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SAN DIEGO — Juan Soto and Josh Hader absorbed most of the attention, but Brandon Drury and Josh Bell were in-season acquisitions of similar importance to the San Diego Padres — a belief further emphasized by Fernando Tatis Jr.’s ensuing suspension. Bell and Drury represented key power bats in the middle of the lineup, a key source of protection for Soto and Manny Machado. And on Wednesday, with the Padres in desperate need of a victory, their bats finally came alive.

Drury and Bell, struggling all postseason and for most of their Padres tenure, combined for five hits and drove in five runs in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, keying an 8-5 come-from-behind victory over the Philadelphia Phillies to earn a split from Petco Park.

The Padres found themselves in a four-run hole midway through the second inning and clawed all the way back, an exceedingly rare triumph for this time of year. Before Wednesday, teams that trailed by four or more runs at any point in an LCS game were 12-268, which amounts to a .043 winning percentage. The Padres themselves were 1-16 in their postseason history, but they had recency on their side. They came back from down four runs during their last trip to the postseason in 2020, in Game 2 of their wild-card series against the St. Louis Cardinals. And they strung together a five-run seventh inning to overcome a three-run deficit and eliminate the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of the NL Division Series four days ago.

“We’re trying to extend every at-bat,” said Padres catcher Austin Nola, who helped ignite a five-run fifth inning with a hit off his brother. “We’re trying to get to the next one. That’s kind of what we’re doing right now. Get to the next pitch, and then eventually you’re going to get to the next guy and keep this thing rolling, getting a good rally.”

Padres manager Bob Melvin made what appeared to be a small lineup change heading into Game 2, benching Wil Myers, who provided superior defense at first base, and moving Jake Cronenworth up to the cleanup spot. Drury and Bell, who had combined for a .105/.128/.184 slash line through the Padres’ first eight postseason games, would hit fifth and sixth, respectively. And they came through when the Padres most desperately needed a lift.

The Phillies had compiled four runs off Blake Snell in the most unlikely of ways, stringing together four softly hit singles, benefiting from a fly ball Soto lost in the sun and scoring another run on a sharp grounder that was booted by Drury at first base. Aaron Nola, who had yet to allow an earned run in these playoffs, was toeing the rubber. A 2-0 lead in this series — with up to three games to follow in Philadelphia — seemed well within the Phillies grasp.

Then Drury led off the bottom half and lined the second pitch he saw, a chest-high fastball, over the fence in left field.

“I was trying to get a big inning going,” Drury said during an on-field interview. “He left a fastball over the middle and I just took a good swing on it.”

On the next pitch — another fastball, this one up and in — Bell hit a towering blast out to right, cutting the Phillies’ lead in half and injecting life into a sold-out crowd of 44,607. Three innings later, in the bottom of the fifth, the Padres sent 11 batters to the plate and accumulated five runs. Three of the first four batters reached, and then Soto tied the score with an RBI double into the right-field corner. Drury came up later against Brad Hand, with the bases loaded and two outs, and smoked a two-run single to left-center. Bell followed with a run-scoring single down the right-field line. By that point, Drury and Bell had combined for as many hits through the first five innings of one game (four) as they had through the entire postseason.

“Those guys are here for a reason, and they all have track records,” Melvin said. “You look at their numbers over the course of this year, and they’re all good. Those are the guys we’re going to keep running out there.”

The Padres’ win was a by-product of so much more than just Drury and Bell. It was Snell hanging tough after a 37-pitch second inning, finding a way to record 15 outs to turn the game over to the Padres’ best high-leverage relievers. It was Soto, who had been hitting the ball hard all month but didn’t have much to show for it, atoning for a missed fly ball with a key hit. It was Machado clobbering a 424-foot home run in the seventh, then starting a slick double play with the Phillies threatening and Bryce Harper up in the next half-inning. And, most memorably, it was Nola conquering his younger brother.

The Padres had one on and one out, still trailed by a couple of runs, and Austin Nola faced an 0-2 count against Aaron Nola, with their parents nervously watching from the stands.

“I feel like every time I face my brother I’m 0-2,” Austin Nola said. “He’s always ahead of me, and I’m always fighting back just trying to get some barrels somewhere.”

This time, Austin — in the first sibling matchup of pitcher versus batter in postseason history — executed a perfect run-and-hit. Ha-Seong Kim took off for second base in an attempted steal, Phillies second baseman Jean Segura shifted over to cover and Austin lined a base hit through a vacated right side, allowing Kim to score all the way from first and ultimately igniting a major rally.

The Padres avoided what would have felt like a major deficit and now they’ll have one of their aces, Joe Musgrove, lined up for Game 3 in Philadelphia on Friday.

“We knew what we had to do,” Machado said in Spanish. “We had to win this game no matter what.”

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Texas A&M feels sting of loss but proud of season

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Texas A&M feels sting of loss but proud of season

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Texas A&M‘s historic season ended with a gut punch, as quarterback Marcel Reed, who had driven the Aggies to the Miami 5-yard line with 27 seconds left, threw an interception in the back of the end zone in a 10-3 loss at Kyle Field.

The loss Saturday in front of 104,122, the second-biggest crowd in CFP history, ended the Aggies’ season at 11-2, tying A&M’s 1939, 1998 and 2012 teams for the second-most wins in program history, behind the 1992 squad that finished 12-1.

Mike Elko, the Aggies’ second-year head coach, said that the loss will sting but that it shouldn’t discount what the team accomplished. When he took over before last season, he said that this was not an elite program ready to compete for a national championship. In his first season, the Aggies finished 8-5 after a 7-1 start and went into the offseason vowing to put an emphasis on finishing games. They did that all year and started 11-0 but lost their final two games: to Texas in Austin and then to the Hurricanes, their first defeat at home this season.

“We weren’t able to tilt the margins in our favor the last two games,” Elko said. “That’s going to be a killer. One to not go to Atlanta [to the SEC championship], one to not go to the quarterfinals. So that’s a killer, but you’ve got to swallow it and you’ve got to move forward just like we did last year.”

Elko said he and his staff believed this team had “fairly small margins” to be successful in each game, and that’s exactly how the season played out. He said that as a grown man he can handle the disappointment but that he is hurting for his players. Still, he emphasized that he didn’t want to discount what his players had done to help turn the tide for the Aggies.

“I said to the seniors who just played their last game, they left a mark on elevating this program that will never go away. From where this program was two years ago to where it is now, I don’t think that can be lost on people,” Elko said. “I said to the guys coming back, there’s still another major step we have to take as a program to finish. I think the last two games showed that.”

Elko said his offense had become one-dimensional, and he credited Miami’s defense for preventing the Aggies from being able to run the ball, enabling the Canes to tee off on Reed.

“Marcel Reed can’t be our leading rusher,” Elko said of his sophomore quarterback who had 15 carries for 27 yards, 6 more than running back Rueben Owens II. “He can’t have the most carries. It just can’t happen that way.”

Reed sat devastated on the bench as the game ended following the interception, a towel draped over his head. Reed’s offensive coordinator, Collin Klein, is headed to Kansas State, his alma mater, as the Wildcats’ new coach. The two spoke about how close their relationship is after the game, with Reed saying Klein is like a father figure for him.

“It didn’t really feel real,” Reed said. “I don’t want the season to end. A lot of changes are going to be made after the season, so I really didn’t want it to end. It sucked.”

Taurean York, the Aggies’ all-SEC linebacker, said he’s proud of the steps the team took and called the season a “foundation-setter,” saying A&M finally got to the big stage and has plans to keep building.

“We’re really just scratching the surface of who we’re going to become in the future,” he said.

The Aggies traded defensive blows with Miami all day, but Carson Beck‘s shovel pass to Malachi Toney with 1:44 left broke the game open. The Aggies’ offense responded, driving with a chance to tie the game before Bryce Fitzgerald‘s second interception of Reed on the day ended A&M’s season and crushed the Kyle Field faithful.

“We came up 5 yards short and that’s something we’ll have to live with throughout the off season,” Elko said. “But [I’m] still proud of this team, proud of what they accomplished, proud of what they did.”

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Miami’s defense dominates A&M for first CFP win

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Miami's defense dominates A&M for first CFP win

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Rueben Bain rolled his eyes, smiled, then held up his cell phone, the lock screen glowing with a photo of Texas A&M offensive lineman Trey Zuhn III. Bain had anticipated the question. He was looking forward to it.

In the run-up to Saturday’s College Football Playoff game between Miami and Texas A&M, Zuhn had delivered the bulletin-board material, when he told reporters he didn’t think Bain “would be a threat that we need to worry about too much.”

Big mistake.

“We don’t take kindly to disrespect,” Bain said. “Some people said some things they shouldn’t have said.”

Bain and the Miami defense were dominant in a 10-3 win over the Aggies, ending a once-promising Texas A&M season and sending the Hurricanes on to the Goodyear Cotton Bowl, where they’ll face off against Ohio State.

Bain finished with five tackles — four for a loss — and three sacks, while also blocking a field goal in the first half.

The rest of the defense followed his lead, racking up nine tackles for loss and creating three takeaways, including a game-sealing interception in the back of the end zone with 24 seconds to play by freshman Bryce Fitzgerald.

In the aftermath, defensive end Akheem Mesidor was running through his rolodex of players who’d stepped up against the Aggies — defensive line, defensive backs, linebackers — then mentioned Fitzgerald.

“Bryce!” Bain and cornerback Keionte Scott both shouted in unison, laughing.

Fitzgerald arrived on campus in June, but quickly made his presence felt, and his role on Miami’s defense has grown as the season progressed. On Saturday, he was a star, intercepting Aggies quarterback Marcel Reed twice. The latter came on a third-and-goal at the 5 after the Aggies had marched down the field in an effort to tie it, but Fitzgerald stepped in front of a pass intended for Melin Ohrstrom and the celebration began.

“He’s a quick study,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal said. “He’s never flinched. He spends every waking minute studying, but when the lights come on, some guys just kind of have ‘it.’ He’s that guy. He just knows what to do and how to do it.”

A year ago, this Miami defense was the fly in the ointment that kept the Hurricanes from the playoff. With future No. 1 NFL draft pick Cam Ward working magic on offense, Miami’s battered secondary created a chain reaction that led to a complete defensive meltdown in the season’s stretch run. Miami lost two of its final three games to fall from No. 4 in the rankings to out of the playoff.

Cristobal responded by making a change at coordinator, bringing in Corey Hetherman — now a Broyles Award finalist — and putting a focus on rebuilding the back end of the defense. Fitzgerald and Scott, along with transfer Xavier Lucas, were keys to the turnaround. With the secondary secure, the defensive front was free to wreak havoc, and Mesidor and Bain did exactly that against the Aggies.

“We sat in the locker room for like 15 minutes [after the game],” Bain said, “just saying how crazy it was for us to win this game in this kind of way.”

Hetherman said the focus for Miami’s defense was actually more about patience and keeping Reed inside the pocket. The A&M quarterback did have a handful of scrambles that extended plays to find open receivers or picked up yards on the ground. But Hetherman said he prioritized showing Reed a host of different coverage schemes to keep him off balance, and eventually that allowed the Miami defensive front to get home.

Miami’s seven sacks against Texas A&M tied for the most by a ‘Canes defense in the last six seasons. And while there’d been concern about how Miami’s offensive line would handle the crowd noise at Kyle Field, where more than 104,000 fans provided a stifling soundtrack, it was actually the Aggies O-line that was flagged for multiple penalties.

“We lost the game of the line of scrimmage, and I think it got worse in the second half,” Aggies coach Mike Elko said. “We just couldn’t keep them off of us. We couldn’t get the run game established. We became one-dimensional. Once we became one-dimensional, they were able to tee off.”

Overall, Miami held the Aggies to just 326 yards of offense and just 89 on the ground — just 50 from A&M’s trio of tailbacks, Le’Veon Moss, Rueben Owens and EJ Smith.

And when Miami’s back was against the wall, the defense was at its best. A&M’s three red-zone trips amounted to just three total points, and when Miami receiver Malachi Toney fumbled near midfield late in the game, the Hurricanes defense followed with a quick three-and-out.

“A year ago, we had a tough time stopping people on defense,” Cristobal said. “This was one of those games where we felt like we were holding good and knocking them back. The confidence that [the defense] brings is off the charts, and they were the difference today.”

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Rangers rally past Flyers but lose captain Miller

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Rangers rally past Flyers but lose captain Miller

NEW YORK — Mika Zibanejad tied it late in the third period, and the New York Rangers killed off two penalties in overtime on the way to beating the Philadelphia Flyers 5-4 in a shootout on Saturday.

The comeback for just a fifth win in 18 home games this season potentially came at a great cost, with captain J.T. Miller leaving in pain after taking a big hit from Nick Seeler with just over eight minutes left. Miller seemed to be favoring his right arm/shoulder as he skated off and went down the tunnel for medical attention.

Miller was already out when Zibanejad scored on a late power play following Rasmus Ristolainen‘s delay-of-game penalty for putting the puck over the glass. Penalties to Artemi Panarin and Scott Morrow in OT put the Rangers on the kill, but Igor Shesterkin made four of his 28 saves after regulation.

Panarin scored twice and had the shootout winner in his return after sitting out Thursday night at St. Louis because of an illness. The Rangers fell behind, allowing three goals in less than four minutes and another before the second period ended, then Vincent Trocheck got things rolling in the third.

Travis Sanheim had a goal and an assist, and Denver Barkey picked up his first two career points in his NHL debut for Philadelphia. Samuel Ersson allowed four goals on 27 shots, plus two more in the shootout, and he and the Flyers lost for the fifth time in six games.

Aleksei Kolosov was recalled from the minors to back up Ersson because Dan Vladar is banged up, general manager Daniel Briere said. Barkey was filling in for injured winger Christian Dvorak.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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