October 2009

Game One – Cliff and Chase Set the Pace

GAME ONE – CLIFF AND CHASE SET THE PACE

by Max Blue

 

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                        For those who had doubts,

                        Note C-Lee’s arm and C-Ut’s clouts.

                        The mystique of Yankee Stadium,

                        Lost in Phil’s radioactive radium,

                        And just enough,”Let’s go Phillies!” shouts

 

                        Sabathia and Lee duked it out,

                        The difference: Utley hit two out.

                        Lee in command all the way,

                        A ten K, no walks day.

                        Any doubt what this game’s all about?

 

Wednesday, October 28, 2009. Yankee Stadium, the Bronz, New York.

Philadelphia – 6, New York Yankees – 1.

WP – Cliff Lee (3-0), LP – CC Sabathia (3-1).

HR – Utley – 2 (31), 3rd, 6th.

 

Cliff Lee, the Phillies’ gold-plated, ice-water veined, lefthander dismissed a Yankee team that led the majors in wins, homers, and runs, with cool disdain, fanning 10, including the ballyhooed Alex Rodriguez, the fearsome A-Rod, three times. Lee was machine-like in command of at least four pitches – 4-seam fastball, 2-seam fastball, spiked curve ball, cutter, and changeup. Did I say four? The Yankees’ run came in the 9th inning on an error by Jimmy Rollins that Lee shrugged off with K’s of A-Rod and Posada to end it.

 

CC Sabathia, the mountainous Yankee lefty, was almost as good but for two fastballs that Chase Utley  hit into the rightfield bleachers.

 

Next up: Game two. Pedro Martinez for Philadelphia, A.J. Burnett for New York. In a pre-first- game press conference, Pedro announced to the New York writers, and the world, that he, Pedro Martinez, might be the most influential player that ever stepped in Yankee Stadium. Any questions?

                       

 

NL LCS GAME THREE – CLIFF LEE DAZZLES DODGERS

GAME THREE – CLIFF LEE DAZZLES DODGERS

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                        On a cool October night at the Bank,

                        Champs have Cliff Lee and their lumber to thank

                        For putting Dodgers under

                        With fastballs and thunder,

                        LA is walking the plank to the tank.

 

Sunday, October 18, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Philadelphia – 11, Los Angeles Dodgers – 0.

WP – Lee (1-0), LP – Kuroda (0-1)

HR – Werth (1) [36], 1st, 1 on; Victorino (1) [10].8th, 2 on.

 

Phillies played the way champions are supposed to play: score lots of runs and shut out the opposition. They jumped all over Hiroki Kuroda, the only Dodger pitcher to beat them in the 2008, LCS. Ryan Howard’s two-run triple began the run parade in the first inning, followed shortly thereafter by Jason Werth’s missile off the ivy climbing the brick wall beyond the centerfield fence. Cliif Lee took it from there: eight innings, three singles, no walks, no runs, 10 strikeouts, tieing him with Steve Carlton and Curt Schilling for most Ks in a post-season game. Howard’s first inning RBIs set a major league record of RBIs in seven consecutive post-season games in the same year.

 

Lookin’ good, Champs.

 

NLCS GAME TWO – A TALE OF TWO BALLGAMES

NLCS GAME TWO – A TALE OF TWO BALLGAMES

Game one – Innings one through seven

 

                                    PEDRO RULES

            Pedro Martinez was dealing,

            And the LA Dodgers were reeling.

            Ryan Howard supplied the one run,

            Hit one to left a long ton.

            Hard to describe the good feeling.

 

Friday, October 16, 2009. Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California.

Philadelphia – 1, Los Angeles Dodgers – 0 (seven innings)

WP – Pedro Martinez, LP – Vicente Padilla.

HR – Howard, 4th.

 

Game two – Innings eight and nine.

 

                                    UTLEY FOOLS

            In the eighth when we needed his arm,

            “You da man” Chase did us harm.
            Two days in a row,

            he made a bad throw,

            Should we send him back down to the farm?

            Or remember his great baseball charm?

           

            J. Happ also gets blame.

            A sacks-full walk to lose game.

            A four alarm, brain-cramping shame.

 

Friday, October 16, 2009. Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California.

Los Angeles Dodgers – 2, Philadelphia – 0.(8th and 9th)

 

Los Angeles Dodgers – 2, Philadelphia – 1 (full nine innings)

WP – Kuo (1-0), LP – Park (0-1)

BS- Park (1). S – Broxton (1).

 

Pedro had not pitched for about three weeks, and there were questions about his physical condition. Was it his ribs or his neck that was giving him trouble? The guy is 37-years old- a relic by some baseball standards. Oh sure, he had 212 major league wins, won three Cy Young awards, and was 6-2 in post-season play, but none of that mattered as he rocked back to deliver the first pitch to Dodger leadoff hitter, Rafael Furcal, in game two of the League Championship Series in 90-degree weather here in Los Angeles.

 

Pedro delivered an 87-pitch, two-hit, seven inning shutout, and to say he was masterful is a giant understatement. Popups and nubs, but only three strikeouts, testimony that this was not the physically overpowering Pedro of his youth. This was the  intellectually overpowering Pedro of his maturity. This was Pedro, the symphony conductor, orchestrating the sweet music of  Dodger broken bats. This was a performance that actually brought tears to these old eyes watching the flickering TV screen in a red Phillies, Sue Walters embroidered, T-shirt, and a $39 Phillies cap.  

 

Charlie Manuel decried that Pedro was done after seven innings and went to his bullpen with a

1-0  lead, forged by Ryan Howard, his “big piece”, who slugged a Vicente Padilla, (yep, our old amigo, back to break a few of his old teammates bats)) breaking pitch into the Dodger Stadium left field bleachers. The pen might have pulled it off  if Chase Utley had not thrown an almost certain doubleplay ball into the Phillies dugout, allowing the tieing run to score, and if Jay Happ had not walked Andre Ethier with the bases loaded to force in the winning run.

 

The Dodgers didn’t win this game, the Phillies lost it.

 

 

NLCS GAME ONE – PHILLIES

NLCS GAME ONE – PHILLIES

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                    Up 1-0 in the fifth, LA’s Kershaw faltered.

                                    His high and tight fastball was altered,

                                    When Champ’s Carlos Ruiz

                                    launched a three-run deep breeze,

                                    And the Dodger’s momentum was haltered.

 

                                    In the eighth, another Champ’s two-on home run,

                                    And the Dodgers’potato was done.

                                    Raoool Ibañez the guy

                                    Who darkened LA sky,

                                    And Brad Lidge sealed the Champions’ fun.

 

Thursday, October 15, 2009. Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California.

Philadelphia – 8, Los Angeles Dodgers – 6.

WP – Hamels (1-1) [11-12], LP – Clayton Kershaw (0-1)

H – Durbin (1), Happ (1), Park (1)

S – Lidge (3) [34].

HR – Loney (1) [11], 2nd; M. Ramirez (1) [16], 5th, 1 on.

Ruiz (1) [10], 5th, 2 on; Ibañez (1) [35], 8th, 2 on.

 

GAME FOUR – CHAMPS ADVANCE TO LCS

GAME FOUR – CHAMPS ADVANCE TO LCS

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                    Colorado did not go down easy,

                                    Their three-run 8th made us queasy.

                                    But Phils saved the best for the last,

                                    Keyed by R-How’s clutch two base blast.

                                    On to LA, land of Dopey and Sneezy.                                      

                       

Monday, October 12, 2009. Coors Field,Denver, Colorado.

Philadelphia – 5, Colorado – 4.

 

WP – Madson (1-0) [5-5]. LP – Street (0-2) [4-1].

H – Eyre (2) [13].

BS – Street (1) [2].

S- Lidge (2) [31]

HR – Victorino (1) [10], 1st.; Werth (2) [36], 6th.

 

It was a warm and snuggly night in Denver, a cool 47 degrees at game time. Cliff Lee took the mound in the first inning with a one-run lead thanks to Shane Victorino’s first inning homerun off Rockies’ ace, Ubaldo Jiminez. Program note: two years ago, here at Coors Field in the 7th inning of  the Game 3 LDS, Victorino homered off Jiminez to tie the game at 1-1 though the Phillies lost it 3-1. Lee pitched into the 8th with a 2-1 lead then turned it over to Mad Dog Madson following a bizarre acrobatic leap by Dexter Fowler over Chase Utley fielding Todd Helton’s weak grounder in the basepath. . Utley’s flip to Rollins was dropped leaving two on and cleanup hitter Troy Tulowitzki due to hit. Madson retired Tulow but yielded a game-tying single to pinch-hitter Jason Giambi and a two-run double to catcher Yorvit Torrealba who nearly dislocated his jaw screaming his pleasure. Not so fast, Yorvit, these are the World’s Champions, and they showed it by posting a three-spot of their own in the 9th. With two out and two on, Charlie Manuel’s “Big Piece”, R-How, himself, nailed a Huston Street pitch for a breathtaking shot off the base of the rightfield wall to score Victorino and Utley. Jason Werth followed with a well-placed dunk to rightcenter plating Howard with the game and series-ending hit, when Brad Lidge fanned Tulowitzki with two on to end it.

 

Bring on the LA Dodgers.

GAME THREE – LIDGE TURNS OUT COLD, LATE LIGHTS

GAME THREE – LIDGE TURNS OUT COLD, LATE LIGHTS

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                        The spotlight came on and Brad Lidge jogged in,

                        His job, as before, to save a Phils’ win.

                        In mile-high Denver it was just below freezing,

                        Could B-Lid overcome his 11 blown-save teasing?

                        With two on he turned out the lights with a pop fly and grin.

 

Sunday, October  11, 2009. Coors Field, Denver, Colorado.

Philadelphia – 6, Colorado – 5.

WP – Durbin (1-0) [5-5], LP – Street (0-1) [4-1].

H – Eyre (1) [13].

BS – Madson (0-1) [6].

S – Lidge (1-0) [31]

HR – Carlos Gonzalez (1) [13], 4th.

Utley (1), [31], 1st.

                       

The good news was there was no wind, so the 30 degree temperature did not feel like 15 or below. The bad news was the cold caused pitchers to struggle with command of their fastballs, and curve balls were out of the question. Hitters did their part by swinging at pitches out, even way out, of the strike zone. In the fourth, after Rockies’ right hander Jason Hammel walked Ibañez with the bases loaded and nobody out to tie the game at three, Feliz lunged at a slider way outside and low, tapping it to Hammel who started a 1-2-3 double play. Yikes! Chooch Ruiz then rapped a ground single to left to give the Champs a 4-3 lead. Two innings later, Ruiz singled on the ground to center for a 5-4 lead.  But again the Rockies forged a tie, keyed by a leadoff double from the suddenly unstoppable Carlos Gonzalez..

 

Chad Durbin pitched a crucial 8th inning for the Phillies, retiring the Rockies with three ground ball outs on ten pitches to preserve the 5-5 tie. The Champs broke through for a run in the 9th off Rox closer Huston Street, aided by two Umpires’ wrong calls on the same play. With Rollins on second base after a leadoff single and a Victorino sacrifice bunt, Utley fouled a low and in slider off his leg, but took off for first when the ball rolled into fair territory. Video replays showed that it was a foul ball and that catcher Torrealba’s throw to first was speared by first baseman Helton with his toe on the base a fraction before Utley’s foot hit the bag. Utley was called safe at first with Rollins taking third. Ryan Howard then delivered a mammoth sacrifice fly near the 400 foot mark in left centerfield for a 6-5 lead.

 

And then came Lidge. It was nearing 2 a.m..in Philadelphia when B-Lid toed the ice-cold Denver rubber with the game, and assuredly, the 2009 season on the line. With one out, Lidge walked the smoking hot Gonzalez who quickly stole second as Lidge faced the dangerous Jason Giambi, pinch hitting for Dexter Fowler, never mind the rookie already had two hits. When Lidge retired Giambi on a late-swing pop to third, it was not clear whether the result was caused by a slow Giambi bat or a late moving Lidge fast ball. The next challenge was the veteran professional hitter, Todd Helton. Lidge would not let this guy beat him. He pitched to him, but carefully, Helton not eager to swing at pitches close to the strike zone. Why not, Helton? That’s the tying run out there on second base. What are you waiting for? Goes through the mind of more than one Rockies’ fan, to say nothing of legions of baseball experts around the country who stayed up late to catch this drama. Whatever. Helton takes first in his mincing trot way, looking to Troy Tulowitzki to bring home the bacon. He can’t do it. The dreaded fly ball to left and at 2:14 a.m.in the East it’s over. Champs win 6-5 to lead the series 2-1. Lidge celebrates mildly, and looks for Cliff Lee to end it starting about 16 hours later here in Denver where it’s hoped it will be in the balmy 40-degree range.

 

Let it be mentioned that Frank Fitzpatrick, writing in the Philadelphia Inquirer, noting that Lee shaved off his goatee following his first game shut down of the Rockies, had this to say:

 

            The baseball universe is more superstitious than a Haitian grandmother. Why in the world would Lee tempt the fates by altering his appearance for game 5(sic)?     

            The baseball gods are fickle deities.

                                                                                   

GAME TWO – ROCKIES COME THROUGH

GAME TWO – ROCKIES COME THROUGH

                        Rockies’ Cook throwing sinkers,

                        Bounced off Champs’ bats like cold clinkers.

                        Cole Hamels could not find his groove,

                        It’s like he had nothing to prove,

                        For the team it was one of those stinkers.

 

Thursday, October 8, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Colorado – 5, Philadelphia – 4.

WP – Cook (1-0) [11-7], LP – Hamels (0-1)[10-11]

H – Contreras, Belisle, Betancourt, Morales.

S – Street

HR – Torrealba (1) [2], 4th, 1 on.

Werth (1) [36], 8th.

The game turned on two bang-bang plays that the Phillies failed to execute. In the first, Hamels picked Carlos Gomez off first, but when Howard double-clutched getting his throw off to Rollins, Gomez was credited with a stolen base. He was bunted to third, and scored on Todd Helton’s off-the-end-of-the-bat tap down the first base line. Yuk.

 

Trailing 4-0, the Phillies rallied for three runs in the sixth inning on RBIs from Howard and Ibañez, but the Rockies scored what proved to be the game-winner in the seventh. Joe Blanton, relieving for the first time, gave up a leadoff double, and threw late to third by a fraction on a bunt. J-Happ relieved and was felled by a line-drive off his shin that loaded the bases. The run scored on a sacrifice fly.

 

After Jason Werth cut the lead to 5-4 with an 8th inning homer, Shane Victorino lined out to second to end the game with the tying run on second and the winning run on first.

 

Game three is scheduled to be played in Denver on Saturday where the weather forecast is for a high temperature of 34 degrees and a 30 percent chance of freezing drizzle and snow. Oh boy.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   

NLDS- GAME ONE- CHAMPS IN A BREEZE

PHILLIES JOURNAL 2009 POST SEASON                   

 

                                    NLDS – GAME ONE – CHAMP PHILLIES IN A BREEZE

                                                Cliff Lee, not the wind, blew Rockies away

                                                A complete game six-hitter kept Rox at bay.

                                                Scoring began with Ibañez double to right,

                                                That uplifting, soul soothing, beautiful sight.

                                                Ten wins to go ’til Champs reclaim crown

                                                Small smiles and head nods blanket the town.

 

Wednesday, October 7, 2009, Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Philadelphia – 5, Colorado – 1.

WP – Cliff Lee (1-0), [7-4]. LP – Ubaldo Jiminez (0-1), [15-12].

 

The wind was a troubling 25 MPH, gusting to 45, and swirling all over the place. Batters had to step out of the box to get chalk dust and grass clippings out of their eyes. Outfielders were running circle routes trying to track fly balls. Jason Werth in rightfield lost a line drive in the swirl of white rally towels furnishing a background to his line-of-sight. A high pop fly to short left was blown back short of third base where Jimmy Rollins snagged it after a desperate sprint and a last-second lunge. Ryan Howard just missed putting the ball on the barrel of his bat, but the swirling wind picked up the soaring fly to left and flung it against the wall as Rockies’ leftfielder, Carlos Gomez, frantically tried to catch it. The same swirling wind caught Jason Werth’s perfectly squared up smash to left center, and kept it from landing 10 rows deep in the stands. When Werth hit it, he went into his Cadillac trot, which cost him an inside-the-park homerun when the ball hit the top of the wall over the Budweiser sign and caromed toward right field. But the wind had no effect on Cliff Lee who fired first-pitch strikes from first to last, and retired 15 in a row in the middle innings. It was a breeze.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

PAUL HOOVER WALKS OFF

PAUL HOOVER WALKS OFF

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                                Phils win with Triple-A team,

                                                Big guys are tired it would seem.

                                                Still, the game was much fun,

                                                And somehow we won,

                                                Hoover’s walk off hit was a dream.

 

Sunday, October 4, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Philadelphia – 7, Florida – 6 (10 innings).
WP – Chad Durbin (2-2), LP – Dan Meyer (3-2)

H – Badenhop (2). BS – Calero (5).

HR – Cairo (1), 4th.

MORE OF THAT RELAXING

MORE OF THAT RELAXING

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                                Champs gearing up for post season,

                                                Still, to lose to the Fish is not pleasin’.
                                                R. How and J. Werth went long,

                                                But C. Ham a three inning wrong song.

                                                The good news: B. Lid a clean inning teasin’.

 

Saturday, October 3, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Florida – 4, Philadelphia – 3.

WP – A. Sanchez (4-8), LP – Hamels (10-11).

H – Meyer (20), Sanches (10).
S – Nuñez (26).
HR – Howard (45), 2
nd; Werth (36), 8th, 1 on.

 

The Division Championship Series are in place after St. Louis lost and LA beat Colorado. Phillies play a five-game series against Colorado beginning Wednesday, October 7 at Citizens Bank Park. C-Man has not announced who will start Game 1. The choices seem to be either Cliff Lee, or Cole Hamels. Neither has pitched that well in recent starts.

 

The main worries are these:

1.       No Champs’ pitcher has sparkled in the last week or so.

2.       Was today’s Brad Lidge’s 1-2-3  ninth indeed a tease? Mad Dog gave up an 8th inning run that proved a game-winner.

3.      Chase Utley looks completely lost – his batting average has slipped to around .280 with feeble, and last second cuts at pitches he famously used to drill to vacant spots in the gaps, down the lines, and over the walls. He almost certainly is once again playing with a sore hip as he did a year ago. We can only hope he has the fortitude to rise above the pain in the playoffs as he did last year.

 

The good news is that Ryan Howard has been seeing the ball well and is launching it to far places against all kinds of pitching. His batting average has nudged toward .280, closing in on Chase Utley. He seems poised for a titanic post-season run. The Champs will go as far as R-How carries them. So says the fearless Max.

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