Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

Management of pitchers could hurt Phillies in NLDS

 Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson lived by the leash and died by the leash over the span of two games.

In Game 1 of the National League Division Series in Atlanta on Saturday, Thomson made the boldest of decisions by pulling starting pitcher Ranger Suarez after 3.2 shutout innings.

The gamble paid off with six Phillies relievers combining to secure a 3-0 blanking of the Braves.

Game 2 on Monday was a different story. Philadelphia ace Zack Wheeler was brilliant through five innings, not allowing a single hit. He began to show signs of wear in the sixth inning by walking Ronald Acuna Jr., who then scored on an Ozzie Albies single and an error by shortstop Trea Turner. Wheeler was able to strike out Austin Riley to end the inning and keep the score at 4-1. At 85 pitches, his night appeared to be done.

Instead, Thomson sent Wheeler back out for the seventh inning, and a two-run home run by Travis d'Arnaud cut the Phillies' lead to one.

Wheeler was pulled immediately, but the aftershocks were evident. Philadelphia's equilibrium had been rattled. Reliever Jeff Hoffman surrendered a two-run homer to Riley in the eighth inning, and Atlanta tied the series with a 5-4 win. 

After the game, Thomson stood by his decision to let Wheeler go another inning.

"I wanted him to go back out. He said he was fine. And he still looked it."

He was fine. He said so. He looked fine ... until he didn't, that is.

Thomson and the Phillies learned the hard way that luck runs out quickly in the postseason. They'll have a chance to redeem themselves when they return to Citizens Bank Park for Game 3 on Wednesday, but it may not be easy.

Not only has Atlanta's offense awakened, but Philadelphia will be sending enigmatic starter Aaron Nola to the mound. Nola was outstanding in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series against Miami, but he's been prone to a meltdown inning, for lack of a better term, in several previous starts. He'll cruise through four or five innings, then everything will unravel.

These are the situations in which Thomson can either redeem himself or play to old habits. Over the first two games of this series, he's proven that a short leash is more reliable than a long one. It was better to be safe in Game 1 than sorry in Game 2. Confidence is far from a bad trait, but overconfidence can spell doom in the postseason.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Insider names frontrunner in Browns' QB competition after drafting Shedeur Sanders
Yankees offense goes nuclear in blowout win
Giannis Antetokounmpo rips Tyrese Haliburton's father for 'disrespectful' act
Celtics make unique NBA playoff history in Game 5 win
How Steelers reportedly expect Aaron Rodgers saga will end
Juan Soto's bat speed decline threatens Mets' $765 million investment
NFL team executive expands on what Browns' Shedeur Sanders did wrong before draft
Insider suggests four-time Pro Bowl option for Steelers if Aaron Rodgers doesn't sign
Watch: Pacers, Tyrese Haliburton eliminate the Bucks in OT
Stanley Cup playoffs takeaways: Hurricanes advance, panic time for Maple Leafs
Jayson Tatum's historic game helps send Celtics to Eastern Conference semis
Pirates ace Paul Skenes explains why he's not concerned about potential injuries
Steelers may have found another steal in UDFA pool as Pittsburgh lands an athletic freak
49ers sign star TE to four-year extension
Spurs' Stephon Castle runs away with Rookie of the Year Award
Kings to make Doug Christie new head coach in full-circle moment
Vikings QB J.J. McCarthy sends strong message about whether he's ready to start in 2025
Pistons' Cade Cunningham comes alive in fourth quarter to stave off elimination vs. Knicks
Cubs defeat Pirates with an impressive night at the plate
Watch: Blue Jays' Daulton Varsho makes potential catch of the year