Results tagged ‘ Pedro Martinez ’

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.

 

 

PHILLIES WIN NL EAST

PHILLIES WIN NL EAST

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                                RBIs from seven Phils,
                                                took care of  all batting ills.
                                                Pedro pitched four, Kyle Kendrick three,

                                                45,000 fans jumping with glee.

                                                Bring on the post season thrills.

 

Wednesday, September 30, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia – 10, Houston – 3.

WP – Kendrick (3-1), LP – Moehler (8-12).

HR – Towles – 2 (2), 2nd, 4th.

Ibañez (34), 7th, 1 on.

BRAVES NOT DOWN YET

BRAVES NOT DOWN YET

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                    Trailing big in the 9th, Champs scored four,

                                    not enough, fans, they needed two more.

                                    Javier Vasquez preserved the Braves’ life

                                    with seven shutout innings of pressure-packed strife.

                                    Braves squirming hard to get off the floor.

 

Saturday, September 19, 2009. Turner Field, Atlanta, Georgia.

Atlanta – 6, Philadelphia – 4.

WP – Vasquez (14-9), LP – Pedro Martinez (5-1).

HR – Diaz (11), 5th, 1 on.

Howard (41), 9th, 1 on.

CHAMPS BEAT METS TWICE

CHAMPS BEAT  METS  TWICE

 

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

Game one:

KENDRICK STEPS UP

                                                Kyle Kendrick, remember him?
                                                Used to pitch here with
vigor and vim

                                                He came back today,

                                                and put Mets away,

                                                Did Charlie put him in on a whim?

 

Sunday, September 13, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia – 5, New York Mets – 4.

WP – Kendrick (1-1), LP – Maine (5-5)

H – Walker (1). S – Lidge (29).
HR – Anderson Hernandez (2), 8
th, 1 on.

Ben Francisco (4), 4th; Victorino (10), 5th, 1 on.

 

Game two:

  MARTINEZ  MASTERS METS

                                                It’s no secret, but still I’ll confide:

                                                It’s a joy to have him on our side.

                                                Pedro pulls out the book,

                                                says, “Here have a look,”

                                                then destroys them before they can hide.

 

Sunday, September 13, 2009, Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia – 1, New York Mets – 0.

WP- Pedro Martinez (5-0), LP – Tim Redding (2-6).

S – Madson (8).

                                                                                                                       

PEDRO OUTPITCHES LINCECUM

PEDRO OUTPITCHES LINCECUM

 

by Max Blue
http://maxblue3.tripod.com

 

                                                After one pitch, Pedro trailed,
                                                after that, Giants failed.

                                                Next, Werth said, “What the heck,”
                                                then hit into deep upper deck.
                                                From H-bomb’s big hit, Giants nailed.

 

Thursday, September 3, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia – 2, San Francisco, 1.

WP – Pedro Martinez (3-0), LP – Tim Lincecum (13-5).
H – Madson (23), S – Lidge (28).
HR – Eugenio Velez (4), 1
st
..
Werth (30), 2
nd
.
                                                                       

It could have been October in a League Championship game. What it was was the Giants needing a win to tie Colorado for the Wild Card lead. With reigning Cy Young award winner, Tim Lincecum rested and ready, they liked their chances against Pedro Martinez, 12 years older than Lincecum, and on the downslope of a Hall-of-Fame career. They can only hope that Lincecum learned something about grit, guile, and determination from the old guy. Lincecum pitched well, to be sure, but he faltered in the sixth inning of a 1-1 game when, with two outs, he hit Chase Utley with a pitch, then lost the game when he challenged Charlie Manuel’s “Big Piece” and saw the game, maybe the season, rolling away toward the right-centerfield wall, the peerless Aaron Rowan giving frantic and futile chase as the Phillies’ peerless Chase raced home with the game-winner. Madson and Lidge held he lead. Bring it on.

RYAN HOWARD, THE BIG PIECE

 

 

 

                                                        RYAN HOWARD – THE BIG PIECE

by Max Blue

http://maxblue3.tripod.com

                                                            As we watched the ball soar
                                                            and heard the crowd roar,
                                                            we knew it was Ryan Howard time,
                                                            helping Champs continue their climb,
                                                            and show Atlanta Braves the loss door.

 

Friday, August 28, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia – 4, Atlanta – 2.
WP – Moyer (12-9), LP – Hanson (9-3).

H- Park (9), Madson (22). S – Lidge (26).
HR – Howard – 2 (37), 2
nd, 4th, 1 on.

 

Charlie Manuel has named him “The Big Piece.” Charlie got that one right . . . with 2 games left in August, Ryan Howard has 11 homeruns and 32 RBIs, approaching the 14 -40 August numbers he posted in his 2006 MVP year.

 

Good news was all over the place after this night’s game ended. Two rain delays brought Jamie Moyer in to take over from Pedro Martinez who got through two scoreless innings before the rains came. As he did 10 days ago against Arizona in a similar situation, Moyer pitched brilliantly, and was rewarded with his 257th ML victory. The other good news was Brad Lidge’s clean 1,2,3 save punctuated by striking out smoking hot hitter Matt Diaz for the final out.  

MOYER CHARMS SNAKES

MOYER CHARMS SNAKES

by Max Blue
http://maxblue3.tripod.com

                        Pedro Martinez’ night cut short by rain.
                        Old man Moyer comes in and hands Snakes big pain.
                        Pedro and Jamie a nice pair,
                        471 ML wins, who can compare?
                        Phils’ path to greatness is plain.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009. Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia – 5, Arizona – 1.
WP – Moyer (11-9), Garland (6-11).
HR – Drew (11), 1
st
.
Werth (25), 5
th; Ruiz (6), 6th.

The Baseball Gods (some said Mother Nature) solved Charlie Manuel’s dilemma of what to do with Jamie Moyer. When it became clear that the rain delay would go past 60 minutes, Charlie dialed Moyer’s bullpen number, and told Pedro to take the rest of the night off. Moyer was strong with eight days rest, his fastball reaching 84 mph. His changeup was 10 mph slower and his control was spot on. Result: six shutout innings, two hits, five Ks, no walks, and only 69 pitches. Dilemma solved – Martinez and Moyer share the fifth spot in the rotation and everybody lives happily ever after.  

 

 

CHAMPS ROMP BEHIND PEDRO

            CHAMPS ROMP BEHIND PEDRO

by Max Blue
http://maxblue3.tripod.com

                                    Pedro was good but not great,
                                    no sweat with 12 runs on his plate.
                                    Fourteen hits, eight extra base for the Champs,
                                    a welcome relief from recent batting cramps
                                    that have plagued this great team as of late.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009, Wrigley Field, Chicago, Illinois.
Philadelphia – 12, Chicago Cubs – 5.
WP – Pedro Martinez (1-0), LP – Jeff Samardzija (1-2)
HR – Victorino (9), 3
rd, 1 on; Rollins (15), 4th, 2 on; Ibañez (27), 4th, 2 on.

The month-long drumbeat and drama of The Philadelphia Coming of Pedro, played out this night in the Friendly Confines of ancient and hallowed Wrigley Field on the north side of Chicago before a howling and beer-tossing sellout of 41,133 people, to say nothing of the countless roof sitters across the street, and the counted millions looking at their flat and curved screens all over the central and eastern part of Pennsylvania and Delaware, and the southern part of New Jersey.

Pedro was cool; he said all the right things – he was not here to take Jamie Moyer’s place (which he was), Jamie was his friend. He said he was humbled by the whole experience, and that he intended to savor every moment of this god-given opportunity. Then he took the mound, said his prayer, and threw an 87 m.p.h. cutter to Cubs’ leadoff man Ryan Theriot, aka The Riot. After 5 innings and 99 pitches, with a 12-3 lead, Pedro sat down in the dugout, took off his game face, and accepted congratulations from his teammates and coaches. Manager Charlie Manuel was seen walking over to pat his man on the shoulder. Well done, Pedro.

So what are we looking at here? Pedro Martinez is a Philly, we saw it with our own eyes. We have seen this guy before …On September 24, 1996, Pedro was a 24 year-old 98 m.p.h. take-no-prisoners flamethrower for the Montreal Expos. Max Blue was a rookie writer, so to speak, and had this to say about what happened at Veterans Stadium in south Philadelphia that night :

            It was a good fight but we lost. Wait til next year. New York beat Houston and Philadelphia lost to Montreal 6-2 to leave the Phillies six games behind the Mets with five games to play. The home team will finish last. It is a certainty.
            But let it be said the Phillies did not go down without a fight. It came in the 5
th
inning, with the Phillies trailing 2-0, when Mike Williams, ignoring plate umpire Frank Pulli’s theatrical warning after aiming a pitch at opposing pitcher Pedro Martinez’ belt buckle, decked Martinez with a well-designed throw at his butt. It was a night when Mike had his control. Martinez picked himself up off the muddy turf and charged the mound swinging his batting helmet like a mace. Williams, five inches taller and 30 pounds heavier, ducked the flailing weapon and took Pedro to the ground in a headlock.
            The benches emptied, the bullpens emptied, and a couple of tons of high-priced ballplayers piled on. It was a prototype baseball fight; nobody got hurt. The hurt had come in the 3
rd
inning when Martinez, in a scoreless game with two outs and nobody on base, apparently with cool calculation, took dead aim at Greg Jeffries’ gut and nailed him square on the crazy bone with a 90 plus mile an hour fastball. Jeffries had to leave the game and go to a hospital for X-rays. (Jeffries was replaced by current Phillies General Manager Ruben Amaro, Junior).
            The unwritten rules of baseball are clear: an eye for an eye. It was only a matter of time.

 

            So here we are, 13 years later, Pedro has added three Cy Young Awards to his resume, along with 108 hit batters, and a bagful of achievements that most people believe will make him a first-ballot Hall of Famer. And he is proud to be a Phillie.   

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