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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 4:01 p.m., Monday, June 2, 2008

Baseball: Utley hits 21st while Griffey stays at 599

By ROB MAADDI
AP Sports Writer

PHILADELPHIA — Ken Griffey Jr. remained one shy of 600 home runs after getting the night off, but Philadelphia's Chase Utley hit his major league-leading 21st homer to help the Phillies beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-4 today.

Also, former St. Anthony star Shane Victorino singled in the first to extend his hitting streak to 14 games, tying his career-best.

With Griffey watching from the bench, balls were flying out of Citizens Bank Park.

Utley went deep for the fifth straight game, tying a club record he shares with Dick Allen, Mike Schmidt and Bobby Abreu. Utley also homered in five consecutive games earlier this season.

Pedro Feliz and Chris Coste also connected for the NL East-leading Phillies. Rookie sensation Jay Bruce and Edwin Encarnacion went deep for the Reds.

Kyle Kendrick (5-2) pitched just well enough to earn the win, giving up four runs and five hits in 5 1-3 innings. Chad Durbin pitched 1 2-3 scoreless innings, Tom Gordon tossed a perfect eighth and Brad Lidge finished for his 14th save in as many chances.

Reds starter Bronson Arroyo was hurt by the longball. Arroyo (4-5) allowed five runs and 10 hits in 4 1-3 innings. It was his shortest outing since giving up seven runs in 1 1-3 innings against Atlanta on May 4.

Griffey wasn't in the starting lineup because of general soreness. He should start Tuesday night. Junior hit No. 599 at home Saturday against Atlanta. The only players to reach 600 are Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and Sammy Sosa.

Utley lined a two-run shot into the right-center field seats to give the Phillies a 2-0 lead in the first. Utley is on pace to hit 58 homers, 26 more than his career high in 2006. The record for second basemen is 42, set by Rogers Hornsby in 1922 and tied by Davey Johnson in 1973.

Utley isn't just doing it with his bat. He's made outstanding defensive plays lately, including a diving, backhanded catch to rob Joey Votto leading off the seventh and almost the exact play on Votto against to end it.

Bruce hit an opposite-field drive that just cleared the left-field wall to cut it to 2-1 in the fourth. It was Bruce's third homer in his first seven games. The 21-year-old center fielder has been on a tear since getting called up from Triple-A last week, hitting .577 with three homers and seven RBIs.

After Bruce's first three at-bats, he was 2-for-3, making him 15-for-25 overall. The last player to have at least 15 hits in his first 25 major league at-bats was Chris C. Jones of the Reds in 1991, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Jones went 15-for-25 from April 27 to June 28.

Bruce flied out in his final at-bat in the eighth.

Feliz hit a two-run homer after Geoff Jenkins led off Philadelphia's fourth with a double. Coste followed with a solo shot to make it 5-1.

Encarnacion led off the fifth with a homer to left to get the Reds within 5-2.

Adam Dunn's two-run double off Durbin with two outs in the sixth cut it to 5-4. Kendrick left after Bruce singled to put two runners on with one out. Durbin retired Brandon Phillips on a fly to right, but Dunn hit a liner into the gap in right-center.

The Phillies chased Arroyo in the fifth after singles by Utley and Pat Burrell and a walk to Jenkins loaded the bases with one out. But Gary Majewski came in and retired Feliz on a double-play grounder to escape the jam and keep it close.