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Johnny Damon marked the beginning of the
end.....
And Arod was just one of many Yankee heroes
Photo by Al Bello - Getty Images
Photo
by Jeff Zelevansky - Getty Images |
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A lot was made of two big NY-Philly
games occurring on the same day in
the same venue. But there was only one game that was played like a big
game. Only that terrific World Series Game 4 will be remembered. The
Yankees won it 7-4 and they took it from a very determined Phillies
team that in the end were only one relief pitcher short of tying the
Series at 2’s.
To get it out of the way, let me first say the
football Giants were awful in the afternoon game. They have no pass
defense. They have no cover guys, they have no defensive line and they
have no Steve Spagnuolo anymore. They do have a defensive coordinator
with not much nerve and not much imagination. So the Giants lost. The
score doesn’t even matter. The Eagles scored at will.
The first
intriguing thing about the Yanks-Phils Game 4 was the starting pitching
matchup. The Yanks pitched their ace, C.C. Sabathia, on 3 days rest.
The Phillies pitched Joe Blanton, their regular guy in the rotation.
Phils Manager Charlie Manuel can’t be faulted for not starting his ace,
Cliff Lee, as he had never pitched on just 3 days rest before. And the
Phillies had beaten Sabathia in the past.
And, if the Phils
had managed to survive Game 4, they’d have had their ace going on
normal rest in a Game 5, and they’d have likely been up 3-2 in the
Series 9 innings later. So the move made sense, I guess. But while it
made sense, it seemed to me the game meant more to the Yankees. They
were going all out to win. They were pulling out all the stops. The
Phillies were doing business as usual.
As things turned out, of
course, the game didn’t hinge on the starters. Blanton wasn’t as tough
as was Sabathia but he managed to give up just four runs after six full
innings. And, when C.C. left in the seventh, immediately after Chase
Utley banged a long solo home run to right, the Yanks were still up
4-3.
Damaso Marte managed to get the Yanks out of the seventh
and Joba struck out the side in the eighth. There was just one problem.
Before he struck out the side, he gave up a tying dinger to Phils 3rd
baseman Pedro Feliz. So the game rested on those ninth inning pitchers.
The Phils selection was their closer, Brad Lidge, even though Ryan
Madsen had just finished pitching a very nice eighth.
Lidge
looked just terrific for 2/3 of an inning. It was Johnny Damon who did
him in. After taking some pitches and fouling off some pitches and
pretty much wearing Lidge out, Damon stroked a single to left. It was
an at-bat that a few players mentioned after the game, one that will
probably be remembered fifty years from now when youngsters in the
stands today discuss the 2009 World Series. Lidge was never the same
after Damon.
Lidge then had to face Mark Teixeira, which would
have been bad enough. But then Damon stole second, and, as the Phillies
had shifted their defense to the right hand side for Teixeira, Damon
popped up from the keystone and stole third too, as nobody was covering
the bag.
Lidge was a mess now because he couldn’t really use
that slider of his that bounces in the dirt with a runner on third. So
he proceeded to hit Teixeira with a pitch. Of course, with the Yankees
lineup, things never seem to get any easier. Now he just had to face
Arod, he of the many post-season homers and rbi’s.
Arod didn’t
disappoint either, smacking a double to left that scored Damon with the
eventual game-winning run and a hustling Teixeira went first to third.
It was academic after that, but Posada drove in both Teixeira and Arod
anyway. The game was all but over as they handed a 3-run lead to
Mariano Rivera.
But it was a classic World Series game. Jeter
and Damon were workmanlike in putting the Yanks ahead and Joe Blanton
was cool as he managed the Yankees through the first six. Utley’s
at-bat versus Sabathia in the 7th was a beauty and his homer seemed to
give the Phils momentum even though they were still down a run. Then
Feliz’s shot to left off Joba in the 8th to tie the game at last could
have spelled the end for the Bombers.
But even before that,
there were unusual things. I mean, how often do you see Ryan Howard
steal a base? How often do you see any quick pitches, not just one but
two for strikeouts? How about all those meetings on the mound with
Sabathia? What gamesmanship was employed by both sides, and Posada and
Sabathia were definitely playing with Werth’s mind when they struck him
out with two men on. Once again, it was the Yankees who were pulling
out all the stops, even the psychological ones.
Charlie Manuel’s
supposed reliance on hunches wasn’t so evident for this game. He seemed
to be doing everything strictly by the book. He pulled Blanton after
six for no particular reason. The move to Chan Ho Park didn’t seem
particularly wise as Joe had been pretty much coasting. That Park got
them through the seventh isn’t really my point.
Ryan Madsen was
pretty good in the 8th too, but that didn’t stop Charlie from pulling
him for Lidge in the 9th, probably his last disastrous and fateful move
in this Series. Lidge couldn’t handle the adversity Damon threw his
way. No, I didn’t see many hunches being played by Manuel last night.
The
Yanks go with Burnett on 3 days rest now and, even with Lee going for
the Phillies, I expect the Yanks now to finish this one off in 5. The
Yanks are playing to win, pulling out all the stops. The Phillies, with
as much talent as they possess, are playing by the book.
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