DENVER -- Jhoulys Chacin walked to the mound in the ninth inning, fired up and ready to finish a gem. He was nearly unhittable for eight innings and had plenty left in the tank. But with two outs and one strike on Jimmy Rollins, he left a changeup over the plate for an RBI double that spoiled a bid for a shutout. Ryan Howard followed with a single, and Chacins day was done. However, he left the field to a standing ovation following the best outing by a Colorado Rockies starter this season. "I was really pumped up when I finished (the eighth). The last time I pitched here in the ninth was 2011," Chacin said. "I really wanted to finish the inning. After two outs I (said), You have one out left." He couldnt get the final out and instead had to settle for a 5-2 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday. Chacin (5-3) gave up six hits, struck out three and didnt walk a batter. His 8 2-3 innings marked the longest outing by a Colorado starter this season, but he missed a chance at his second career shutout and third complete game. His only shutout was a 5-0 win over the Chicago Cubs on April 15, 2011. "Thats what weve been waiting for," teammate Carlos Gonzalez said. "Hes a great pitcher, a great competitor. Too bad he didnt get the shutout, but that was an outstanding performance." Rex Brothers got the final out for his third save of the season. Wilin Rosario and Gonzalez homered for Colorado. The teams combined for 30 runs and 55 hits in splitting the first two games of the series, but pitchers dominated the finale at Coors Field. Phillies starter Cole Hamels (2-10) was sharp early, but Chacin was efficient throughout. Chacin needed just 74 pitches -- 59 strikes -- to get through the first eight innings and he had only one three-ball count, to Rollins in the fourth inning. Chacin retired 14 in a row after Dominic Browns one-out single in the second. Kevin Frandsen led off the seventh with a single but was wiped out on a double play. Howard followed with a single up the middle against the shift, but Brown grounded out to end the inning. "What he was doing wasnt hard to figure out," Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said. "He was throwing first-pitch strikes. He was getting ahead of us, and then we were chasing balls out of the strike zone." Chacin looked as though he was going to go the distance. In the ninth, he gave up a one-out single to Ben Revere, who moved to second on Frandsens groundout. Rollins drove him in with a line drive to the wall just over the head of right fielder Michael Cuddyer. "I was pretty close, but to be honest with you with my ribs I got scared," said Cuddyer, who missed five games last week with a rib injury. "Scared of the wall. No question about it. I know in my mind with my ribs and the wall right there, I felt that warning track, all that together I got a little nervous." After Howards RBI single, Rockies manager Walt Weiss went to remove Chacin to a chorus of boos from the 45,186 fans, who were hoping to see the first complete game by a Rockies starter in two seasons. "I was pulling for a complete game as much as anybody, but once he got to that situation the right thing to do was go get Rex to finish that," Weiss said. "Thats about as good a performance as Ive seen in a while by Jhoulys." Chacin threw just 17 balls in his 86 pitches and had a first-pitch strike on 26 of the 31 batters he faced. The last strike to Howard ended his day earli