primary mission. After stage separation and Merlin Vacuum engine ignition, the payload fairing halves are jettisoned, thereby exposing the satellites to space. Much akin to the Falcon 9 first stage, the fairing halves can be recovered and reused, using a system of thrusters and parachutes to make a controlled descent into the ocean where they will be picked up by a recovery vessel.

Second-stage engine cutoff (SECO-1) typically takes place just over eight and a half minutes into the flight. Other engine burns to modify the deployment orbit will follow if the mission requires it, such as on Group 2-6 which used a second burn before deploying SCV009 Eclectic Elena and the Starlink satellites.

The Starlink satellites are deployed into a low orbit so any faulty or non-functional spacecraft will quickly re-enter the atmosphere and be destroyed. Working satellites will raise themselves into a more stable orbit, where they will undergo checkouts before heading to their final operational orbits.

After spacecraft separation, the second stage will perform a deorbit burn for proper disposal, ensuring that reentry takes place over the ocean.

The Starship vehicle and Super Heavy booster, undergoing a Wet Dress Rehearsal fueling test at Starbase. (Credit: SpaceX)

With two successful launches, Falcon 9 will reach a total of 200 orbital flights, with a launch success rate of 99%. These flights form part of a fast start to the year for SpaceX, which, according to CEO Elon Musk, is aiming for the ambitious goal of achieving up to 100 orbital launches in 2023. This would exceed its current record of 61 launches within a calendar year, set in 2022.

In addition to Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy, SpaceX hopes to introduce Starship into its orbital catalog, starting this year with the first test flight of the full stack (the Starship vehicle and its Super Heavy booster). At this time, Starship is still undergoing readiness tests at the company’s Starbase testing and production facility in South Texas, with a launch date yet to be formally announced.

(Lead image: Falcon 9 lifts off from SLC-4E on the Starlink Group 2-6 mission. Credit: SpaceX)

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SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets set for Starlink double-header

A pair of SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets are on track to round out the first month of 2023 and kick off the second with a Starlink double-header.

“To complete pre-launch checkouts,” SpaceX delayed its last launch of the month by 24 hours. The first Falcon 9 rocket will launch Starlink 2-6 and a D-Orbit rideshare payload no earlier than 8:29 am PST (16:29 UTC) on Monday, January 30th. The mission will lift off from SpaceX’s Vandenberg Space Force Base (VSFB) SLC-4E pad and head southeast, skirting the California and Mexico coast. In case of bad weather or a minor technical issue, a backup window is available at 12:31 pm PST.

As few as 35.5 or 39.5 hours later, a second Falcon 9 rocket will lift off from SpaceX’s Florida-based NASA Kennedy Space Center LC-39A pad around 3:02 am EST on Tuesday, February 1st.

Starlink 2-6

Kicking off the pair, Starlink 2-6 will be SpaceX’s ninth Starlink rideshare mission since the company began manifesting third-party payloads on its internet satellite launches in June 2020. Falcon 9 will launch the mission’s main payload – a batch of 49 Starlink V1.5 satellites – to a semi-polar orbit that will see them cross Earth’s equator at an angle of 70 degrees. Ordinarily, the mission would carry 51 Starlinks, but SpaceX has removed a pair of satellites to make room for Italian space logistics company D-Orbit’s ION SCV009 spacecraft.

ION weighs around 160 kilograms (350 lb) on its own and is roughly the size of a large oven. D-Orbit designed the spacecraft to host fixed payloads and deploy rideshare satellites in orbit. It also has a propulsion system that allows it to provide “last-mile delivery services,” offering rideshare customers the ability to tweak the orbit their satellite ends up in. Space tugs like ION aim to give satellite owners some of the benefits of a dedicated rocket launch (custom orbit selection in particular) while retaining most of the cost savings rideshare launches enable.

A render of a D-Orbit ION vehicle.

After reaching orbit, Falcon 9 will deploy ION first, use thrusters to spin itself end over end, and then release all 49 Starlink satellites simultaneously. The spinning stage’s centrifugal force causes the satellite stack to naturally spread out within several hours. The satellites then use reaction wheels to stabilize their orientation, deploy solar panels to begin charging their batteries, and eventually use ion thrusters to climb to operational orbits.

ION SCV009 will attempt to test a new satellite separation system built by EBAD and demonstrate its ability to operate in very low Earth orbit (VLEO). The spacecraft will potentially lower itself to an altitude of 270 kilometers (170 mi).

Starlink 5-3

Starlink 5-3 will carry no rideshare payloads and will likely be nearly identical to Starlink 5-2, which SpaceX successfully launched on January 26th. The latest mission’s stack of 56 Starlink V1.5 satellites weighed 17.4 tons and was the heaviest payload SpaceX has ever launched. Starlink 5-3 is targeting the same orbit and will likely also carry 56 satellites.

Pad 39A last supported SpaceX’s fifth Falcon Heavy launch on January 15th and has been quickly converted back to its single-core Falcon 9 configuration for Starlink 5-3. After the Starlink mission, Pad 39A has at least two Dragon spacecraft launches scheduled before SpaceX will need to convert it back to a triple-booster configuration for Falcon Heavy’s sixth launch.

SpaceX is scheduled to launch Crew Dragon’s Crew-6 astronaut transport mission no earlier than February 26th, and Cargo Dragon’s Spx-27 cargo delivery mission on March 11th. Falcon Heavy is scheduled to launch the giant ViaSat-3 communications satellite no earlier than March 24th.

Tune in below around 8:25 am PST (16:25 UTC) to watch SpaceX Starlink 2-6 launch live.

SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets set for Starlink double-header








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Meteor shower double-header in store for Colorado stargazers this month

Colorado stargazers have a lot to look forward to this December, with two meteor showers set to dazzle the night sky before year’s end. 

First up, the Geminid meteor shower – which is widely regarded as the most active shower of the year – is set to Peak on the night of December 13 and into the next morning.

Geminids get their name because they appear to shoot from the constellation Gemini. 

On typical years, the shower can produce 120 meteor per hour, but according to NASA, a waning gibbous moon could make them harder to view. Experts predict 30-40 meteors per hour to be visible to the naked human eye this year. 

The weaker Ursid meteor shower is expected to peak between the night of December 22 and the early hours of the following morning. This shower typically only produces between 5-10 meteors per hour. 

The shower is named for the Ursa Minor constellation because the meteors appear to radiate from it. 

Despite its usual tameness, the Ursid meteor shower has wowed skywatchers with some genuinely remarkable displays over the years. In 1945 and 1986, for example, up to 120 and 90 meteors per hour (opens in new tab) were observed, respectively,” a report from Space.com said. 

For the best view, find a spot with limited light pollution. Keep in mind that it’s getting cold in Colorado, so prepare for the potential of dramatic weather changes. 

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MLB Wild Card: Phillies’ magic number at 3 after doubleheader split and Brewers late loss

WASHINGTON — This is what a playoff race looks like behind the scenes in real time.

The Phillies had just rolled over the Washington Nationals, 8-2, in the second game of a doubleheader Saturday night to go up a half-game on the Milwaukee Brewers in the battle for the final National League wild-card playoff berth.

A time zone away, the Brewers were leading by a run in the top of the ninth inning, but the visiting Miami Marlins were threatening.

A shirtless Rhys Hoskins emerged from the trainer’s room, cell phone in hand, riveted to the action from Milwaukee.

Bryan De La Cruz was at the plate for Miami with runners on second and third. Devin Williams was on the mound for Milwaukee, trying to protect a one-run lead.

The count went full. Hoskins wondered aloud what pitch Williams would throw De La Cruz. Williams threw a changeup and …

“Come on! Yeah!” Hoskins shouted as he watched De La Cruz stroke a two-run single to left field to score the tying and go-ahead runs.

Shouts of joy were heard from all reaches of the Phillies’ clubhouse, from inside the shower, from back in the trainer’s room.

“Go Feesh!” someone with a Spanish accent shouted.

The Marlins, who had tormented the Phillies so many times in recent years, helped them on this occasion. Their 4-3 win over Milwaukee, coupled with the Phillies’ win Saturday night, left the Phillies with a full game lead over the Brewers with four to play.

The Phillies’ magic number for making the postseason for the first time since 2011 is down to three. The Marlins have helped the Phillies with late rallies against the Brewers two of the last three nights.

 

Kyle Schwarber watched the Marlins’ rally in the trainer’s room. Moments later, he emerged with a smile on his face.

“Baseball is fun,” he said. “That’s why we all say you have to enjoy this. A lot of people aren’t in this position right now. A lot of people are making their offseason plans right now and we’re trying to make sure we’re not doing that.”

What a day of baseball it was for the Phillies. They played poorly in the opener and lost 13-4 to the worst team in baseball. The Phils played poor defense in the second inning of that game and it led to five runs. In the big picture, the loss dropped the Phils into a tie with Milwaukee.

In between games, Schwarber said the Phillies regrouped. 

“Obviously, we needed to play better,” he said.

But Schwarber tried to spread a more calming message, one he learned as a young player with the Chicago Cubs: Postseason chases don’t happen all the time. Ditch the pressure. Enjoy it.

Then he came out for the second game and put his money where his mouth was. He hit the second pitch of the game over the right-field wall. It was one of five homers the Phillies hit against right-hander Tommy Romero, who was making just his second big-league start. Schwarber hit his league-leading 43rd and 44th.

“I think it got us right back on track,” Noah Syndergaard said of Schwarber’s first-inning homer.

“I just tried to execute pitches and it was fun watching the offense really explode and the guys make plays behind me.”

Alec Bohm, Brandon Marsh and Matt Vierling also homered for the Phillies. 

Syndergaard, in his first start in two weeks, pitched 5⅔ shutout innings and got the win. 

“Impressive,” manager Rob Thomson said.

“Massive,” Schwarber said of Syndergaard’s effort.

The Phillies, 15-3 against Washington this season, dodged rain drops all day and night to get in the doubleheader.

Zack Wheeler is scheduled to face Patrick Corbin in the series finale on Sunday afternoon and the Phillies will need some cooperation from the weather because it’s vital that the game be played. Rain is in the forecast and a postponement would push Wheeler’s turn back to Monday in Houston and that would prevent him from starting the postseason opener on Friday — should the Phils get there.

The Phillies timed Wheeler’s return from the injured list in mid-September so he’d align to start the postseason opener. If he doesn’t pitch Sunday, he would line up to pitch the second game of the postseason. Aaron Nola is Monday’s scheduled starter in Houston. If the Phils are rained out Sunday, Nola would move back to Tuesday. He could potentially skip that start and be used in the postseason opener if the Phils can wrap up a postseason berth on Monday.

 

There’s a lot to this. The bottom line: The Phils need to play Sunday. 

And, of course, they need to win.

And if the Marlins have one more in them up in Milwaukee, the Phils will surely take it. 

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Phillies vs. Nationals rained out, doubleheader set for Saturday

WASHINGTON — The second game of Friday’s doubleheader between the Phillies and Washington Nationals has been postponed because of rain.

The teams are now scheduled to play a separate admission doubleheader Saturday at 1 and 7 p.m. Kyle Gibson will start Game 1 and Noah Syndergaard will start Game 2.

A single game is scheduled for Sunday at 1 p.m.

The Phillies won the first game of Friday’s doubleheader, 5-1, on the strength of Bailey Falter’s six shutout innings and Rhys Hoskins’ two RBIs.

The Phillies lead Milwaukee by a game for the final NL wild-card spot. Milwaukee is playing Friday night. The Phils’ magic number to close out the Brewers and reach the playoffs for the first time since 2011 is 5.

 

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Monday night doubleheader produces 20.6 million total viewers during overlap

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It’s harder than ever to sift through the spin and the smoke when it comes to viewership numbers. ESPN and ABC had plenty of extra fodder for spinning and smoking on Monday night, with an overlapping doubleheader.

Here are the basic, raw numbers. Titans-Bills on ESPN averaged 7.9 million viewers on ESPN, ESPN2, and ESPN Deportes. Vikings-Eagles on ABC and ESPN+ averaged 12.9 million viewers. Neither number is all that phenomenal, which likely has something to do with the fact that neither game was all that compelling.

The P.R. spin doctors at Disney have whipped up a bigger number regarding the total viewership during the inherently frustrating (for many) two-game overlap. The two games being played at once generated an average audience of 20.6 million on all networks. That exceeds the average audience for the entirety of the Week One Broncos-Seahawks game.

It should. It was two games. Four fan bases. And during the period of overlap, the game being played on the larger network (Vikings-Eagles) was not yet decided.

The question becomes whether two games played back to back could do better, especially with a six-hour ManningCast marathon to go along with the consecutive games. Maybe ESPN and ABC (working with the NFL) should try that next year.

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Mets sweep doubleheader from Pirates, retake first place

PITTSBURGH — Once again, reports of the Mets’ demise have been greatly exaggerated.
 
Between games of Wednesday’s doubleheader at PNC Park, Mets starter Chris Bassitt went out of his way to reference the idea (which he called “obviously a little extreme”) that the Mets’ three-game losing streak marked the beginning of an irrepressible spiral. The reality is much different, as Bassitt, Jacob deGrom and a resurgent offense demonstrated throughout a doubleheader sweep.
 
Behind seven shutout innings from deGrom, the Mets won the nightcap, 10-0, after enjoying a 5-1 victory in Game 1.
 
“I’m sure the world was going crazy,” Bassitt said of the club’s recent skid. “But we’re fine.”

The Mets came away from the day, and from Pittsburgh, holding a half-game lead over the Braves in the National League East, after they had briefly dipped into a tie with their rivals atop the division. And while those clubs may continue to jockey for position over the remainder of the season, the takeaway from Wednesday’s doubleheader was that the Mets are not simply going to shrivel. They are on a 102-win pace, which would be the second-best record in franchise history. They have played remarkably consistent baseball from April through September.

And they are now featuring a healthy deGrom, which may be the most critical aspect of all. Looking as dominant as ever against one of the NL’s lightest-hitting teams, deGrom retired 12 straight batters at one point, becoming the first pitcher in the last 40 years to string together at least that many consecutive outs in six straight outings. deGrom is also now tied for second all-time with 38 consecutive starts of allowing three or fewer earned runs.

“It’s like a video game,” catcher James McCann said. “Press what button you want, and it goes right to the [spot].”

If momentum is the next day’s starting pitcher, as the old baseball adage goes, then the Mets never really needed to worry following three straight losses to the last-place Nationals and Pirates. It’s that formula that has allowed the Mets to become one of only two Major League teams not to lose more than three games in a row at any point this season. Their magic number to clinch a playoff berth is 11, giving them a chance to wrap up that business by the middle of this month. In many ways, things have never really stopped going swimmingly.

New York’s primary problem is the Braves, the only other team that’s managed to avoid losing four in a row over the course of the season. But the Mets aren’t playing the Braves right now, which means they’re not a pressing problem. When asked Wednesday if he had stayed up until 1 a.m. ET to watch Atlanta claim a share of the divisional lead for the first time this season, manager Buck Showalter laughed and shook his head.

“It’s about us,” the Mets’ skipper said.

Showalter did admit to staying up late for other reasons, which were solely internal. He fretted over Max Scherzer’s impending assignment to the injured list, and how he might build out the rotation in Scherzer’s absence. He thought about the other players in his clubhouse nursing minor aches and pains, and also of his offense, which was slumping as badly as at any point this season.

Then Showalter caught what sleep he could, returned to PNC Park, and watched the Mets outscore the Pirates by 14 runs over two games to restore order to their universe.

“The mentality hasn’t changed,” said third baseman Eduardo Escobar, who homered in Game 1 and had four hits in Game 2. “We come in happy. We come in excited. We come in united. Honestly, it doesn’t really matter what’s going on in the other games. We have the control.”

If the Mets take care of their own business, they will win the division, plain and simple. Coming into the season, shortstop Francisco Lindor spoke often about how he expected the NL East to be a tight race between the defending World Series champion Braves and the much-improved Mets. Through 138 games, Lindor has seen nothing to sway his opinion.

“It should be a tight race the whole entire time,” said Lindor, who collected two hits and three RBIs in the nightcap victory. “They have a good team. The Phillies as well. Three teams are competing for the playoffs in this division. They have really good ballclubs. At the end of the day, let’s see if we can lose less than they do.”

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First Pitch: Cardinals postponed due to rain, set for double-header Thursday as make up | Cardinal Beat

The Cardinals Wednesday evening game against the Chicago Cubs has been postponed due to rain. The game will be made up Thursday at 12:15pm as part of a double-header with the originally scheduled game still taking place at 6:45PM.

_____________________________________________________________

Starting the day winners of four of their last five games, the Cardinals now sit just two games back of the Milwaukee Brewers for the division lead. They also begin the day on the outside looking in on the playoff hunt, half a game back from the Phillies. The Cardinals will send their ace to the mound looking for a series win against the Cubs.

After three days rest between the series in Washington, D.C. and with a lefty on the mound for the Cubs, Albert Pujols returns to the lineup for the Cardinals. Having a midseason resurgence at the plate, The Machine is still mashing lefties this season to the tune of a .339 batting average with an OPS of .931. He’s slotted to hit sixth tonight. 

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With Pujols DH’ing, Nolan Gorman will get the day off. Manager Oli Marmol indicated before the game that he is not worried about a potential issue of finding spots in the middle of the diamond between Gorman, Paul DeJong and Tommy Edman.

With the return of Tyler O’Neill to the lineup, the Cardinals are as close to their opening day roster as they have been in some time. Only Lars Nootbar hitting ninth and playing right field stands as an alteration to the starting nine. 

Lineups (Game now postponned)

CARDINALS (55-48)

CUBS (41-61)

Pitching Matchup

RHP Miles Mikolas (7-8, 2.87 ERA): Pitching for the first time on home soil since June 16, Mikolas has been significantly better at home this season, allowing hitters to only hit .142 when pitching at Busch Stadium. Mikolas is 4-2 when starting a home as well. 

LHP Justin Steele (4-7, 3.87 ERA): Making his 40th career appearance, youngster Steele has struggled in the dog days of summer. In his four starts this July, he’s averaged just four innings per start.

Wild Card

  • The Cardinals revamped their pitching staff at the trade deadline acquiring three new pitchers to bolster the staff: LHP Jordan Montgomery, LHP Jose Quintana and RHP Chris Stratton. 
  • The Cardinals have hit home runs in 11 straight games, the second longest active streak behind the New York Yankees. The Bronx Bombers will come to Busch Stadium this weekend.

Injury Report 

  • Left-hander Steven Matz was diagnosed with a torn MCL in his left knee after reaching for a ground ball back to the mound. After meeting with team doctors there is optimism he could avoid season-ending surgery and rehab the torn ligament, allowing him to return in September. The Cardinals expect to have a plan of action as to the severity of the injury when evaluated later in the week. (Updated July 26)
  • 1B/OF/DH Juan Yepez is on the 10-day IL with a forearm strain suffered a week ago Thursday night making a throw to the plate. He will begin throwing in a few days. (Updated July 22)
  • RHP Jack Flaherty (shoulder) has been moved to the 60-Day IL meaning he would not be available until late August, at the earliest. The transaction gives a structure to a spring training-like return for the right-hander and a rehab assignment that could take a month, if necessary. (Updated July 13)

Who’s Next

Thursday vs. the Chicago Cubs: Jose Quintana (first start as a Cardinal) vs. Marcus Stroman (3-5, 3.99 ERA)

Up Next

The Cardinals close their series against the Cubs before the New York Yankees comes to town this weekend. The Cardinals will play 12 of their next 15 games at Busch Stadium, welcoming the New York Yankees, Colorado Rockies and Milwaukee Brewers over that stretch.

Check back here throughout the evening for immediate coverage of the game and any news that surfaces from the Cardinals’ pre-game activities. We will publish expanded game coverage online Wednesday night, and also in the pages of Thursday’s Post-Dispatch.

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Phillies win a wild one in Washington to sweep doubleheader from Nats

WASHINGTON – The Phillies did not play perfect baseball in their doubleheader against the Washington Nationals, but that didn’t seem to matter as celebratory music blared in the clubhouse after 12 hours at the ballpark late Friday night.

The Phils survived a series of miscues that included leaving too many runners on base in the opener and costly bullpen walks, two base running mistakes and an almost-fatal fielding error in the nightcap to pull off a sweep of the Nationals.

The Phillies took the opener, 5-3. The second game was a wild one and the Phils won it, 8-7.

The two victories pushed the Phils to a season-best four games over .500 at 35-31. They have taken the first three games of this five-gamer and have now won five straight series for the first time since 2011, the last time they made the playoffs.

The Phils are 14-2 in June and 13-2 under new skipper Rob Thomson.

“Great day,” Thomson said when it was over.

He acknowledged that the team overcame some miscues during the long, hot, exhausting day.

“That’s just the character of this club,” he said. “They believe.”

The biggest reason the Phillies were able to cover their shortcomings in the nightcap – baserunning mistakes by Rhys Hoskins and Kyle Schwarber, two damaging walks and a wild pitch by Nick Nelson in the sixth, and an error by shortstop Didi Gregorius that allowed the Nats to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth – was that they did some little things so well.

 

J.T. Realmuto beat out a potential double-play ball to keep the eighth inning alive for pinch-hitter Bryce Harper to come off the bench and stroke a game-tying, two-run double to right-center.

Little things …

Washington reliever Kyle Finnegan was clearly trying to pitch around Harper and appeared to walk him on four pitches. However, umpire Clinton Vondrak called the fourth pitch, which was out of the strike zone, a strike. Harper wasn’t happy with the call – and he still wasn’t after the game. Finnegan’s fifth pitch was a strike and Harper crushed it.

“Harp was upset it wasn’t ball four, but I was like, ‘Good, let him hit,’ “ Thomson said. “J.T. beating out that ball and getting Harper to the plate was really key.”

Realmuto was initially called out, but the Phillies challenged and won.

After Harper tied the game in the eighth, Matt Vierling belted his second homer of the game in the top of the ninth to give the Phils a 6-5 lead.

The Phillies went deep into their bullpen on the day. Corey Knebel, Jeurys Familia and Andrew Bellatti got important outs in the nightcap and Jose Alvarado was on the verge of closing out a one-run win in the ninth when Gregorius committed a two-out throwing error that allowed Washington to tie the game.

Alvarado finally ended up closing it out in the bottom of the 10th. He got the win after Realmuto singled home two runs. The two runs were huge because the Nats scored an unearned run to make it a one-run game in the 10th.

Hoskins scored the second run in the 10th thanks to another of those little things, specifically third base coach Dusty Wathan’s knowledge of the obstruction rule. Washington shortstop Luis Garcia interfered with Hoskins’ path to third as Realmuto’s ball went up the middle. Wathan noticed the obstruction, saw third base umpire John Bacon’s hand go up, and furiously waved Hoskins home to ensure that the run would count.

“Dusty knows the rule,” Thomson said. “Huge. Really smart.”

“It just goes to show what a great baseball mind he has,” Harper said of Wathan.

The Phillies actually go over that play in spring training. It seldom comes up, but when it did in this game, everyone was ready.

It would not be difficult to imagine the Phillies losing a game like this back in the first two months of the season, back when the offense was inconsistent, the bullpen was having occasional meltdowns and the defense was shaky.

The defense and the bullpen are still far from perfect, but things are improving.

“We’re finding ways to win games we’re probably not supposed to and that’s what good teams do,” Hoskins said. “ I don’t think we ever feel like we’re out of a game. That has a lot to do with the way we’re swinging the bats, but I also think the guys in the bullpen have been great lately, attacking the zone, and when we’ve scored we’re throwing up some zeroes.”

 

The Phils won the first game in three hours, 32 minutes.

They won the second game in three hours, 45 minutes.

“It was a great day of baseball,” Harper said. “Win the series today with two more games to hopefully do good and get out of here feeling good.”

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Phillies win a wild one in Washington to sweep doubleheader from Nats

WASHINGTON – Three huge hits in the late innings lifted the Phillies to a 8-7 win in 10 innings over the Washington Nationals in the second game of a doubleheader Friday night.

The Phils swept the doubleheader. They won the first game, 5-3.

In the nightcap, the Phils trailed by two runs with two outs in the top of the eighth.

Bryce Harper, who did not start the second game, came off the bench and drove a game-tying, pinch-hit, two-run double to the gap in right-center to tie the game. The hit came after Kyle Finnegan, clearly pitching around Harper, threw three straight balls to the Phillies slugger. The fourth pitch was out of the strike zone but called a strike by home plate umpire Clinton Vondrak.

Finnegan’s next pitch was a strike and Harper unloaded on it to tie the game.

The Phils took the lead on a solo homer by Matt Vierling in the top of the ninth against Tanner Rainey. It was Vierling’s second homer of the game and his second late-game, go-ahead shot this month.

The Phillies went deep into their bullpen on the day. Corey Knebel, Jeurys Familia and Andrew Bellatti got important outs in the nightcap and Jose Alvarado was on the verge of closing out a one-run win in the ninth when shortstop Didi Gregorius committed a two-out throwing error that allowed Washington to tie the game.

The 10th inning opened with a runner, Kyle Schwarber, on second base. Rhys Hoskins walked and Nick Castellanos advanced the runners with a right-side ground ball.

 

J.T. Realmuto then delivered both runners with a base hit up the middle. There was some controversy as Washington shortstop Luis Garcia was called for obstructing Hoskins’ path to third base. Phillies third base coach Dusty Wathan alertly sent Hoskins home on the play and the run was counted as good.

Alvarado stayed on for the bottom of the 10th, allowed an unearned run, but hung on for the win.

The Phillies are 14-2 in June and 13-2 under new manager Rob Thomson. They are a season-high four games over .500.

The Phils have won the first three games of this five-game series, which continues Saturday afternoon and concludes Sunday afternoon.

This was just the Phillies’ second sweep in their last 28 doubleheaders and first since September 2020 against Toronto.

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