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Jayson Werth - tough in the clutch
Photo
by Jeff Gross - Getty Images |
Carlos Pena - the Rays RBI man
Photo
by Elsa - Getty Images
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Life
must go on. Despite America having been sold, despite
billions and billions of dollars that we don't have bailing out a
few
cheating, incompetent, greedy financial companies (and campaign
contributors to
both Presidential candidates), despite all those homes in foreclosure
remaining
closed to the foolish families that bought them with money they didn't
have and
couldn't hope to have. Despite the macabre choice that faces
all Americans on November 4th, life will go on, at least for a short
time. And a large part of life for any real sports fan is the
World
Series.
This is an event that remains
unsullied. Best
four out of seven . Sure, the games may start a little later than
in the
past, but what the heck, it's still the two best teams in baseball
facing off
for the World Championship. And this should be a great World
Series. Both teams have pitching and defense and both teams are
undeniably tough.
The
NL Champion Phillies were tough enough to outlast my Mets for the NL
East
Division and tough enough to make short work of the Brewers and
Dodgers, the latter a team that had beaten
the best team in the National League for the entire regular
season. The upstart Rays only
beat out the Red Sox and Yankees for the AL East lead, then redefined
"tough"
by outlasting the Red Sox in seven games.
The
oversimplifications surrounding this Series have been amazing.
The Rays
have the best starting pitching so they'll win it all. Tampa Bay
teams have beaten Philadelphia teams in
hockey
and football playoffs so Tampa
Bay
will win it
all. Tampa
Bay
beat the best teams in baseball so
they'll win it all. The Phillies have the better lineup so
they'll win it
all. The Phillies have the best relief staff so they'll win it
all.
But
that's okay, I love all the speculation, even the stupid stuff, for
isn't that
part and parcel of a World Series? Hasn't it been part of every
World
Series that I can remember, never mind those Series before my
time? It'll
still be the World Series. Sure, there'll be a designated hitter
this
year, and that's quite different from back in 1954, the first Series
that I can
really recall. And the Rays will get the home field advantage
because the
American League once again won the All-Star Game. But it's still
fundamentally the same game of baseball, the same series of games, even
the
same format of two-three-two.
The Rays seem to be favored by most pundits and probably in Vegas,
although I
have too little respect for Vegas to even check the actual odds
there.
And for good reason, I suppose, with that corps (and core) of starting
pitchers. Kazmir, Shields, Garza, Sonnenstein, geez! Except
for the
Phils Cole Hamels, who might be the best pitcher of them all, the Rays
would
seem to have the advantage there.
But there's so much more to baseball than just the starting
pitching.
These Phillies seem to be able to hit good pitching. Didn't the
Mets have
good pitching, at least starting pitching? Didn't the Brewers
have good
pitching? the Dodgers? What a lineup these Phillies have!
Rollins,
Utley, Burrell and Howard come first to mind, but there's also
guys like
Jayson Werth, who only seem to kill the opponents at the most critical
junctures. I don't care to search for the stats with runners in
scoring
position but I just know what I've seen all season from these Phillies.
And,
most frightening of all, maybe, is that if the Phillies take a lead
late into
the game, that lead ain't going nowhere. And if they hold the
lead going
into the ninth, they've been unbeatable. But, in the final
analysis,
baseball is more than all of these things too. It's the pesky
guys, like
Victorino, the Phils centerfielder, who just seems to run everything
down and
steal a base at the most opportune moments. It's the moves made
by the
manager, Charlie Manuel, who seems to have his finger on the very pulse
of his
charges.
Of
course, the Rays are no slouches either. And they seem to be
playing
better in the post-season than they did during the regular season, a
very scary
proposition indeed. Their centerfielder, B.J. Upton, didn't
really hit
for power during the regular season, but he's really turned his game up
a notch
now. Carlos Pena can drive them a long way too. And then there's
Longoria
and Baldelli and Crawford. And their own set of pests in that
shortstop Bartlett and that quicker
than a bunny kid from New Jersey and Columbia University.
<>So what makes me think the Phillies can really win this
thing?
Experience, particularly the
experience of having lost in the post-season before, particularly the
experience of losing to the Colorado Rockies just a year ago.
Determination, the resolve to win it all.
That can mean a lot, and I think it will
spell the difference in this World Series.
<>For
determination plays itself out in all aspects of the
game, at the plate, in the field and on the mound.
In
my heart of hearts, I don’t see the same
determination in the Rays.
Didn’t they
seem awfully happy to have survived that Red Sox Series?
Make no mistake about it, the pressure will be squarely on
the Rays right now.
For the first time
really this year.
They’ve handled
whatever pressure there has been, of course, the pressure of playing
without
Longoria and Crawford and Baldelli for long periods of time, the
pressure
of having lost a seven-run lead to the Red Sox in Game 5 and having to
win it
in that fateful Game 7.
But I think the Rays have been locked
in all along on
winning the AL
pennant. On beating the all-powerful
Yankees and Red Sox, on making it to the biggest stage of them all, the
World
Series.
Did their dreams extend beyond this
point? I don’t think so.
Phillies in Seven.
