PHOENIX — Corbin Carroll hit a pinch-hit homer with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning to cap a five-run rally, and the Arizona Diamondbacks shocked the Washington Nationals with a 9-8 win on Monday night.
The D-backs trailed 8-4 heading to the ninth, but Geraldo Perdomo's RBI single brought home Alek Thomas and Ketel Marte followed with a two-run homer down the right-field line off Washington's All-Star closer Kyle Finnegan.
“We've been saying it all year — we're never out of the game,” Carroll said. “It's not over until it's over and we've been putting together some really great late-game at-bats and it's been paying off.”
Monday night magic. 🪄 pic.twitter.com/ew9R9aOVpz
— Arizona Diamondbacks (@Dbacks) July 30, 2024
Finnegan (2-5) retired Gabriel Moreno for the first out before Lourdes Gurriel Jr. singled up the middle. That brought up Carroll, the reigning NL Rookie of the Year who has struggled at times this season.
But he jumped all over a Finnegan splitter, launching the ball over the right-center fence to set off a raucous Arizona celebration. It was Finnegan's fifth blow save of the season in 33 chances.
“Just wasn't able to get it done tonight,” Finnegan said. “I was ahead of every guy I faced — just wasn't able to put them away.”
Washington built a big advantage early. C.J. Abrams struck out to start the game, but the next six Nationals reached base on the way to their 5-0 lead. Alex Call had the big blow, launching a three-run homer to left, which was his first long ball of the season. James Wood and Keibert Ruiz also had RBI hits.
Call was just promoted from Triple-A Rochester on Sunday. The 29-year-old has played for the Nationals and Guardians over parts of the past three seasons.
Washington made it 6-0 in the second on Harold Ramírez's RBI single. Call, Ruiz, Ramírez, Juan Yepez, Ildemaro Vargas and Jacob Young all had two hits.
For Arizona lefty Jordan Montgomery, it was the latest rough night in a brutal season. He now has a 6.51 ERA and hasn't come close to producing at the level the D-backs expected after they signed him to a $25 million, one-year deal in March.
Montgomery gave up six runs on nine hits over four innings. He walked three and struck out one.
The D-backs cut the margin to 6-2, scoring one run in the fourth and fifth. Newman had two hits, including an RBI double. Washington added two more runs in the sixth for an 8-2 advantage.
But Arizona was far from finished.
“That was a team that played with heart, determination and a lot of will,” Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said. “The first couple innings were very difficult. We got flattened. But we kept chipping away.”
Mitchell Parker gave up two runs on four hits and two walks, striking out three. The lefty bounced back from two straight rough starts in which he gave up a combined 11 earned runs over 3 2/3 innings.
Joe Mantiply (5-2) got the win by pitching a scoreless ninth.