SAN DIEGO — They finally found a weakness in Cristopher Sánchez, a few minutes after the Phillies completed a sweep at Petco Park. The Phillies wanted a toast to history. They demanded Sánchez deliver a speech inside the visiting clubhouse. It was cramped. He stood near a surfboard table and a Golden Tee machine. Not everyone could see Sánchez, the man with a 44 2/3-inning scoreless streak, but they could hear team interpreter Diego D’Aniello’s translation.Sánchez thanked his teammates for their support — in the good and the bad times. He thanked God. It was all so special, he said, and that was it. They had a bus to ride up the Pacific Coast. A brief speech.“I didn’t do a good job,” Sánchez later said.His teammates disagreed. They are all grateful to witness this, perhaps the second-greatest month for a pitcher in modern Major League Baseball history. Sánchez threw 39 innings in May. He struck out 45 batters. He walked three. He did not allow a run.It just keeps going. It almost feels like it cannot end.“A little bit,” Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly said after Wednesday’s 3-0 win over the San Diego Padres. “You just don’t expect him to give up any runs.”That is an audacious thing to say about a pitcher, even one of the best in the sport, because that is not how this works. Manny Machado should have hit a ball over the wall in left field, but it died at the warning track in the fourth inning. He should have hit at least a double in the sixth inning, but rookie center fielder Justin Crawford ran and ran and ran until the ball plopped into his glove and he crashed into the padded fence. A bloop should have fallen here or there. Something should have conspired against Sánchez.Nothing. Sánchez owns the longest scoreless streak in Phillies history — since at least 1893, when the current mound distance was set — and probably even before that. He has the seventh-longest such streak in MLB since 1920. He has the second-longest one by a lefty.So, he had to give a speech.“This is a game; it’s not only about me or about what I do on the mound,” Sánchez said. “It’s about our group. And I think it’s really something special and beautiful to feel the support of the team as a whole.”“You just don’t expect him to give up any runs,” interim manager Don Mattingly said of Cristopher Sánchez, who has pitched 44 2/3 scoreless innings in a row. (Orlando Ramirez / Getty Images)What is it like to be Cristopher Sánchez right now?“Pretty good,” shortstop Trea Turner said, “when they know what’s coming and still can’t hit you.”“I would imagine you feel like Superman,” fellow lefty Jesús Luzardo said. “Just untouchable. And it’s not just given to him. He obviously works extremely hard. Like, he’s earned that. But I would just imagine it feels just like an all-time high. When he’s out there on the mound, he’s flowing, and I feel like there’s probably not many thoughts.”