Ian Happ homers from both sides as Cubs beat Phillies 10-2 to avoid sweep

Notes: Mark Leiter Jr. nears a return, and Pete Crow-Armstrong gets stitches in his thumb.

SHARE Ian Happ homers from both sides as Cubs beat Phillies 10-2 to avoid sweep
The Cubs' Ian Happ watches his three-run home run during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday in Chicago.

The Cubs’ Ian Happ watches his three-run homer, his second of the game, during the fifth inning Thursday.

Paul Beaty/AP

The Phillies pulled starter Cristopher Sanchez before he faced switch-hitting Ian Happ in the fifth inning Thursday.

In his previous at-bat, Happ hit a three-run homer off Sanchez, just the second home run the lefty had allowed all season.

The pitching change didn’t help. From the other side of the plate, it was the same result. Happ hit a three-run shot off right-hander Seranthony Dominguez, and the Cubs went on to win 10-2

“We’ve been looking for one of these for a while now,” Happ said of the blowout win, “where we can go out there, everybody contributes, make it easy on the bullpen. Let’s ride that momentum and see what we can do.”

The Cubs scored in double digits for the first time since April 16 at Arizona and for only the third time this season.

Avoiding the sweep was a small consolation considering the Cubs have lost 13 of their last 15 series. The way they won, however, harkened back to the team’s offensive success in April. They got to the starting pitcher early, which was even more impressive considering the competition.

Sanchez had capped his National League Player of the Month performance in June with a three-hit shutout against the Marlins. His 2.41 ERA entering Thursday ranked fourth in the majors.

“We did a good job just putting pressure on him, laying off — it looked like he was a little off with the breaking ball and struggling to throw it for strikes — and we got ourselves in some good counts,” manager Craig Counsell said.

The seven runs charged to Sanchez were his most in an outing all year, almost doubling his previous season high. He exited with no outs in the fifth, making it his second-shortest start of the season.

Happ homered from both sides of the plate for the second time in his career and recorded a career-high six RBI. He went 4-for-4 with a single and double to go with his pair of long balls. Seiya Suzuki, batting ahead of Happ, reached base four times with two hits and two walks.

Pitcher injury updates

Cubs high-leverage reliever Mark Leiter Jr. (strained right forearm) is nearing a return from the injured list. His bullpen session Wednesday included a simulated inning. As long as he recovers well, the next step will be a live batting-practice session.

“If that all goes well,” pitching coach Tommy Hottovy said, “we’re looking at hopefully getting him back next week.”

Adbert Alzolay (strained right flexor), another back-end reliever, is “progressing well” in the bullpen segment of his throwing program at the Cubs’ spring-training complex in Arizona, Hottovy said.

“He’s recovering; that’s the biggest thing,” Hottovy said. “For a guy who’s a high-leverage reliever that’s going to pitch a lot, the recovery, for me, is the most important thing. Obviously, the stuff that we’re seeing has been really good, too.”

His return, however, isn’t imminent. He isn’t even eligible to be activated from the 60-day IL for at least another week, and he has been out since mid-May, requiring a longer ramp up.

“Hopefully, we progress the next couple of weeks through some bullpens, and then getting into some live BPs,” Hottovy said. “Adbert’s not a guy that takes long once he starts getting into games, because once he’s in games, he’s fully healthy and he’s confident and ready to go.”

Crow-Armstrong stitched up

Center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong needed four stitches to close the gash on his left thumb caused by Whit Merrifield’s cleats after Crow-Armstrong stole third base in the Cubs’ 5-3 loss Wednesday. But he was available off the bench Thursday, according to the team.

With Sanchez on the mound, the left-handed-hitting Crow-Armstrong likely wouldn’t have been in the lineup regardless of the injury.

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