Galvis’ HR a lone spark as Thompson struggles

CHICAGO — Carlos Rodon has grown accustomed to winning ways. The southpaw went from May 23 to Aug. 11 without a victory, but factoring in his 6 2/3-inning shutout performance during a 9-1 trouncing of the Phillies on Tuesday night at U.S. Cellular Field, the White Sox hurler has gone four straight starts without a setback.

In those four starts, Rodon has yielded four earned runs on 19 hits over 24 2/3 innings, with 21 strikeouts and six walks. He gave up three hits over 109 pitches against the Phillies.

“It’s all about strike one and strike two. When you get ahead of guys and you’ve got good stuff, you can beat ’em,” Rodon said. “You can cause more contact when you get ahead, you can just flip up there whatever you want when it’s 1-2, 0-2. Omar [Narvaez] back there calling that game is huge. Just comfortable, got on a roll and everything worked out.”

• Rodon unlocks backdoor slider in commanding win

Phillies rookie Jake Thompson, who entered with an 8.79 ERA, was hit early and often by the White Sox offense. The team scored one in the first on Adam Eaton’s triple and Tim Anderson’s groundout, added three in the third and three more in the fifth, including back-to-back homers from Jose Abreu and Justin Morneau.

“I’m not used to this,” Thompson said. “The issue is pretty evident. I’m not throwing strikes, and when I am throwing strikes, they’re not good strikes. It’s coming back to the drawing board and figuring it out a little bit.”

Philadelphia avoided the shutout when Freddy Galvis homered off of reliever Chris Beck with two outs in the seventh. Every White Sox starter but Todd Frazier had at least one hit, as the White Sox won a third straight game.

MOMENTS THAT MATTEREDThree, it’s a magic number: When Abreu homered with one out and one on in the fifth, it marked the third straight game in which the White Sox first baseman had gone deep. Abreu also homered in three straight games from June 9-12, 2015. He has raised his home run total to 17 and his RBI total to 70.

“His hands have been working great lately,” said White …

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