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Brad Lidge reflects after giving up three ninth-inning runs.
RON CORTES / Staff photographer
Brad Lidge reflects after giving up three ninth-inning runs.
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Do the Phillies need a new closer?


Rich Hofmann: The moment we all feared: Lidge implosion

FIVE APPEARANCES. Four innings pitched. One hit. No runs. That had been the postseason enjoyed by Brad Lidge before last night.

Then, it happened. This is what we have all expected to happen since about June. This was the concern. The emotions have risen and fallen since that time, and the opinions and prognostications have varied along with those rhythms. But the thing has always been there, in the back of everybody's mind.

The thing: that Brad Lidge really wasn't Brad Lidge anymore.

Perfection is the standard. Lidge set it. Lidge knows it. That he never had a chance to match it, after his impeccable, impossible 2008 season, was a known fact. But he has not approached it. He has not been in the area code. We have all pretended sometimes, or kind of pretended. But we always really knew, deep down.

And then the ninth inning happened, offering crushing confirmation that it really isn't 2008 anymore. And now, after a 7-4 loss to the Yankees, the Phillies trail in the World Series by three games to one.

"It's always tough,'' Lidge said. "You always want to go out there and have good results. Anytime you don't do well, it's frustrating. Obviously, the guys did a great job coming back tonight, so I really wish we could have come out with the 'W' here. But we've got Cliff [Lee] going tomorrow. We feel good about that.''

The hope in his eyes screamed at you as Lidge spoke to a mob of reporters in the Phillies' clubhouse. It will be hard to forget the look in those eyes.

The ninth inning, it began with such promise. When Pedro Feliz hit the game-tying home run with two outs and a 3-2 count on him in the bottom of the eighth inning, it energized Citizens Bank Park. It offered hope most of all, loud hope. And it was on that wave of noise and emotion that Lidge rode out from the bullpen.

Pinch-hitter Hideki Matsui led off the inning and popped out to shortstop. Derek Jeter, who already had scored a run and driven in a run, struck out. There were two outs and Lidge was looking just fine. And you sat there and wondered.

Phillies manager Charlie Manuel had watched the deconstruction of Lidge this season and never gave up on him. Manuel had worked to rebuild Lidge, to resurrect his confidence. It has been great work, and Lidge had shown signs, flashes, whatever. The postseason had been untainted. But, deep down, well, who knew?

With two outs, Lidge could not put away Johnny Damon, who fouled off pitch after pitch before serving a single into leftfield. It was a nine-pitch at-bat and it changed everything.

"I felt real good,'' Lidge said. "It felt like one of those innings that was going to be a good, quick inning. And then he ended up having a really good at-bat, seeing a lot of pitches. Very quickly after that, he's on third base. It turned pretty quick . . . It happened really fast. Real close to getting out of the inning.''

Third base? Huh? It was the moment that will live forever in the annals. As everyone knows, Lidge does not hold runners on first base at all. He is just lousy at it. As Damon said, "I knew he was slow to the plate. I knew I had to take a chance early.''

So Damon stole second, which has become pretty standard operating procedure. The sickening, unforgettable moment came next. Because they had an overshift on against Mark Teixeira, Feliz was the one who took the throw down to second base. That means somebody else had to cover third.

But nobody did.

"I remember that he took off,'' Lidge said, reconstructing the moment. "I threw the ball to Carlos [Ruiz, the Phillies' catcher] and kind of crouched down and turned around to see what was going to be the result. I remember the ball kind of bouncing by me a little bit. It looked like he was just on second base and then, all of a sudden, he took off for third - which really surprised me. I thought we had him. I didn't realize there was nobody at third base. Then I looked over and saw there was no one there. I tried to get over there, but he's faster than I am.''

So, who should be covering?

"It's the catcher or the pitcher has to be heads up,'' Manuel said. " . . . Evidently, there was some miscommunication there. It's the first time we've had it happen to us this year.''

From there, Lidge completely unraveled. It was as if the strange Damon moment unnerved him, costing him his focus - although Lidge denied this afterward. He hit Teixeira with a pitch, bringing up Alex Rodriguez. A-Rod drilled a two-run double to leftfield, scoring Damon, and then Jorge Posada followed with a two-run single that made it 7-4.

Rodriguez hit a fastball. Lidge was asked if he threw fastballs early to A-Rod because of a hesitancy about bouncing a slider with Damon on third. Lidge said that wasn't it. He said he's sure they would have gotten to the slider eventually.

It is a question for the ages. Anyway, at that point, the deconstruction was complete. And the question for Manuel was if the Damon moment cost Lidge his focus.

"I think the first two hitters he did real well,'' Manuel said. "He was up 1-2 on Damon. Damon had a real good at-bat . . . Once he stole, did he lose [focus], I don't know. I don't know. He was having trouble. But at the same time, when he started the inning, he was fine.''

And then he wasn't. And now the Phillies need Cliff Lee to save them, which used to be Brad Lidge's job.

Send e-mail to

hofmanr@phillynews.com,

or read his blog, The Idle Rich, at

http://go.philly.com/theidlerich.

For recent columns go to

http://go.philly.com/hofmann.

Comments   
Posted 05:49 AM, 11/02/2009
Bill Foley
Why Lidge? Why now?
Posted 06:19 AM, 11/02/2009
wildwood guy
Hard to believe Harry, hard to believe.
Posted 06:46 AM, 11/02/2009
pkrainik
Is Charlie smarter than a 5th grader? We all know the answer. Surprised he is starting Lee again. Thought Charlie wanted to save him to start next April strong?
Posted 07:20 AM, 11/02/2009
joeolive
Don't blame Charlie and don't blame Blanton...... where was the offense?? Where were the 5 runs in the first 3 innings to knock CC out early and get to the bullpen like they did against him last year?? This was a team loss, not a manager's loss, not a Lidge loss...... Need Lee to be perfect tonight, Pedro perfect in Game 6 and have to got with the pot luck special in Game 7. All arms on call!!! Cole for 2 or 4, Happ for a couple, Park.... even Lee for an inning, if needs be!!!
Posted 07:26 AM, 11/02/2009
lonewolf 10
rich,brad lidge,the bullpen and the bench was the issue and the end of the season,but beating the soft dodgers and the phillies overconfident cockiness towards the yankees along with howards 10k's have put the phillies in a bad spot....i would make a few line-up changes tonite:rollins-victorino-utley-werth-howard-ruiz-ibanez-feliz-lee...also it's time to play some hard nose baseball running bunting in other words pete rose type baseball.........
Posted 07:27 AM, 11/02/2009
Tomme
The game is tied. Yes, the Phils could have come up with a walk-off win in the ninth, BUT why not anticipate that the game may realistically go into extra innings and, rather than put a closer in like Lidge who at best could only go one inning, put in Happ or someone who could pitch a few strong innings, if needed. Don't tell me he was using Lidge because he was going to start the 9th with a pinch hitter. The real reason is because Charlie is a stuborn old bas***d and is still playing sports therapist with Brad Lidge, EVEN IN A WORLD SERIES GAME. Hamels...Lidge...Hey Chatlie, are there any more stupid pitching decisions you can come up with to throw WS games away.
Posted 07:28 AM, 11/02/2009
carmen2
WINNING A WORLD SERIES--IS ALL ABOUT VERY GOOD PITCHING--depending on Blanton- an innings eater and a robust 4 plus era- is not going to put you into a parade! Plus Cole's disappearance--those are big holes to fill--especially when your big guys are striking out at an alarming rate... unless you pound the ball into oblivion--PITCHING MUST BE YOUR SAVING GRACE---the Phil's do not have it---and Charlie's Insistence on making the standard pitching changes an not going with the hot hand in relief is just plain archaic!! ITS OVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted 07:28 AM, 11/02/2009
mikeyhigs
I agree Bill Foley. I don't have the stats to back me up, but Lidge has been dreadful in non-save situations since he joined the Phils. Even last year when he was "lights-out," he failed miserably in most non-save situations. Why was he in there?!?
Posted 07:29 AM, 11/02/2009
LI PhilPhan
Let's go back to the 5th inning. No out Rollins on second, Victorino on first. Middle of the order. Couldn't have asked for better - or could you. Howard pops to infield. Utley pops to infield. Werth strikes out. Not how world championships are won!
Posted 07:31 AM, 11/02/2009
gluteman
LIDGE? I was nearly in tears watching him come in. And then to get beat on fastball after fastball when that pitch stinks for him. This game is on Charlie.
Posted 07:33 AM, 11/02/2009
clinoril
A. hitters have no patience at the plate; chasing pitches, striking out B. Hamels and Lidge are done in Philly, both head cases C. The Yankees are too good for the Phillies to make their usual mistakes D. If it weren't for Cliff Lee and Pedro we wouldn't even be here E. Phillies reverted back to Philadelphia teams of old, failing to seize the moment, mistakes instead of triumphs F. You knew the Phillies would lose when the Eagles won
Posted 07:37 AM, 11/02/2009
Kenny Junod
word nightmare came true last night when the mole face killa blew game 4. knew it was going to happen. he should have never been in the game
Posted 07:44 AM, 11/02/2009
Neal Obstat
Yeah, you can blame the offense. Too many .270 (or lower) hitters, so the homeruns have been solo shots. They need a .300 hitter or two. But you have to blame Lidge too. It's obvious that for next year the Phillies need a new closer.
Posted 07:46 AM, 11/02/2009
jingles
Lidge had no business pitching in the 9th inning. (He and Cole should be sent home until spring training.) It was not a close situation, and even if it was, he probably still should not have been in there. But seeing that Cholly put him in, he should have been pulled after hitting Mark Teixeira. More bumbling managing, by the king of incompetence himself. Good ole boy Cholly does it again. In a short series like this, the idiocy of Manuel is exposed even more. On a side note, can someone please take Raul and Ryan's pulse to see if they are still alive. Better off starting Francisco than Raul.
Posted 07:50 AM, 11/02/2009
AllDawk_AllTheTime
Blanton pitched GREAT. That 5th inning, a walk and the two softly hit bouncers that found holes and a bloop hit - what can Blanton do? This team came back and tied it - but Ibanez and Howard (and Utley to a degree) have been neutralized by tough lefty pitching - and it has killed our momentum throughout the lineup. Amazing what $260M can get you with 2 pitchers. Let's see how the other pitchers pitch on 3 days rest - that's our last hope.
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