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It'll be a great Hall-of-Famer in Pedro
(above)........
versus a great Yankee in Andy Pettitte (above right)
Photo by Tom Mihalek - Getty Images
Photo
by Jeff Zelevansky - Getty Images |
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Thank your lucky stars, if you’re not
too disappointed with
your particular election results, for Game 6 finally arriving. Since the end of Game 5, since Jeter hit
that double play groundball and Teixeira struck out, we’ve been hearing
about
the starting pitching, and how bad they’re going to be.
That’s led to insane discussions of relief
pitching, and pleas to bring Mariano Rivera into the game at the
earliest
possible opportunity.
Seldom in life, or elections for that
matter, do things turn
out exactly as we thought they might. I think it’s entirely likely that
both
Andy Pettitte and Pedro Martinez will be great.
One’s a super-Yankee and one’s a super Hall of Famer. They should both be relieved of an awful lot
of pressure, being that everyone’s expectations of them are so low.
They both
have long
histories of successes and they both have the hearts of baseball fans
firmly in
their uniform pockets. Pedro is 219-100
in his career. He’s pitching to put a
fine shiny cap on an almost unbelievable career. Pettitte
is 229-135 for his career. He’s pitching
to go down in Yankee lore as
one of their best, alongside names such as Ford and Guidry.
So they both have all the incentive in
the world to pitch
the greatest game of their career. There’s
really no pressure on either of them.
Pettitte
is pitching
on three days rest. If he fails, it was
Girardi’s mistake. He’s 37 years old and
has pitched for the Yankees, except for a 3-year stint with Houston, since 1995. So his arm has lots of miles on
it. Besides, even if he loses, the Yanks
can still pull out a Game 7.
Pedro cares more about his reputation
than he does about a
Phillies win. That he’s with the Phils
at all is entirely a matter of money and opportunity.
He looks great. Pedro
just turned 38 on October 25th. He
can still throw pretty hard and his ball
moves like crazy. He changes speeds with
every pitch. And of course, he works in
and out, up and down, and all the other things a great pitcher does.
Pettitte won’t go more than 6
regardless of the game circumstances. The
Yanks are too concerned with pitch counts,
and even at this ridiculously late date, their behavior is too
ingrained to
stop now. Pedro could go the whole
nine. If he’s having success out there,
they’ll let him pitch himself into the ground.
The Phillies relievers haven’t had enough success
this Series to warrant
any other decision-making process.
I fully expect them to shut down those
heavy-hitters on both
sides. Pettitte has a couple of other
things going for him. He’s a lefty and
lefties have been particularly successful in this Series.
He’s also great with men on base.
Almost nobody is able to sustain a running
game against Andy Pettitte. His move to
first base is the best in the game and probably illegal.
I figure the game to be even at
between two and three runs
after 6 innings. That will be where the
real fun starts. Pedro will go out there
for the 7th and beyond. The
Yanks, in an even game, will go to Joba or Marte, depending upon the
lefty-righty matchups. It’ll still be an
even match after 7, a tired Pedro vs either Yankee is no better than
even.
The Yanks will go to Rivera for the
eighth. The
Phils will stay with Pedro if they’re still even. And
then we’ll see the real reason pitchers
blow up. It’s not pitch counts that
finishes pitchers. It’s pressure. It’s confidence. How
many times can a team expect a 4-out,
5-out, 6-out save or hold from a guy who’ll be 40 on November 29th? My guess is not too many times, maybe not
even one time.
It’s hard to imagine Pedro going more
than 7 unscathed by
all that Yankee lumber. But they do have
this Madsen guy and he hasn’t been too bad.
He throws hard and he’s got a nice breaking ball. Lidge does too for that matter, and I think
these Phillies relievers may be primed to shut up all those Yankee
nay-sayers.
That’s one scenario, and maybe a more
likely scenario could
be imagined too. Maybe the years will
show on both old reliables and they’ll both be gone early.
In that event, the Phillies have some nice
answers, either Happ or Myers or anybody wearing a
red uniform in the pen. The Yanks have
less reliable alternatives to
my mind. Hughes has been inconstant, and
he’s their most likely long guy, I would think.
Of course, there’s Aceves and Coke and all the rest
but nobody who really
inspires confidence.
In the latter event, the failure of
the starters, the Phils
have the advantage but it’s probably a slim one. One
thing’s for sure though. The attention in
this Series will quickly
shift to the hitters and then the story will shift to Arod or Utley,
the big
hitters in this Series, or it could turn to somebody nobody expected,
like
Scottie Brosius in one of those Yankee stories of yesteryear.
I can’t say as I’d mind if the hero
were someone totally
unexpected. I’d love to see Shane
Victorino have a big game, he of the smashed fingers from Game 5. Both teams have a bevy of secondary stars, if
you will, hitters all.
And both teams have legitimate stars
who have not yet
produced in this Series. Ryan Howard and
Mark Teixeira could be having a futility contest. Certainly
more could be expected from Rollins
in this Series, or for the Yanks, Cano and Swisher, who will be
starting
tonight. And what about Matsui, who’s
been limited only by opportunity?
I’m rooting for a Game 7 though. And, as a long-time Mets fan, I’d like to see
a National League team take the whole shebang.
This Series deserves to go 7. And
I have a feeling that it will.
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