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Yankees' Rivera still the ultimate closer

NEW YORK - Yankees manager Joe Girardi called for his closer, Mariano Rivera, with five outs remaining last night.

Rivera jogged from the bullpen, clutching - not wearing - his glove.

The Yankee Stadium crowd, watching a collage of Rivera highlights, stood and clapped in unison as Metallica's "Enter Sandman" blasted in their ears.

What the crowd sensed, as it always senses when Rivera enters, is victory nearing.

Last night, that victory was seven batters away. Rivera retired five of them.

Last night in Game 6 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, Rivera pitched a scoreless 12/3 innings in the 7-3 victory, essentially slamming shut the door on the already reeling Phillies.

"It's amazing," Rivera said afterward, soaked in champagne. "You can't explain it. It's wonderful. It's special. I think it's crazy. You fight for this moment since spring training, and the organization gives us tremendous talent to put on the field."

Near game's end, it was Rivera jogging to the mound as the game's closer with a stadium sure of his abilities, confident he would do what a closer does: close.

This season, the Phillies had no such enforcer.

Last season's guy, Brad Lidge, wasn't the same. In Game 4 of this series, when the Phillies looked as if they might tie it at two games apiece, Lidge allowed three runs in the ninth, allowing the Yankees to take command of the series.

Last night, when Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard hit a two-run home run in the sixth inning to bring the score to 7-3, time seemed running out quickly for the Phillies, because outs against the Yankees are not measured in nine innings but rather until Rivera is called from the bullpen, from out of his warm-up jacket and onto the mound.

In 87 postseason games, Rivera has an 8-1 record, 0.75 ERA, and 39 saves. In this World Series, he pitched 51/3 scoreless innings and extended his World Series scoreless innings streak to 91/3 innings.

For the sixth time in his career, Rivera was the Yankees' finishing World Series pitcher.

For his efforts last night, Rivera earned no save.

Last night, Rivera, as he's done for nearly all of his 14-year career, threw fire. He wasn't unhittable, but nearly so. Except for a two-out double by Raul Ibanez in the eighth inning and a walk to Carlos Ruiz in the ninth, Rivera retired all who stepped to the plate.

Rivera's final challenge was Phillies centerfielder Shane Victorino, who fended off fastball after fastball, finally working the count to full. On that full-count pitch, Rivera forced Victorino to tap a dribbler to second base, the final out in the 2009 season for both the Phillies and Yankees.

Standing on the podium after the game, Rivera told the crowd that he didn't want to retire, that he wanted to remain a Yankee.

"They don't want me to retire," Rivera said later. "So I stay here."

Through a crowd on the infield, Rivera walked from the podium toward the clubhouse, being ushered off the field and toward the underground celebration.

He stopped only once, answering a question for a Spanish-speaking television crew.

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Comments   
Posted 07:09 AM, 11/05/2009
FlyersFan88
Mariano Rivera...that guy...just, wow. He's the difference, has always been the difference, between the Yankees and all the teams they play. It's HIM. Because he doesn't give it up.
Posted 09:34 AM, 11/05/2009
lonewolf 10
mariano is amazing,but the phillies had a chance to beat rivera in game 2,but as i said before,the chase utley double play in game 2 was a very big play in the series,after that it was lights out for rivera,he could have been the series mvp....
Posted 10:04 AM, 11/05/2009
yankeesmyteam
Yes, Lidge could not hold the lead, and Rivera has a post season era .75 Nuff said
Posted 12:19 PM, 11/05/2009
thehumble1
$200 million. When the Phillies just topped $100 and a host of the rest of MLB has under $50 million in the dugout. What was impressive is that Ruiz (paid $500,000) looked better than Posada ($13m) and the rest of the Philly squad only matched up a bit closer. Sure you can win when you always outpay the opponent 2:1. Rivera is amazing and should be the MVP because he essentially takes away at least one inning from the other team. Most teams just write that inning off, knowing they have to be leading to go into the 9th and come out with a win. But you can't really compare any team till profit sharing and a proper salary cap goes into effect.
Posted 12:25 PM, 11/05/2009
23isking
People always "Almost Beat Rivera", but 99.9% of the time, they dont...it's very Frustrating for other teams im sure. Phils have him, theres probably a game 7
Posted 02:12 PM, 11/05/2009
yankeesrule
Mariano is amazing. Congrats, Yanks. Stop with the salary cap, already. The Yanks want to give us (their fans) the very best. And that is what they do. And we in turn support them 100%. Stop whining, Phillies. Your fans stink anyway. I saw on the news that Phillies fans were throwing beer at 2 young (female) Yankee fans before Game 4. What class.
Posted 02:18 PM, 11/05/2009
yankeesrule
you know, I have tried to post 2 comments that they will not put up. Nothing vulgar. Just that the Yankees are No. 1 and be sure to watch the parade on Friday. What a bunch of nonsense----cannot even get my anti-Phillie statement to post here. Talk about censorship!!
Posted 04:19 PM, 11/05/2009
jim777
with a 4 run lead Rivera is 204-1 lifetime. Not perfect maybe, but not too shabby either
Posted 06:59 PM, 11/05/2009
piscean3651
The Great Rivera! We may never again see the likes of someone like him in the next hundred years. When all is said and done, and he retires, and is in the Hall of Fame, the Yankee players will be kissing his monument in Yankee stadium center field. He alone is in many respects responsible for their championships thru the 90s up till today.
Posted 10:42 AM, 11/06/2009
upstate
Has there ever been a closer that has more presence than Rivera? During the summer his velocity was 93-95, I think the rib problem and overuse had him 90-92 during the past month or so but his cutter is still breaking bats and so hard to square up. Nearing 40 he is still the best.
10 comments