PHILADELPHIA — When it was all over, Trea Turner held his red helmet above his head. The last gasps of this ballpark, potentially until 2026, were screams and boos and then silence. Turner lowered his arms. The disbelief overcame him Monday night. The Los Angeles Dodgers celebrated a two-game lead over the Phillies in the National League Division Series, and as Turner neared the dugout steps, the anger returned. He cocked his arms backward and prepared to spike his helmet.

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He couldn’t do it.

“Trust me,” Turner said, “I wanted to.”

There was wreckage everywhere in the immediate moments that followed a crushing 4-3 loss that will cast doubt on everything the Phillies have built here. They are nine innings from this thing ending, and everyone who boards the club’s charter flights Tuesday morning to California knows the harsh truth. The Phillies have not been good enough in October, whether it’s the stars, the bullpen, the manager — all of it. The Dodgers are the standard; there is not a massive gulf between the sides, but there is a gap. Two games at Citizens Bank Park proved that.

The Phillies are on the brink.

“I mean, at this point, just win one game,” Alec Bohm said. “That’s all we can think about. It’s just too big picture to think, like, ‘We have to win three in a row.’ Just go win one game.”

The reality hit him.

“On the other hand, too, it could be the last time this group gets to play together,” Bohm said. “The whole, full 26-man roster, for sure.

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