Sunday's getaway game is a lefty-on-lefty headliner: Cristopher Sanchez (8-2, 1.54 ERA) against Kyle Harrison (7-1, 2.72 ERA). Sanchez has been one of the most underrated arms in the league all year and Harrison has been the steady veteran-feel anchor in a young Milwaukee rotation that already lost Freddy Peralta and is still waiting on Brandon Woodruff. First pitch is 1:10 PM CT. The Phillies arrive at 37-31 but the underlying story is the 28-12 run they've put together since late April under interim manager Don Mattingly. They took 2 of 3 in Toronto coming in, including a 7-4 win on the front end of the flight to Milwaukee. The Brewers, meanwhile, are still 41-25 and atop the NL Central but lost back-to-back games in Sacramento to drop their last 5 to 3-2 after sweeping the Rockies earlier in the week. Injuries are doing more heavy lifting in this series than either team would like. Milwaukee's pitching staff is the bigger concern — Quinn Priester, Logan Henderson and Woodruff are all sidelined from the rotation, closer Trevor Megill is dealing with oblique tightness, and the bullpen is missing Brian Fitzpatrick (UCL), DL Hall and Carlos Rodriguez. Philadelphia is mostly intact on the position-player side, though Johan Rojas is gone for the season after a UCL tear and Adolis Garcia is day-to-day despite a 2-for-4, homer line in Friday's win over the White Sox. Sunday's game is the kind of spot where the Phillies should feel comfortable. Sanchez has been overpowering, Aaron Nola got the win the previous day if the rotation lines as expected, and Mattingly's group has played like the better team for over a month. The Brewers have leaned on their depth all year, but with the rotation thinned out and Megill questionable in the late innings, the margin for error against this Philly lineup keeps shrinking.