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PHL embassies on alert for attacks on anniversary of Hamas assault on Israel

THE PHILIPPINE government at the weekend said it was on alert for potential security risks in the Middle East as the world marks the anniversary of the Oct. 7 militant attack that led to the conflict in Gaza.

“Either Israel will do something symbolic, or the other side will do something symbolic,” Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Eduardo Jose A. de Vega told a news briefing.

Foreign Affairs Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Middle East Marlowe A. Miranda said Philippine envoys were on alert for possible “signs” of conflict. “In those circumstances, Filipinos overseas will rely on advisories from our embassies,” he said.

Mr. De Vega noted that Israel could protect itself, including the 30,000 Filipinos who live there, from potential missile attacks. “They have the defense mechanism necessary to repel all these missile attacks.”

Tensions in the Middle East continue to escalate after Israel’s bombardment of Gaza in response to missile attacks by militant group Hamas on Oct. 7 last year.

Israel launched a ground operation into southern Lebanon earlier this week, as it vowed to conduct raids against “Hezbollah terror targets” that it said were an “immediate threat” to northern Israeli communities.

Hezbollah spokesman Mohammed Afif last week said there had been “no direct ground clashes” with Israeli forces, denying that they had crossed into southern Lebanon, based on a Reuters report.

The group was “ready for a direct confrontation with the enemy forces that dare or attempt to enter Lebanese territory and to inflict the greatest losses on them.”

Mr. De Vega said more than 100 Filipinos were set to be repatriated from Lebanon in batches on Oct. 11 to 28 amid Israeli bombardments.

They include 15 Filipinos whose repatriation scheduled for Sept. 26 did not proceed after commercial flights were canceled. 

Mr. De Vega said the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) is prepared to help undocumented Filipinos whose passports are being withheld by their employers.  “If they don’t have a passport, we can always issue travel documents for them to go home.”

He said many Filipinos in Lebanon refuse to go home. He added that the DFA was not seeking to raise the alert for Lebanon to Level 4, which would trigger mandatory evacuation.

“Israel has not conducted a full-scale ground assault like we’ve seen, for example, in 1982 or 2006,” he said. “Of course, we need prayers, so that as we see in our analysis, this will not explode.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

LGUs’ PPP projects face funding gap, political pressure

PHILIPPINE STAR/JOHN FELIX M. UNSON

LACK of funding for project development and political pressures that increase the cost of private sector expenses are among the barriers to public-private partnerships (PPP) at the local level in the Philippines, according to the PPP Center.

Still, at least three provinces, two cities and one municipality have successfully pursued PPPs and adopted practices that their peers could learn from, the agency said.

In an e-mail to BusinessWorld, the PPP Center said PPP remains a viable option for local government in financing local infrastructure projects such as public markets, slaughterhouses, hospitals and water supply systems.

It said there have been several digitalization and information and communications technology-related PPP projects at the local level. Local governments “see this as a way to make certain facilities, processes, and public services more efficient.”

“Local government units (LGU) that used to lack the capacity to enact their own PPP regulation now have the PPP Code as the implementation-ready legal framework that they can use to jumpstart their PPPs,” PPP Center Deputy Executive Director Jeffrey I. Manalo said.

He said the provinces of Negros Occidental, Cavite and Bataan, the cities of Iloilo and Baguio, and the municipality of Vaggao in Cagayan province are some of the LGUs with a steady project pipeline involving PPPs, both solicited and unsolicited.

These local governments have sought feedback from stakeholders and potential investors to ensure that PPP projects are commercially, economically and technically viable.

“The firm commitment of these LGUs is crucial in developing and implementing successful PPP projects,” Mr. Manalo said. “The political will of local leaders plays a vital role, especially during the approval and implementation phases of these projects.”

He noted while local PPP projects in the pipeline remain mostly unsolicited, there’s “increasing interest” from LGUs in developing their own PPPs and pursuing them using the solicited PPP track.

The government of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has vowed to harness the potential of PPPs to boost Philippine infrastructure. In December, he signed the PPP Code or Republic Act No. 11966, which amended the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Law to create a unified legal framework for all PPPs at the national and local levels.

Mr. Manalo said major obstacles to PPP projects at the local level include lack of funding to conduct their own preparatory or project development studies and their lack of capacity to develop business cases and assess solicited and unsolicited proposals.

He also cited local political pressures that in some cases have forced local officials to keep water tariffs low “to the point that these may already be below the cost-recovery levels for potential private sector counterparts.”

The center also cited right-of-way issues during the implementation stage and operational challenges in monitoring private sector counterparts. 

It said highly urbanized cities and large municipalities often get unsolicited proposals from the private sector due to their commercial potential.

Smaller or less urbanized LGUs are usually advised to adopt a clustering-based approach, under which LGUs are clustered under one PPP arrangement or contract to create a sizeable demand.

“This is intended to optimize investment costs and arrive at designs that are both technically and financially feasible.”

The center said it has developed an LGU PPP Strategy that focuses on assistance to LGUs through capacity-building and technical assistance in pursuing bankable PPP projects.

The project is in line with the government’s aim to expand development in the regions and spread economic growth outside Metro Manila, the agency said. “More LGUs now see PPPs as an engine for growth and driver of economic opportunities.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Slower inflation implies moderate erosion of real wages, analysts say

PNA FILE PHOTO

By Chloe Mari A. Hufana, Reporter

THE PHILIPPINE INFLATION in September, which slowed to an over four-year low, implied a moderate erosion of workers’ real wage as it remains below the cost of living, labor experts said.   

University of the Philippines Diliman School of Labor and Industrial Relations Assistant Professor Benjamin B. Velasco said that while slower inflation is welcome news, it implies that real wages have not increased.

“As per the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), whole-year inflation in 2023 was 6%. The recent National Capital Region minimum wage of P35 is a 5.7% rise over P610,” he told BusinessWorld in a Facebook Messenger chat over the weekend.

“We will have to see how the 2024 average inflation is, compared with 2023 inflation. Nominal minimum wages rose just below inflation. Real wages are stagnant or even dipped slightly, which is actually the long-term trend in the Philippines,” he added.

The consumer price index slowed to 1.9% year on year in September from 3.3% in August and 6.1% a year ago, the PSA said on Friday. This was linked to the declining food and transport costs.

“Prices still increased even if by a small amount. This implies a reduction of purchasing power,” Mr. Velasco noted.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile prices of food and fuel, eased to 2.4% in September from 5.9% a year ago. Core inflation averaged 3.1% in the January-September period.

Broken down, food inflation slowed to 1.4% from 4.2% in August and 10% in the previous year.

BOTTOM 30%
Mr. Velasco said inflation for the bottom 30% of the population is “usually higher,” citing a PSA report in 2023 which showed yearly inflation for the bottom 30% was 6.7%.

“As for the bottom 30%, the basket of goods of the poorer Filipinos is skewed for food. Unfortunately, food inflation is greater than nonfood inflation,” he said. “Despite lower inflation, we need pro-active interventions to assist [the] working poor and [the] poorest of the poor.”

Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino National President Renecio “Luke” S. Espiritu, Jr. said the slower inflation rate last month is not “worth celebrating” as wages remain insufficient to cover day-to-day cost of living.

“Beyond looking at the inflation rate, let us look at the daily lives of the average Filipino,” he told BusinessWorld in a Facebook Messenger chat over the weekend.

“For a worker, a low inflation rate means little if the cost of everyday living remains sky-high and wages remain to be way below the cost of living.”

He added that the high costs of essential services, like electricity, water, and telecommunications continue to burden micro, small, and medium enterprises.

“There will be no ease for the working Filipino if wages do not keep up with inflation,” he added. “The little increases we get in the minimum wage do not reflect reality when it comes to actual needs of a working-class family.”

Federation of Free Workers President Jose Sonny G. Matula echoed that the drop in inflation would not necessarily help ease the burden of minimum wage workers.

“Even with lower inflation, many workers are still grappling with the effects of high living costs from previous inflationary periods,” he said in a Viber message.

“Minimum wage earners, in particular, have seen their purchasing power significantly reduced, and wage increases remain necessary to bring them back to a level where they can meet basic needs,” he added.

LEGISLATE WAGE HIKES
Both labor leaders reiterated their call for a legislated wage hike, noting the current daily minimum wages per region do not align with the inflation rates.

“While this (slower inflation) provides a window for wage hikes, especially where workers have long been demanding fair compensation, (such as) workers without a union and without bargaining power, it ultimately depends on how businesses choose to allocate their savings,” Mr. Matula added.

In February, the Senate approved on third and final reading a P100 across-the-board minimum wage increase for workers in the private sector. The House of Representatives has yet to pass similar legislation.

The current daily minimum wage in the capital region is P645 for non-agricultural workers and P608 for workers in agriculture and service/retail establishments employing 15 workers or fewer.

BoC seizes P2-M illegal onions

BUREAU OF CUSTOMS

THE Customs bureau’s Manila port last week confiscated P2 million worth of onions without proper sanitation permits.

The shipment, which contained 25 kilograms of onions, reportedly came from China, the Bureau of Customs (BoC) said in a statement.

“Upon verification, it was confirmed that the shipment lacked the required Sanitary and Phytosanitary Import Clearance (SPSIC) from the Department of Agriculture – Bureau of Plant Industry (DA-BPI), leading to the issuance of a Warrant of Seizure and Detention against it,” the statement read.

“This recent seizure reflects our firm resolve in ensuring that products that are noncompliant with laws, rules and regulations do not infiltrate our markets,” Customs-Port of Manila District Collector Rizalino Jose C. Torralba was quoted as saying.

As of end-August, the BoC has seized P61.16 billion worth of smuggled goods from 1,231 operations.

Enforcing import regulations would help avoid the entry of unsafe agricultural commodities and enhance public trust, Customs Commissioner Bienvenido Y. Rubio said. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Dole tax petition vs Davao junked

CTA.JUDICIARY.GOV.PH

THE Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) junked the petition of Dole Philippines, Inc.-Stanfilco Divison which challenged Davao City’s Watershed Code and environmental tax, citing lack of jurisdiction.

The tax court’s Second Division said the environmental tax is a regulatory fee, not a tax intended to generate revenue.

“Correspondingly, this Court is without jurisdiction to entertain the present appeal of the assailed Decision and assailed Order issued by the Regional Trial Court (RTC),” the 17-paged decision, penned by Associate Justice Corazon G. Ferrer-Flores, read.

“The Court finds that the Environmental Tax imposed under Section 17 of Davao City Ordinance No. 0310-07 is not a tax,” it added in a decision publicized on Oct. 2.

The case began when Dole, Inc. challenged Davao City’s Watershed Code, enacted by then-Mayor Rodrigo R. Duterte in 2007, seeking to nullify the law and declare the collection of the environmental tax incorrect and illegal.

It also asked the local government, under his successor Sara Z. Duterte-Carpio, to refund the P3.32 million environmental tax that it had paid under protest. 

The banana exporter initially filed its petition before the Davao City RTC but did not win, prompting to elevate the case before the CTA.

The firm argued the environmental fee was excessive, oppressive, confiscatory, arbitrary, and discriminatory, adding it was not a regulatory fee but a tax.

Assuming it is a fee, it should be declared invalid for imposing an excessive amount, it said.

The CTA clarified that if the main goal of an imposition is to raise revenue, it is considered a tax. However, if it is mainly meant to regulate, it is classified as a regulatory fee even if it also generates some revenue. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

P1.6-B Sorsogon assets flagged

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE Commission on Audit (CoA) has flagged the provincial government of Sorsogon over its failure to insure P1.62 billion worth of properties, risking massive loss of government assets due to man-made or natural calamities.

State auditors said only P671.2 million, 29.2% of P2.3 billion assets of Sorsogon provincial government were insured.

This leaves P1.62 billion of properties at risk of damage, violating the Property Insurance Law of 1951 and a CoA circular requiring all government assets and properties to be insured by the Government Service Insurance System.

“Examination of the insurance policies over properties likewise disclosed that only 29.26% or ₱671,201,751 of its ₱2,293,533,967 insurable properties were covered by insurance policies for various risks such as fire, lightning, earthquake, typhoon and flood, while 70.74% or ₱1,622,332,215 were not covered by any insurance policy,” part of the CoA report stated.

“The noncompliance with the requirement denied the government adequate and reliable protection against any damage to or loss of its properties or assets and interests due to fortuitous events and/or casualty,” state auditors added.

The Provincial Government of Sorsogon did not immediately reply to a Facebook Messenger chat seeking comment. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Isabela City now ‘Abu Sayyaf free’

COTABATO CITY — Officials have declared Isabela City in Basilan as fully cleared from the presence of the Abu Sayyaf terror group, a result of cross-section peace initiatives.

Brig. Gen. Alvin V. Luzon, commander of the Army’s 101st Infantry Brigade in Basilan, told reporters via Facebook Messenger on Sunday that credit for the feat should go to the Isabela City Peace and Order Council and the administration of Basilan Gov. Hadjiman H. Salliman.

The multi-sector, inter-agency Isabela City peace and security council, led by Mayor Sitti Djalia Turabin-Hataman, has members from the local Muslim and Christian religious communities.

Luzon, local leaders led by Ms. Turabin-Hataman and her spouse, Basilan Congressman Mujiv S. Hataman, and Army Brig. Gen. Leonardo I. Peña, who is commander of the anti-terror Joint Task Force Orion, together officiated last week the symbolic declaration of Isabela City as “Abu Sayyaf free,” meaning totally liberated from the presence of the group.

Units of the 101st Infantry Brigade, the Basilan Provincial Police Office, Salliman and his constituent-mayors in the province had earlier declared, one after another, as Abu Sayyaf free all the 11 towns in the province and its second city, Lamitan, which has 45 barangays. — John Felix M. Unson

Youth-laden ROS faces titleholder TNT in Governors’ Cup semifinals

RAIN OR SHINE ELASTO PAINTERS — PBA.PH

IT WAS A GREAT TEST of toughness against Magnolia and because of it, Rain or Shine (ROS) coach Yeng Guiao believes his youth-laden charges will be better equipped when they challenge titleholder TNT in the PBA Governors’ Cup semifinals.

“We’re a young team and to beat Magnolia in a (sudden death) Game 5, where everything was at stake (was a big morale boost),” Mr. Guaio said after finishing off the Hotshots, 114-110, Saturday night.

That series was an up-and-down for the Elasto Painters, who showed stern stuff bouncing back from deflating losses in Games 2 and 4, 69-121 and 100-129, respectively, and getting the job done in a thrilling KO.

As Magnolia was the more playoffs-experienced team, Mr. Guiao told his young guns like Jhonard Clarito, Adrian Nocum, Andrei Caracut, Keith Datu, Anton Asistio and Felix Lemetti to watch the Hotshots’ veterans closely and pick up a thing or do.

Well, that’s exactly what the E-Painters’ did with big help from the ever dependable Aaron Fuller.

In the best-of-seven semis, it will essentially be the same for ROS against the Tropang Giga, who have at their disposal the likes of Jayson Castro, Kelly Williams, RR Pogoy, the fast-maturing Calvin Oftana and prolific reinforcement Rondae Hollis-Jefferson.

And just like Magnolia, the Chot Reyes-coached TNT is a heavyweight with defensive orientation.

The best-of-seven Final Four between TNT, the topnotcher of Group A, and ROS, the No. 1-ranked squad of Group B, will blast off on Wednesday.

The protagonists will engage in a playoffs showdown for the second straight conference after fighting in a best-of-three in the Season 48 Philippine Cup quarterfinals. That went the full distance with Elasto Painters prevailing by the skin of their teeth in the decider, 110-109. — Olmin Leyba

UST blasts Mapua in straight sets, 25-17,  25-17, 25-20, to stay perfect in Shakey’s Super League

ANGGE POYOS

Games on Friday
(Rizal Memorial Coliseum)
1 p.m. – EAC vs NU
3:30 p.m. – La Salle vs Letran
6 p.m. – Perpetual vs UST

UNTIRING University of Santo Tomas (UST) walloped Mapua University, 25-17, 25-17, 25-20, to stay perfect in the 2024 Shakey’s Super League (SSL) Collegiate Pre-Season Championship on Sunday at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum.

It’s the second straight win in second straight day for the Tigresses after also trouncing Lyceum of the Philippines University, 25-16, 28-30, 25-17, 25-14 on Saturday.

Ace spiker Angge Poyos played only the first set as Kyla Cordora, Xyza Gula and Margaret Altea took the cudgels with nine, eight and seven points, respectively.

Eight more players racked up the scoring board for the Tigresses with setter Cassie Carballo orchestrating their attack in their third straight game overall after a championship run in V-League Women’s Collegiate Championship on Friday.

With Ms. Poyos clinching Tournament MVP and Ms. Carballo nabbing Finals MVP honor, Santo Tomas won its first title in any major league for the first time in 14 years and it’s eyeing the same in the SSL.

At 2-0 with a chance to close in on a sweep against University of Perpetual Help next week, the Tigresses are poised for a quarterfinal stint along with fellow unbeaten University of the East (3-0) in Pool B.

Meanwhile, University of the Philippines (1-1) registered its first win after taking down Colegio de San Juan de Letran, 17-25, 25-18, 25-18, 25-23, in Pool C.

Kassandra Doering had seven blocks for 16 points while Joan Monares and Niña Ytang had 11 and 10 points, respectively, for the Fighting Maroons in avenging their debut loss to De La Salle University. — John Bryan Ulanday

Alex Verdugo, Yankees clip Royals to open ALDS

NEW YORK — The final three-plus months of Alex Verdugo’s first regular season with the New York Yankees were so frustrating that there were some doubts if he would be in the starting lineup for Game 1 of the American League Division Series (ALDS).

Though the Yankees decided to go with Verdugo mostly because of his better outfield defense than novice rookie Jasson Dominguez, the left fielder delivered on both ends to help the Yankees open the postseason on a positive note.

Verdugo hit a tiebreaking RBI single with two outs in the seventh inning and the New York Yankees opened the ALDS with a 6-5 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night.

Game 2 is scheduled for Monday night in New York.

Verdugo reached base three times, doing so six days after delivering a go-ahead two-run single in the eighth of the Yankees’ regular-season finale, a 6-4 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday.

With Jazz Chisholm Jr. on second after opening the seventh inning Saturday with a single and a stolen base, Verdugo lined an 0-1 cutter from Michael Lorenzen (0-1) into left field. He advanced to second when Chisholm scored standing up ahead of left fielder MJ Melendez’s throw to the plate.

“Just trusting that he’s going to be ready for the moment, his experience, his track record and he’s going to be ready for the moment,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said of Verdugo. “It’s been a little bit of an up-and-down, tough second half for him offensively, but the guy’s a good hitter.”

Acquired in a rare trade with the rival Boston Red Sox in December, Verdugo started the season decently but tailed off considerably, finishing with a .233 average that was the lowest of any of his full seasons. He ended the campaign with four hits in his final 26 at-bats but capped New York’s 94-win regular season with a two-run bases-loaded single on Sunday in the eighth to beat the Pirates before coming through again Saturday.

Before his clutch hit, Verdugo made a highlight-reel juggling catch on Michael Massey’s drive to end the fourth and strand two. He tracked down the ball as it glanced off his wrist and bounced off his chest before completing the catch with his bare left hand.

Verdugo’s clutch hit occurred after the Yankees tied the score in the sixth on a run-scoring bloop single by Austin Wells, who also drew one of New York’s two bases-loaded walks in the fifth. Anthony Volpe had the other bases-loaded free pass, but his error in the top of the sixth eventually led to Garrett Hampson’s pinch-hit two-run single that gave the Royals a 5-4 lead.

Volpe committed a throwing error on a forceout attempt at second after a grounder by Tommy Pham, and the misplay proved costly when Hampson hit his two-run single off Tim Hill through a drawn-in infield.

Verdugo singled in the third and scored on a two-run homer by Gleyber Torres. Verdugo also opened the home half of the sixth with a walk and scored on Wells’ game-tying base hit.

Melendez hit a two-run homer and Pham lifted a sacrifice fly to center against New York starter Gerrit Cole as the Royals took a 3-2 lead through four innings.

Cole allowed four runs (three earned) on seven hits in five-plus innings, getting lifted after Yuli Gurriel opened the sixth with a single. The reigning AL Cy Young Award winner struck out four, walked two and threw 80 pitches.

Clay Holmes relieved Hill in the sixth, got the final two outs of the frame and pitched a 1-2-3 seventh. Tommy Kahnle went two-thirds of an inning, and Luke Weaver recorded a four-out save.

Kansas City starter Michael Wacha allowed three runs on four hits in four-plus innings. He struck out three and walked three as the Royals tied a season high by issuing eight walks. — Reuters

Napheesa Collier, Lynx have Sun on brink of elimination in Game 4

AFTER taking a 1-0 lead on the road, the Connecticut Sun now face elimination from the WNBA postseason at home when they host the Minnesota Lynx on Sunday in a pivotal Game 4 of a five-game semifinal series in Uncasville, Conn.

The Sun trail the Lynx 2-1 in the series after Minnesota claimed two straight victories. Most recently, the Lynx won 90-81 on Friday night in Connecticut behind 26 points and 11 rebounds from All-Star forward Napheesa Collier.

Connecticut had been able to contain Collier early in the series — holding her to a combined 28 points on 10-of-30 shooting in the first two games — but the Defensive Player of the Year bounced back in a big way on offense in Game 3. Collier shot 11 of 19 from the floor and dished out three assists. Collier had eight points in the fourth quarter to help the Lynx hold on for the win.

“There was nobody more frustrated than Phee over the past couple games,” said Cheryl Reeve, the Lynx head coach who also coached Collier on gold medal-winning Team USA at the Paris Olympics this summer.

Combined with her performances in a first-round sweep of the Phoenix Mercury, Collier became the first player in Lynx history to have multiple games of at least 25 points and 10 rebounds in the postseason, according to ESPN.

“I think just staying aggressive,” Collier said Friday of her bounce-back offensive output. “Everybody has off-nights, of course, but we won the game. That’s all that matters. But I knew I needed to come in today being aggressive and keep that for the next game.”

The Sun lost despite having all five starters score in double figures, led by Brionna Jones’ 21 points. It was the first time since Sept. 17 that Jones had scored in double figures.

For Connecticut, the game may have gone differently had Marina Mabrey (14 points) shot a little bit better than 6 of 20 from the floor and 1 of 11 from 3-point range. It was Mabrey’s worst shooting performance in 11 games. The last time she made less than 10 percent of her 3-point attempts was a Sept. 3 loss to the Seattle Storm (0 for 5).

As a team, the Sun shot just 3 of 20 from 3-point range and missed five free throws in 23 attempts.

“A lot of us have been in this position before and have come out of it,” Sun forward Alyssa Thomas said. “If you want your season to continue, you want to make it to the finals, you’ve got to give it everything that you’ve got.” — Reuters

Mets pummel Phillies’ bullpen for comeback victory in Game 1

PHILADELPHIA — Blanked for seven innings by Philadelphia starter Zack Wheeler, the New York Mets erupted for six runs against the Phillies’ bullpen in the final two innings Saturday to earn a 6-2 victory in Game 1 of a National League Division Series.

Brandon Nimmo’s RBI single off Matt Strahm snapped a 1-1 tie in the eighth after Mark Vientos delivered the tying run with a run-scoring single of his own. Pete Alonso, J.D. Martinez and Starling Marte also drove in runs in the inning for the Mets, who came from behind in the late innings for the third time in six days.

Nimmo, who went 2-for-4 in the game, delivered another run with a single in the ninth off Tanner Banks.

Kyle Schwarber hit a leadoff homer in the bottom of the first for the Phillies. Schwarber went 2-for-5, but the Phillies managed only three other hits against five Mets pitchers. The last was a pinch-hit RBI double by Kody Clemens in the ninth.

Wheeler allowed a single hit over seven innings before giving way to Jeff Hoffman to start the eighth. Francisco Alvarez opened the inning with a single and Francisco Lindor then walked after falling behind in the count 0-2.

Vientos then lined Hoffman’s 1-2 slider into left field to score pinch runner Harrison Bader. Strahm relieved Hoffman, but Nimmo’s single on an 0-2 pitch brought Lindor home. Alonso’s sacrifice fly, also on an 0-2 pitch, made it 3-1. — Reuters