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Chase Utley made the biggest play
Photo
by Doug Pensinger - Getty Images |
......while Iwamura could not .
Photo
by Elsa - Getty
Images |
Well,
as I predicted, it was the Phillies, but easier than I had thought, the
Phils
prevailing in five, not seven, games. But it couldn't have been
more
exciting. And today, as callers to the FAN's Mike Francesa
discussed who the MVP of the Series should have been, nobody mentioned
Chase
Utley. And that's just plain wrong.
Just
to recap, Cole Hamels was voted the MVP. He won Game 1 and was
the
starting pitcher in Game 5, that the Phils went on to win. But,
as Francesa
pointed out, he was really just 1-0 for the Series. And, as he
reviewed
the batting stats for Phillies in the Series, he basically said, "well,
there really was nobody else".
Spoken
like a Yankee fan. Yankee fans are all about home runs.
That's all
they know, except perhaps for batting average. Those were the
categories
Francesa reviewed. And I had to wonder whether he even watched
the
Series. He mentioned Carlos Ruiz, the Phils catcher, and he mentioned
Howard's
production in Game 4. He pointed out a few others and totally
ignored
Chase Utley, except to point out that he did make an excellent play in
Game 5
when he faked a throw to first and threw a runner out at home.
What
he neglected to point out was that that play kept the score tied.
Utley
had made the game-changing play and Francesa missed it totally.
Fielding
doesn't count to Yankees fans. Nor does running for that
matter.
And they love the designated hitter. Idiots.
I probably shouldn't let this bother
me so much. After
all, Utley was only 3 for 18 in the Series. But let's
review. Utley
scored five runs, walked five times, stole 3 bases and made the
game-deciding
fielding play in the final.
His 4 rbi's won two games, Game 1 and Game 3,
which were
both won by just one run. Of the four Phillies victories, I figure
Utley was
the key player in three of them. In the 10-2 laugher in Game 4,
Utley
really didn't do that much. But then, he didn't really have to.
In Game 1, the opener in Tampa Bay, when a tone needed to be set, if
ever there
was to be a tone, Utley stepped up to the plate in the first inning
against the
Rays top pitcher, Scott Kazmir and promptly smacked a two-run
homer.
Those two runs held up for the entire game until Ruiz plated the
winning
run on a ground ball late in the game.
In
the pivotal Game 3, back in Philadelphia,
Utley set the tone once again. He drove in Jimmy Rollins in the
first
inning and then he and Ryan Howard hit back to back solo homers in the
bottom
of the 6th to extend a 2-1 lead to 4-1. Those runs prevented the
Rays
from ever taking the lead when they came back in the 7th and 8th to tie
the
game.
Game 4 was the laugher, of course, the Phils winning it 10-2.
But, before
it was a laugher, Utley scored the run that extended a 1-0 lead to 2-0
in the
third. And he was on base for Howard's drive in the
Phillies 8th
that ensured the Phillies win.
In
the all-important Game 5, a game that had to be won lest the Series go
back to Tampa,
Utley followed
Werth's walk in the first inning by getting hit with a pitch. He
was
therefore on base when Victorino singled both him and Werth home to
take the
critical 2-0 lead, once again in the first inning, once again helping
to break
the Rays back before things really even got started. The Rays
would finally
tie the game in the top of the sixth to make it 2-2, which, of course,
allowed
the game to be suspended, setting up its dramatic resumption.
Of
course, in the resumed game, Jenkins and Werth put the Phils
immediately ahead
in the bottom of the sixth, and Utley struck out in that inning against
the
tough Rays lefty J.P. Howell. Things looked bad in the 7th after
Baldelli's homer tied the game, only to be followed by still another
Rays hit
and a sacrifice that put the winning run on 2nd base in the person of
the pesky
Rays shortstop James Bartlett.
If
Utley had been looking for an opportunity to change the momentum, he
found it
almost immediately. His counterpart at second base for the Rays,
Akinori
Iwamura, whose misplay of Werth's Texas Leaguer had put the Phils ahead
an
inning earlier, hit a hard ground ball to Utley's right. Utley,
sensing
that he had no play on the speedy Iwamura at first, nevertheless faked
the
throw to first, inducing Bartlett
to break hard for home. Utley then made a very nice throw to Ruiz to
nail the
runner and end the inning still tied at 3-3.
Pat Burrell's double and then Pedro
Feliz's single later put
the Phillies ahead again, of course, and the Phillies wouldn't
relinquish that
lead. J.C. Romero and Brad Lidge made sure of that with some fine
pitching.
But Utley tried his utmost to extend
that Phillies lead once
again in the eighth, drawing a walk off the tough Rays lefty reliever
Price
with two outs. Utley then stole second
base to put himself in scoring position for Howard once again.
That
Howard struck out isn’t really the point. Utley
put himself in position to make sure the
Phillies would prevail.
There's no doubt in my mind that Utley played a key
role in this
Series. As did Ruiz and Werth and Howard and Feliz, and all those
tough
Phillies pitchers. But all those momentum swingers by Utley were
hard to
miss. Not to mention all those double plays that more often than
not cut
down the Rays tough B.J. Upton.
Second base is called the keystone for good
reason.
Chase Utley drove home that point.
It was the keystone difference
in this 2008
World Series.
