Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH  

Sports   

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
YONG KIM / Staff Photographer
The frustration registers on Ryan Howard's face after his strikeout in the eighth inning. It was his 13th - a World Series record.
1 of 54
LISTEN TO AUDIO
Ryan Howard 11/4/09
READER FEEDBACK
Did Howard's slump change the outcome of the World Series?
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


Howard's slump: Sudden, ill timed

NEW YORK - Standing at his locker in the visiting clubhouse at Yankee Stadium, Ryan Howard wasn't going to offer some technical hitting explanation for why he had just struck out more times in a World Series than anybody in history.

"Sometimes you've got it," Howard said. "Sometimes it's not there."

In his last at-bat, in the eighth inning, Howard struck out on three pitches against Yankees lefty Damaso Marte, flailing at an outside slider that wasn't close to the plate. The strikeout was Howard's 13th against the Yankees, breaking a mark set by Kansas City's Willie Wilson against the Phillies in 1980.

Before Game 6, Andy Pettitte had offered his theory, basic as it was, for how Yankees pitchers had consistently shut down Howard in the World Series: "I don't think that there's been a whole lot of balls left in the middle of the plate for him to hit."

Maybe the Yankees lefthander was right. Maybe Pettitte proved the theory last night in the sixth inning by doing just that - leaving a first-pitch slider over the plate. Howard sent it over Yankee Stadium's left-field wall.

More than giving the Phillies a momentary lift, the two-run homer served as a reminder of how this World Series could have been different if Howard had been himself.

"That's baseball," Howard said. "It can happen. You see when guys are going good and guys are going bad. It's nothing new. It's nothing that surprises anybody. That's just the game."

Charlie Manuel is the Phillies' manager, but at heart he is a hitting coach.

"I can sit here and tell you exactly what gets Ryan in trouble," Manuel said before the game. "It's kind of up to him. The pitcher doesn't have nothing to do with it. Basically he's just [not] completely following the ball. [If] he's staying on the ball . . . usually things come around for him."

But from his first at-bat in the World Series, Howard had been a dead spot. Before that homer, Howard had hit just .143, going 3 for 21 with no homers and one RBI.

In his career, Howard has gone through slumps - even mega-slumps - but this one showed up all of the sudden. Before getting to Yankee Stadium, Howard had been the hottest hitter in the postseason, in either league. He had tied a Lou Gehrig record by getting RBIs in eight straight playoff games, after a regular season with 45 home runs. His 141 RBIs tied for the major-league high.

Still, Howard can struggle against lefthanders, and that's mostly what he saw. He was 1 for 11 against Pettitte before last night's game.

In the three previous games the Phillies had lost, Howard was 1 for 12, with just a single. He scored his lone run in those losses in part by stealing a base. He struck out eight times in the three losses.

Howard did tie the National League record of 17 postseason RBIs. But in the pregame news conference, Manuel was asked if he might drop Howard to the No. 5 spot, with Jayson Werth moving up to the cleanup spot.

"He's the fourth hitter," Manuel said of Howard. "He's been there. What kind of message do I send to Howard . . . all of a sudden on a big, important game in the World Series, I drop him? . . . What's that telling him?"

Manuel then said, "If my manager did that to me, I'd have some words with him."

Manuel later added that he would make any move if it helped the Phillies win.

"If I thought sliding Howard down in the lineup would win the game for us, I'd do it," Manuel said.

He was right about that part. Moving Howard wasn't going to make a bit of difference, last night or any other.

Afterward, Howard sat in the dugout for a little bit watching the celebration.

Page:   1  of  3  View All
1 |   2 |   3      Next»
Comments   
Comment removed.
Posted 08:28 AM, 11/05/2009
Johnnydeagle
It was the ridiculously inconsistent strike zone (see fox pitch trax) and bad plate umpiring that makes this loss hard to take! The math doesn't add up, one team can't win that much more than all the others without some help. Any mathematician would see the discrepancy! Fox's pitch trax may have provided the answer. It's too easy for umpires to manipulate a game. Its easy to see wall street, and money playing a big part in the Yankees record. 7th inning, Chase is up and pitch trax clearly showed the first pitch was well outside, ump calls a strike. Chase was put into a defensive position at that point and ended up striking out. No justice in sports any more! Boycott corporations, and support local, and small business's. Thats the only advice I can give.
Posted 08:52 AM, 11/05/2009
ratbag
Oh, Johnny! You're so cynical.But I like it. Yeah, the stink of this kind of influence pervades everything, even our beloved basball. I had my suspicions as well. Meanwhile, Ryan Howard is still a great player and deserves our support for helping give us another exciting season. I feel so bad for how he must be feeling right about now. He'll be back, though.
Comment removed.
Posted 09:07 AM, 11/05/2009
G$Money
The truth is that Howard is not a clutch player. If you tell me to look at his numbers I will tell you to point out the number of times he has carried this team when they were not already ahead. He is a Dave Kingman type slugger; not mentally disciplined or tough enough to stop shaking his head after a strikeout and start hitting for average. How many years till he learns to hit breaking pitches and left handers. He was exposed as a boy playing against men. He disappeared when he was needed. What more is there to say.
Posted 11:33 AM, 11/05/2009
stockman1
I agree with Money. Too many disappearances in big spots by Ryan. He puts up tremendous numbers but his post season is his career in a microcosim...hot with gaudy statistics in the preliminary rounds and then a major slump when it counts most. When he was in contract talks people were commenting that the Phillies have him for the next few years until he commands mega-bucks in New York. My reaction then and now is "they can have him...he's just not clutch enough". Mark Kram had the best quote on Daily News Live the other night when he said "Howard's in one of those slumps where it looks like he's never gonna hit the ball ever again". If I were a major league pitcher, I'd throw him breaking stuff outside all day long. He can't hit it and he can't lay off it. It's his Achillies heel.
Posted 12:13 PM, 11/05/2009
Johnnydeagle
Howard also had to deal with the ridiculously inconsistent strike zone (see fox pitch trax) and bad plate umpiring! He carried us to the WS!
Posted 12:25 PM, 11/05/2009
NCogNeato
Ryan's not the first slugger to disappear in the playoffs and won't be the last. But, he's got to show some humility and admit that the hitting coaches are actually right sometimes. I'm sitting there on the couch and I say to the wife, "Watch this... Ryan will probably get two breaking balls inside and then fastball low and away." Sure enough, there it is. He stays on the ball, like Charlie says, takes a few of those to left and next thing you know,... no shift. Then he gets a few more hits because the second baseman isn't parked in shallow right. I hope he figures it out because I like the way he's dedicated to getting better.
Posted 01:40 PM, 11/05/2009
chuckw
Not a clutch hitter? Two of the lamest posts ever on this site. Carried this team each September, former MVP of the league, MVP of this year's league championship series, one of the greatest sluggers in Baseball history in his first four years. You may not have noticed, but sluggers go through slumps; A-Rod has been awful until this series; Teixeira hit .136, struck out 8 times, looked awful at the plate. Neither Howard nor Teixeira were helped by the fact that the series droned into November, not exactly slugging weather. Phillies fans earn their reputation as front-runners.
Posted 01:41 PM, 11/05/2009
republicrat
...Howard gets too much credit. How many of those home runs were actually the difference in winning a game? It would be much better if he could just get a base hit in the clutch when it is needed. I'd rather have a Victorino who is almost always on base, than a Howard who either homers or strikes out.
Posted 01:48 PM, 11/05/2009
LongtimeFan3
One- some guys slump, some guys groove it..Ryan IS IS IS a clutch player....proved it in the first 2 series........TWO-those of you blaming the umps need to get a life....IMO the zones were small...but both teams had to deal with it
Posted 01:48 PM, 11/05/2009
Will T.
Ryan carried this team on his back many times this year and last year, they needed to pick him up this time. Rollins and Victorino did nothing at the plate.
Posted 01:51 PM, 11/05/2009
bigsud
Guys like Money and stockman are unbelievable. To say that Howard is not a clutch player (and to agree with that) is ridiculous. Didn't the guy just single-handedly destroy the Rockies and Dodgers in the first two rounds? And then to comment that he has a major slump when it counted the most....well, Howard carried the team the last two years down the stretch WHEN IT COUNTED THE MOST, because if they didn't win in September, there would not have been Octobers and Novembers the last two seasons. Quit throwing the guy under the bus. The Yankees are the best team money can buy, but I'd like to get a rematch next year.
Posted 01:52 PM, 11/05/2009
Manor2009
I have always been a rooter for Howard. However, he is increasingly becoming the McNabb of Phillies baseball: flashes of brilliance, only to set-up to disappoint. As goes Howard, so go the Phillies. Too much reliance on one man.
Posted 01:54 PM, 11/05/2009
Tyronne Coppel
We Will Be Back Next Year to Reclaim our World Series Title/Trophy