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Vince Velasquez makes spectacular play before exiting game

The Phillies righthander was hit on his right arm with a line drive but threw out Adam Eaton with a bullet of a lefthanded throw.

Phillies pitcher Vince Velasquez was hurt when Nat's Adam Eaton lined the ball sharply to Velasquez who knocked it down with his right hand then threw him out at first using his left hand. The out was the 3rd out of the 2nd inning and Velasquez then fell to the ground eventually getting up and leaving the Washington Nationals at Philadelphia Phillies Major League Baseball game at Citizens Bank Park in Phila., Pa. on June 30, 2018. ELIZABETH ROBERTSON / Staff Photographer
Phillies pitcher Vince Velasquez was hurt when Nat's Adam Eaton lined the ball sharply to Velasquez who knocked it down with his right hand then threw him out at first using his left hand. The out was the 3rd out of the 2nd inning and Velasquez then fell to the ground eventually getting up and leaving the Washington Nationals at Philadelphia Phillies Major League Baseball game at Citizens Bank Park in Phila., Pa. on June 30, 2018. ELIZABETH ROBERTSON / Staff PhotographerRead moreElizabeth Robertson

The throw would have been spectacular righthanded.

Without the use of his throwing arm, Vince Velasquez improvised on one of the more incredible plays of this season or any other during Saturday night's 3-2 win over the Washington Nationals at Citizens Bank Park.

With two outs in the second inning, the Phillies righthander was hit on the arm by a sharp liner off the bat of Nationals leadoff man Adam Eaton.

Velasquez veered about 10 feet to the right of the mound to retrieve the ball and, unable to throw righthanded, he flipped off his glove, and gunned the ball to first base lefthanded to just beat the speedy Eaton for the third out.

"I didn't know where the ball was going to go, I just hoped I was going to get the ball and finish the play," Velasquez said.

It turns out he has thrown lefthanded before. As a junior in high school he had bone spurs in his right hand and played center field lefthanded.

That aside, his teammates and coaches were still in awe.

"It was one of the more athletic plays that most of us have ever seen," said manager Gabe Kapler. "… In the dugout, we were all pretty floored by the lefthanded throw and the creativity and, in fact, two innings later everybody was still talking about it."

Velasquez said there was no way he could have made the throw righthanded.
"That is the reason why I dropped my glove," he said. "I know I am capable of throwing lefthanded and I was hoping for a strike. I have thrown lefty numerous times and I know how accurate I can be and how non-accurate I can be and I was hoping that I could literally get it there and hopefully finish the play."

Velasquez then lay on the ground, writhing in pain before eventually walking off the field. But it would be his final pitch of the evening.

"I had no feeling right after that and that is why I reacted the way I did," he said.

The Phillies announced that he had a right forearm contusion and that X-rays were negative. He will be re-evaluated on Sunday.

Velasquez said he was feeling good afterward but that it was too early to tell if he would be able to make his next start. When asked after the game how sore he was, Velasquez said, "I am pretty good. It was a nice hit but it caught me right on the fat. I am very optimistic, thank God nothing is really severe, nothing is really broken."

Velasquez had allowed one run on three hits but had also struck out three in his two-inning stint.