PHILADELPHIA — Jean Segura kept running away from his teammates after his single drove in the winning run, sliding in the outfield beyond second base before letting them mob him.
That's one way to celebrate a walk-off hit on opening day.
Segura's RBI single with two outs in the 10th inning lifted the Philadelphia Phillies over the Atlanta Braves 3-2 in their season opener Thursday.
"I just wanted to race and let them get me," Segura said. "It's kind of boring when you wait and let them hug you. It was fun."
After Nate Jones (0-1) intentionally walked Did Gregorius, Segura hit a bouncer down the third-base line to score Bryce Harper, who began the inning as the automatic runner at second base and advanced to third on a grounder.
"Jean has a real competitive spirit and wants to be great," Phillies manager Joe Girardi said. "He was walking to the plate as Didi was being walked and I think he took it as a challenge."
In the top of the 10th, center fielder Roman Quinn made a perfect throw to the plate to retire Ozzie Albies, who was trying to score on Marcell Ozuna's fly ball. Catcher J.T. Realmuto caught the ball and slid in front of the plate in one slick motion, successfully blocking Albies' path.
Phillies ace Aaron Nola was one strike away from tossing seven scoreless innings before pinch-hitter Pablo Sandoval ripped an 0-2 pitch into the second deck in right field to tie it at 2.
The Phillies got 3 1/3 scoreless innings from four relievers, with Connor Brogdon (1-0) working the 10th. They had the worst bullpen in the majors last year, blowing 14 saves with a 7.06 ERA.
Hard-throwing lefty Jose Alvarado struck out three batters in the eighth despite loading the bases. His fastball hit 100 mph on a few of his pitches. Hector Neris threw a 1-2-3 ninth, aided by shortstop Gregorius' sliding, over-the-shoulder basket catch in shallow left field to deny Albies a hit.
Nola gave up two runs and six hits in 6 2/3 innings, striking out six. The right-hander tied Hall of Famer Juan Marichal for most starts against the Braves on opening day with three.
"Unbelieveable win," Nola said. "Last pitch was a pretty bad pitch. Definitely tough pitch to swallow, but overall we got the win and that's all that matters."
Atlanta's Max Fried gave up two runs and six hits in five innings, striking out eight. Fried became just the fourth left-hander since the Braves moved to Atlanta in 1966 to start on opening day and the first since Tom Glavine did it in 2002.
"I didn't feel like I was really sharp," Fried said. "I was grinding out there, trying to keep us in the game."
Andrew McCutchen led off Philadelphia's first with a single and scored the first run on Alec Bohm's sacrifice fly to left with the bases loaded. McCutchen's headfirst slide barely beat left fielder Ozuna's throw to the plate.
Realmuto's RBI single in the third gave Philadelphia a 2-0 lead. Rhys Hoskins hit a double with one out, advanced to third on Harper's single and scored on Realmuto's grounder to right. Harper was thrown out trying to reach third on the hit.