SAN DIEGO -- Philadelphia Phillies right-fielder Delmon Young says Ben Revere is not the type of player to give up. "Hes had to fight for everything his whole life, hes not going to give up on an at-bat with a chance to win the game there," Young said. The left-handed hitting Revere battled through an eight-pitch at-bat against left-hander Tommy Layne before hitting a grounder to second with the game tied 5-5 in the 13th inning. San Diegos Logan Forsythe bobbled Reveres grounder and then threw home wildly, leading to two unearned runs in Philadelphias 7-5 win Wednesday night. Chase Utley, who was hit by a pitch, and Domonic Brown, who walked against Layne (0-2) scored the decisive runs. Forsythe bounced a throw as he tried to prevent Utley from scoring. The ball bounced away from catcher Nick Hundley, allowing Brown to score also. "The ball was in the hole," said Forsythe. "I tried to get to it before the lip (of the grass). I misplayed it and made the error. I rushed myself. I didnt know what happened with the throw afterwards." Joe Savery (1-0) worked one inning and Jonathan Papelbon got the final three outs for his 15th save in 19 chances. The Phillies, who trailed 5-2 after six innings, rallied to tie it with an unearned run in the seventh and two runs in the eighth on a two-run home run by Delmon Young off Luke Gregerson. "I didnt light up because I missed his first two pitches by about five feet," said Young. "Those were both balls, but the one I hit was a strike. I didnt hear the noise off the bat and just the way (Carlos) Quentin approached the ball and playing in San Diego I thought it was just going to be one of those high deep flies that gets everyone on their feet and then the groans right afterwards." Chris Denorfia had given the Padres a 4-2 lead with a two-run homer in the fifth. San Diego added a run in the sixth on back-to-back doubles by Chase Headley and Kyle Blanks. Phillies starter Cole Hamels allowed five runs -- four earned -- and seven hits. He walked two and struck out five in six innings, avoiding the distinction of becoming the first Phillies pitcher to lose 12 games before July. "The guys really picked me up," said Hamels, who had won five consecutive games against the Padres with a 0.73 ERA. Padres rookie Robbie Erlin, called up from Triple-A Tucson earlier Wednesday, pitched 6 1-3 innings. He gave up three runs -- two earned -- and four hits. He struck out seven and walked only one. Erlin left the game after giving up a single to Brown and striking out Delmon Young in the seventh. The Phillies got within one with an unearned run in the seventh on an RBI single by pinch-hitter Kevin Frandsen after right fielder Kyle Blanks dropped a foul ball for an error on what would have been the final out of the inning. Nick Vincent, who gave up Frandsens hit, walked Jimmy Rollins to load the bases. But Joe Thatcher got Utley to ground out to end the threat. The Phillies scored single runs in the first and second innings to take a 2-0 lead. Michael Youngs RBI double off the wall in left-centre scored Utley. Carlos Ruiz drove in the Phillies second run with a sacrifice fly. The Padres tied it with two runs in the third. NOTES: Phillies reliever RHP Mike Adams has three tears in his shoulder and might undergo season-ending surgery. He could try rehab in an attempt to return later this season. ... Padres 2B Jedd Gyorko, on the disabled list with a strained right groin, singled in San Antonio in his first rehab at-bat Wednesday. He then left the game due to tightness in his right leg. The Padres hope to have Gyorko back on Friday when they begin a trip at Miami. ... Padres SS Everth Cabrera, on the DL because of an injured left hamstring, is doing baseball activities. Manager Bud Black is hopeful Cabrera will return on July 8. ... Edison Volquez will pitch for the Padres against the Marlins on Friday, Eric Stults will go on Saturday, Andrew Cashner will start on Sunday, and Jason Marquis will go on Monday. Volquez (5-6, 5.67) will be opposed by the Marlins Ricky Nolasco (4-7, 3.68). ... The Phillies play the Dodgers in Los Angeles on Thursday with Jonathan Pettibone (3-3, 4.14) facing Zach Greinke (4-2, 3.79) Kyle Singler Thunder Jersey .35 million, one-year contract that avoided salary arbitration. Plouffe batted .254 with 14 home runs and 52 RBIs in 477 at-bats last season, his second as a regular in the lineup. Kevin Hervey Thunder Jersey . Scott Kazmir allowed four hits in seven shutout innings, Michael Brantley hit a two-run homer in a three-run first inning and the Indians maintained their hold on an AL wild-card spot with a 4-1 win over the Houston Astros on Saturday night. https://www.thunderrookiesshop.com/Patrick-Patterson-City-Edition-Jersey/ . Capitals head coach Adam Oates said Ovechkin was injured in the first period against the Vancouver Canucks on Monday and clarified it was not a head injury. Terrance Ferguson Thunder Jersey .4 million title. Ryan Riess emerged with the title after a session in which he started behind, but used expert skill to gather the chips to his side amid the unpredictability of no-limit Texas Hold em. Riess put his final opponent Jay Farber all-in with an Ace-King. Darius Bazley Jersey . Thats not a comment on the suspension that banished the Portland Winterhawks general manager and coach from his Western Hockey League teams bench for most of the 2012-13 season. Like all good teams, the New York Rangers build toward windows and ride up and down through planned peaks and valleys in order to maximize their chances of winning the Stanley Cup. With some shrewd decisions to save cap space this summer, GM Jeff Gorton might have kept the window jammed open for one more year.Over the past five seasons, the Rangers have enjoyed the longest window as top contenders in their 90-season franchise history. They topped 100 points three times, won the Presidents trophy in 2014-15 and fell just two points short in 2011-12, and have advanced at least as far as the Eaastern Conference finals in three of the past five seasons.dddddddddddd.However, that window might be closing. After a red-hot 16-3-2 start last season, the Rangers finished the balance of the schedule with a 30-24-7 record and were bounced in the first round in five games by the Pittsburgh Penguins.Soon, the Rangers might be facing their next valley, but without a Stanley Cup to show for it. Can they keep their window open long enough to address that deficiency? ' ' '