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BOB NIGHTENGALE
MLB

Phillies win Game 1 of NLCS over Padres behind Kyle Schwarber's monster home run

SAN DIEGO – It sounded like a canon. 

It traveled like a meteor. 

And it landed where no ball has ever gone before in the history of Petco Park. 

The Philadelphia Phillies won Game 1 of the National League Championship Series, 2-0, over the San Diego Padres, but all anyone was talking about was the mammoth home run shot by Kyle Schwarber, who led the NL with 46 home runs this season but was in a 1-for-20 postseason slump coming in. 

Schwarber, with one magnificent swing, sent Padres starter Yu Darvish’s cutter into oblivion, landing in the right field upper deck, 488 feet away. 

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It was the longest ball ever hit in the history of Petco Park. 

The ball left Schwarber’s bat at 119.7 mph, the highest velocity off a bat by any player but New York Yankee sluggers Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton since the statistic began being recorded in 2008. 

The homer was so breath-taking that the Phillies players raised their hands in the sky, with Bryce Harper’s mouth agape, trying to comprehend what they just witnessed. 

“I thought it got pretty small pretty fast,” said Harper. “I’ve never seen a ball go up in that section in Petco Park. Just very impressive. Just wow."

Said Schwarber: “A lot of people just looked at me weird. It was a cool moment, but I’m happy that we got the win overall.”

The Phillies had plenty of other stars, with Zack Wheeler thoroughly dominating the Padres’ offense, yielding just one hit in seven shutout innings. The Padres’ lone hit was Wil Myers' single with one out in the fifth inning. 

Phillies left fielder Kyle Schwarber rounds the bases after hitting a home run in the sixth inning.

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Wheeler cruised from the start, needing 83 pitches through seven innings, before turning the game over to the bullpen. 

“That’s probably as good a pitching performance we’ve seen all year, is my guess,” Padres manager Bob Melvin said.

Harper, who has turned this postseason into his own personal home run derby, once again left another pitcher in his wake, hitting his fourth home run of the postseason in the fourth inning. 

It wasn’t nearly as majestic as Schwarber’s homer, traveling 368 feet into the left-field seats, barely beyond the outstretched glove of left fielder Jurickson Profar. 

But, hey, it all counted just the same. 

The Padres, in the NLCS for the first time in 24 years, wasted a fabulous performance from ace Yu Darvish, who gave up just three hits in seven innings, striking out seven.

Yet, it made no difference, with the Padres looking clueless against Wheeler. 

The Padres didn’t even have a runner in scoring position until Alec Bohm’s error in the ninth inning that gave the Padres life. No matter, with runners on first and second, Manny Machado flied out and Josh Bell struck out. 

The Padres certainly aren’t taking away anything away from Wheeler, but it's quite possible they played the game with a Dodgers’ hangover. They spent so much energy, and celebrated so hard after finally beating their rivals in the Division Series, it almost felt like their World Series. 

“I love this,” Harper said. “Like I just really enjoy this situation. I really enjoy coming to ballparks that are hostile. I don’t know, I just really enjoy it.”

Follow Nightengale on Twitter: @Bnightengale 

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