Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH  
share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
Phillies GM Ruben Amaro, Jr. chats with actor Jeremy Piven prior to Game 6 of the 2009 World Series at Yankee Stadium Nov. 4, 2009. ( Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer )
1 of 54
LISTEN TO AUDIO
Jimmy Rollins 11/4/09
READER FEEDBACK
Are you satisfied with the Phillies' season?
Yes
No
Post a comment
RELATED STORIES
 
Pedro's dream season with Phillies falls short
 
Bullpen not nearly as mighty as Phillies needed it to be
Photos: Phillies return from New York
 
More World Series coverage
Audio: Utley, Howard, Manuel reflect on loss
 
Sam Donnellon: Scrappy Phillies come up short
 
Phil Sheridan: Phillies didn't play like champions
 
Phillies can't stop Yankees from winning 27th title
 
Buy Phillies jerseys, playoff t-shirts, hats, and more
 
Purchase Phillies playoff photos & reprints
Photos: 2009 Phillies
 
Relive the memories: Coverage of the World Series run


Phil Sheridan: In this Series, the Phillies didn't play like champions

NEW YORK - The greatest 13-month stretch in Phillies history ended one night too soon for the simplest of reasons.

It takes more than one pitcher and one hitter to win a World Series against a team as good and as star-kissed as the New York Yankees. The brilliance of Cool Cliff Lee and Home Run Chase Utley could get the Phillies only half the wins required to successfully defend their 2008 title.

The Phillies made history last October, winning just the second title in the life of the franchise and thrilling a city that had gone a quarter-century without a championship parade. This time, they were bystanders. With the Yankees in their first season in a brand-new ballpark, their 27th World Series victory felt like manifest destiny.

"Are they better than we are?" manager Charlie Manuel said. "For this Series, they are. They got the trophy, we don't. We gave it up, now we've got to get it back."

As galling as that is for Philadelphia, this was not about the Phillies. They were the extras, not the stars of this film.

"Last year, we were the ones celebrating," Ryan Howard said. "Now we've seen what it's like on the other side."

Starting pitcher Pedro Martinez was a fitting symbol for these Phillies. He just didn't have it last night and, for the most part, the Phillies just didn't have it, either.

Howard was a week late for the Series, striking out a record 13 times, although he finally hit a too-little, too-late home run in the sixth inning last night.

Cole Hamels, the MVP of two series last year, was the most disappointing player of this tournament. It is amazing that the Phillies were able to win their division and advance through two playoff rounds without getting anything from Hamels.

Brad Lidge, last year's perfect closer, made just one appearance in this World Series and it was an unbridled disaster - the inning that convinced the Yankees this Series belonged to them.

In hindsight, Johnny Damon's first-to-third sprint in the ninth inning of Game 4 was the pivotal moment. The Phillies, desperate for the big hits that defined last year's postseason run, had finally gotten one. Pedro Feliz's game-tying home run in the eighth had everyone in Citizens Bank Park believing that the Phillies were about to work their magic.

Then Damon dunked a single to left, stole second and stunned everyone by continuing on to third base. Leaving the bag uncovered will go down as one of the biggest gaffes in baseball history. Lidge, reeling, hit Mark Teixeria and then surrendered backbreaking hits to Rodriguez and Posada.

That was the most glaring of the mistakes the Phillies made. The Yankees did what champions do. They made the Phillies pay every time.

Shane Victorino misplayed a Derek Jeter fly ball into a single with one out in the third last night. Four batters later, Hideki Matsui stroked a bases-loaded single to give the Yankees a 4-1 lead.

And then there was Manuel.

The manager pushed all the right buttons and flicked all the right switches in 2008. And he rode a pretty good hot streak through those series against Colorado and Los Angeles last month.

Manuel will be second-guessed quite a bit for some of his decisions in this Series, which is what happens when your team loses. There are some things he didn't try: pinch-hitting for Ben Francisco in the seventh last night, bringing in a lefty to face Matsui in the fourth, shuffling his lineup a bit in an effort to overcome Howard's withering slump.

Ultimately, the problems weren't so much the moves Manuel made or didn't make. The problems were with the options he had to choose from. The bullpen was terrible, the bench was weak. Other than Lee and Utley and Carlos Ruiz, everyone else didn't produce enough.

"We went through the playoffs and we played real good," Manuel said. "All of a sudden when we got to the Series, it seemed like our offense, when we really had to get the big hits and take command of the game, we couldn't do it. We sputtered a little bit."

Despite that, the Phillies took a 103-win Yankees team to Game 6.

Disappointment is understandable. These opportunities are precious and few, after all. It's hard not to look back at this Series and see how the Phillies might have won it.

"Obviously, it hurts," Howard said. "But I'm not disappointed. It hurts a little bit, but I think we can still be proud of what we accomplished."

Over 13 months, these Phillies won a title, brushed off the complacency that kneecaps many champions, returned to the postseason, and delivered two more clinching celebrations.

They are a great baseball team. They just didn't play like one against the Yankees, who did.

 


Contact columnist Phil Sheridan at 215-854-2844 or psheridan@phillynews.com.

Read his recent work at http://go.philly.com/philsheridan.

 

Comments   
Posted 05:34 AM, 11/05/2009
Joey0210
Great season phillies even though the outcome was not what we all expected. I love the way the Phillies play baseball and thier pure love for the game. Unlike the distastfull yankees who basically bought a championship instead of earning one imo. There are some yankees who deserve it (Jeter,Damon,Rivera,Matsui Pettitte) but most are playing for thier huge paychecks and steriod addicted ARod makes me sick. Anyway we have the offense to go to the Series every year (besides a third basemen) but we need pitching and a bench. The bench gave us nothing all year (stairs, Bruntlett, Dobbs) We need new Bench players. the bullpen also needs a complete makeover. We need guys with stikeout stuff Madson is the only one with great stuff. And some leftys. We definitely need someone with closing experince or a closer just in case Lidge implodes agian. i think we need to bring up M.Taylor next year and platoon with Ibanez. You could bring him off the bench and play him agianst lefty's. The yankees leftys destroyed us besides Utley. We need another right handed presence besides Werth agianst lefty's. I also think Drabak should be in the rotation. Lee,Hamles,Blanton,Happ,Drabak you cant put moyer in there because we cant have 4 lefty's. if not Drabak we need another righthander in FA. I just hope this offseason we improve our bench and our bullpen and Hamels learns a new pitch or 2. Bring up Taylor and Drabak we didnt trade them for a reason let them play I think they can improve our team not hurt it.
Posted 05:35 AM, 11/05/2009
gardner60
i think Howards comment"Im not disappointed" is a lot worse then Hamels.He did absolutely nothing in the series except strike out and he is not disappointed? Why Manuel let Pedro pitch to matsui Ill never know. Not only was Matsui right on his pitches but it was obvious that Pedro didnt have it period.This is a different situation then the regular season and Manuel should have managed that way and didnt. The best pitcher the Phils had , Happ, didnt get used at all and probably should have started last night. Pedro Feliz has no clue at the plate and the bench is non existent pinchhitting terrible and Lidge needs a fresh start somewhere else. Having said that the Phils provided us with a lot of great mmemories and excitment. Alot needs to be done over the Winter though. A lot.
Posted 06:35 AM, 11/05/2009
adreils
Dear Phil--I can't believe you would say that the Phillies didn't play like champions. With that statement you don't do justice to two of the great teams in baseball yours & mine. This has been the most exciting series to watch in years. Face it a great team got beaten by a greater team. I guess there is no joy in Mudville. GO YANKEES. See you all next year...I hope.
Posted 06:38 AM, 11/05/2009
nehmeth
Not a championship caliber effort from the team. All season long, these guys got into the bad habit of leaving men stranded on base... over and over and over again. The Yankees pitching made ours look amateurish (with the exception of Lee). Cole Hamels and Brad Lidge went from herose to zeros this year and all the covering for them, could not hide the glaring lights and their poor play in the Series. They fought, but the fought like men who didn't believe they would win... the only guy who had that kind of fire in his belly was Cliff Lee, and he carried to team on his belief. It was a good season for them... not a great one. This showcased again how far the quality of the NL is behind the AL.
Posted 06:47 AM, 11/05/2009
tr88
The better team won. Phils needed to play their best to have a chance and they didn't do it. No disgrace. Lot's of heart, lot's of talent and a lot of fun. Enjoy it, it was a great season.
Posted 07:07 AM, 11/05/2009
Ed the Head
I disagree that Damon stealing two was the pivotal moment. Damon just reaching first was the pivotal moment. If you watched the Phils at all this year you'd know that if Lidge lets anybody get to first, it might as well have been a double because he can't hold them on. And once you're on second- you're in "scoring position". Don't overblow things, Phil. The biggest gaffe in baseball history? That's a little much. Damon was going to score anyway. Lidge cost us the series, just like everyone feared he would.
Posted 07:08 AM, 11/05/2009
Maddy44
Uncle Cholly hasn't made too many bad decisions over the last 2 years, but one fault i have with him is going to bite him again in the future: he doesn't like to rely on rookies and first year guys,he likes- his guys -the ones he can count on,....well, one of his guys got no worthwile playoff and world series experience and that would be J Happ......he should have been the game 6 starter, especially once you've decided to give Hamels the ball for game 7,....Happ earned it and deserved it.......he's coming back next year and there's no guarantee Martinez or even Hamels will......Happ has a spot in the rotation and should have been given a start for not only the experience, but to better help the whole team
Posted 07:08 AM, 11/05/2009
Bates
Yeah....Big Ryan...you set a World Series record...13 strikeouts. You must be so proud!
Posted 07:13 AM, 11/05/2009
Maddy44
This series was lost when Cole Hamels turned around and watched A-Roid's homerun hit the camera.....he had a no-hitter going and completely lost it from there......if Hamels wins that game, its a completely different series, because you wouldn't have to use Pedro again;...you'd cruise out and take your chances with Blanton, Lee, Hamels and a game 7 mix and match with all hands on deck.....completely different story
Posted 07:19 AM, 11/05/2009
gdwilkinson
Ryan Howard's comments just confirmed by beliefs that this team was lacking the fortitude that it took to repeat as champions. Some on the team seemed content with the fact they made it back to the WS and if they didn't win it, oh well. Howard didn't do anything to help the cause. All the homeruns and RBIs are great during the regular season, but need to step up in the WS not shrink. JRolle needs to figure out how to become a better leadoff hitter. Yes he had some big hits in the LCS, but has to be more consistent. During the series heard about the Yankees playing consistent fundamental ball, Phillies need to think about that.
Posted 07:31 AM, 11/05/2009
jingles
All comes down to Cholly and his inept management style. This is why you pitch Lee on Three days rest, so you would have him last night. You have an obese CC willing to pitch on 3 days, and Lee would have, except Cholly says no. This, among other mismanagement blunders by Goober cost the Phillies dearly. Can we once and for all get rid of this guy. And take Milt Thompson with him, he has help no one when they get into a hitting slump. As many have said,they won last year in spite of Cholly. Now it shows, how bad a manger he really is. To the rest of the team, nice try, and thanks for the great year.
Posted 07:35 AM, 11/05/2009
Neal Obstat
The Phillies do have pitching problems they must address. But they also have problems with their offense. I know they scored the most runs in the National League, but they are still a team that good pitching can shut down. As far as I can remember, they have no .300 hitters, one .290s hitter, and one .280s hitter. The rest hit in the .270s or below. Their lead off hitter hit about .250. If they don't hit home runs, this offense is not that tough to shut down. Maybe Ibanez will be that consistent .300 hitter they need when he is healthy again. But he will be a year older. I'd hate to lose Feliz's great glove at third, but maybe they need to upgrade there, with a .300 hitter. Any free agents available?
Posted 07:41 AM, 11/05/2009
SeanHB
I'm not going to kill the team that has given the city more to be happy about for three years now than any other has in 25+ years. The Phillies clearly showed themselves to be the class of the National League, basically sleepwalking to and through the playoff, only to face The Payroll. The Yankees were better rested, better armed, better prepared and more motivated, so give them all the credit that they bought. The Phillies just looked gassed. Now, my big concern is that they will have less rest going into next year than they did this year.
Posted 07:43 AM, 11/05/2009
moramike
I love Philly fans. You'd think with all the losing this city has done over the years, the fans would finally figure out how to do it gracefully. But to no one's surprise they cannot. I heard one Philly fan comment about the "rivalry" between NY and Philly. Rivalry?? Philly is just the toilet a New Yorker smells on the drive to D.C. New York doesn't even know Philly exists. Didn't you guys go bankrupt and fall into the ocean a few years back?
Posted 07:54 AM, 11/05/2009
monsieurms
back to back pennants is a remarkable achievement in and of itself, so congrats to the Phils despite disappointments. This series was there for the taking though---if Hamels is Hamels, Lidge is Lidge, and Howard showed up, Phils might've closed it out at home. The truth is that after the first two games, they didn't get a great pitching performance again--not from Lee either. And they needed to. Their lineup in New York with the DH added was not as competitive. They didn't compensate with pitching. Their two best and most consistent starters all year were Blanton and Happ--and they became afterthoughts thanks to the bullpen meltdown. Despite all this, the team got to Game 6, which is quite an achievement. The Yanks--the best team money can buy. It is really an obnoxious part of baseball.
  • Top Jobs
  • Top Homes
  • Top Cars
 
SEARCH JOBS
Southwark


$385,000
843 S AMERICAN ST #B
Southwark


$5,950,000
615-17 FITZWATER ST
SEARCH CARS

Buy Inquirer, Daily News & Philly merchandise here including:

 
Books
 
Movies
 
Page Reprints
 
Photo Licensing
 
Photos