Halladay human, but Phils need to hit
Halladay human, but Phils need to hit
Sam Donnellon, Daily News Sports Columnist
The good news: The Phillies offense showed signs of life against an excellent pitcher.
The bad news: Roy Halladay is human. Especially against the San Francisco Giants.
Tagged with the loss after allowing all the runs in last night’s 4-3 Game 1 loss in the National League Championship Series, Halladay is now 0-3 in four starts against San Francisco, with an earned run average of just under seven runs per game.
"I never expected it to be easy," Halladay said afterwards. "If you can’t handle failure at this point you’re in the wrong business."
The anticipated duel between last year’s Cy Young Award winner and the likely winner this year fizzled quickly via long pitch counts. Neither ace appeared to have the command that punctuated their first forays into the postseason last week, but home plate umpire Derryl Cousins tight strike zone had something to do with that.
Halladay flinched first, surrendering a no-doubt home run to Cody Ross with one out in the third inning. Halladay struck out Lincecum and Torres to end the inning, but the immediate thought was: Would this be enough?
Carlos Ruiz answered that on Lincecum’s second pitch in the bottom of the third, punching a high outside fastball over the rightfield wall to tie the score at 1.
Lincecum spent the rest of the inning battling his control and glaring at Cousins, necessitating a trip to the mound by Giants manager Bruce Bochy after Lincecum fell behind Ryan Howard with two runners in scoring position.
"I could see that he was showing a little frustration," said Bochy. "I just wanted to calm him down. And I mean, he's really hyped up a little bit in this big game. And he was in a jam there. So I just wanted to make sure he calmed down and kept his poise out there and came back, made some good pitches there on Howard. But I could see a little frustration on his part. That's why I went out there."
It was the most pivotal at-bat of the game. After Ruiz’s home run tied the game, Placido Polanco hit a 2-0 pitch for a double into the leftfield corner and Chase Utley walked. Lincecum fell behind Howard 2-0, who had doubled against Lincecum in the first inning hitting the ball to the opposite field.
This time he swung hard at three consecutive pitches out of the strike zone to end the threat. One of those pitches missed the target so badly that it sailed past catcher Buster Posey, moving both runners into scoring position. Regardless, the Giants kept the shift on, providing a huge hole on the left to punch a ball through.
The Phillies had four extra base hits in three games against the Reds. They had three extra-base hits in the first three innings last night, but just two singles from that point on.
And for the third game in a row, they could not muster consecutive hits.
"I’m concerned,’’ said Phillies manager Charlie Manuel. "We need to hit better."
Cousins strike zone played big in the Giants sixth, when they rallied for three runs with two outs and no one on. With Buster Posey on first, Halladay thought he struck out Burrell on a 1-2 cutter. "Yeah, I did," he said. "But there were calls they wanted too. If you don’t make a pitch, you have to make the next one."
Instead Burrell ripped the following pitch for a double, the ball glancing off Raul Ibanez’s glove at the base of the wall. Uncharacteristically irked, Halladay had words with Cousins after backing up the play. He then surrendered an RBi single up the middle to Juan Uribe and the Giants led 4-1.
Jayson Werth recovered two runs in the bottom of the sixth, launching a 2-2 fastball over the rightfield wall with Chase Utley aboard to make it 4-3.
It stayed that way the rest of the way, although not without drama and missed opportunities.
With a lineup full of other team’s castoffs, the Giants finished well behind the Cincinnati Reds in virtually every important offensive category this season. But they are a team of hackers, and against Halladay, on a night when the strike zone for both he and Giants ace Tim Lincecum shrunk considerably from their first postseason starts, it was a perfect formula.
Halladay lost for the first time since Aug. 30. "You’re always surprised when Roy gets hit," said Brad Lidge. "It’s once in a blue moon."
"But I’m excited to see him pitch the next time out."
- Now Roy sucks? I sure hope this is the stupid minority speaking. COskier
Agree with SFGiantsTorture. First, show Giant's pitching some respect. Sure Wilson fell behind, but he was painting the outside corner to avoid a home run and missing by inches. The HBP was a smart brushback that he had a bit of bad luck with. His control was AMAZING. Outside, outside, outside corner...last pitch to win the game, inside 96mph heat. Phillies stop throwing your hitters and fielders under the bus. Wilson struck out 4 batters because he is damn good. The ball was not caught because he was booking full speed to a ball many dont event reach and having to judge trajectory at a full run. Error free ball, close game, clutch plays by Giants. Give them the respect they deserve. The pitching stats are not by accident, and look what they did to a Rockies team on an amazing comeback. Rocks were rolling to a playoff spot and Giants swatted them down to a painful death. We are pressure-honed and dangerous. I admit Phills are better on paper, but with intangibles, this is a super close matchup. Enjoy the great baseball, we are lucky to watch it. steveinoakland- As shocked as I was that we lost Game 1, everybody relax. We'll be ok. Roy Oswalt surely can't be as ineffective as he was in the Reds series, can he? Surely the bats won't be quiet tonight, will they? If so, and we go down 0-2, count this series as maybe being DOOM for the Fightins. Keep your fingers crossed Phillies fans!
From what I am reading, the majority of Phillies fans are just like the majority of Giants fans. When their team wins, it's like nothing ever goes wrong. When their team loses, all hell breaks lose.
The same kind of pervasive, faulty thinking is apparent with both crowds.
If you Phillies fans would've listened to Charlie Manuel's post game interview, he nailed it.
Baseball is very chancy. Very random. A 4 - 3 loss for the Phillies could've easily been a 3 - 1 win for the Phils.
Here's another thing:
The posters who are posing as Giants fans are some of the most clueless when it comes to baseball.
All they do is play misguided, amateur GM with no real understanding of how the game is played. cankles- The offense was indeed terrible last night, but Halladay DID pitch well enough to win that game. Stop dumping on Halladay! You want to dump on someone, try Ibanez, who just blew that fly ball catch... a routine catch for Werth or Victorino. Ibanez is playing--both offensively and defensively--like he is sleep-walking. Tomme
Tonight is a must win game!!! I don't see us winning 3 in SF against that pitching. I admit it has happened before but with this team I kind of doubt it. ONE THING NEEDS TO BE SAID-- IF CHARLIE CAN'T WIN WITH THIS TEAM AFTER ALL THE MONEY WE'VE SPENT FOR IT WE NEED A CHANGE. PERIOD!!! Wally 24
Since when is an inconsistent offense anything new for the Phillies? While the Phillies pitching overall has been very good the offense, unfortunately, has been pedestrian at best. Frankly, the Phillies struggle to score against average pitchers, so when they face a team with excellent pitching like San Fran, it just adds so much more pressure to the Phillies pitching staff. There are many players on the Phillies offense that are paid very, very well to hit the ball and score runs. We've been waiting for this offense to break out and be consistent all year, and it is not a good sign when it is the NLCS and we are still waiting. I do not see this team magically finding an offense throughout the playoffs, so we have to hope the pitching holds up and continues to pitch beyond what should be expected. MrPhillie- Ryan Howard at the Eagles game today, living it up on the sidelines. Interesting that an obscene high paid player appears to show no interest in tonights game or any remorse about losing last nights game. In fact, he spent the interview segment joking around on the sideline and downplaying last nights loss. Let's see how many times tonight this mega bucks player strikes out tonight...an attitude adjustment is needed with this Phillies team. dogman5
My first post here was congratulating Doc on his amazing no-hitter last week. As a life long Giants fan I really do think people are underestimating this team. Their entire season has been like a playoff with 1 run games and edge of your seat 9th innings.
With that said, I think the Phillys will bounce back against a VERY tough lefty Sanchez. Our goal was get one in Philly. If you cannot get to Sanchez early though, the pressure will mount and the Giants may come out on top.
Go Giants!!! StaunchGiantsFan
@cancles. Typical. You make a blanket statement painting all fans as one thing, then criticize others, call the Giant's fans clueless, but then offer no insights and nothing as an example to support any of your points. Useless.
Let's discuss some baseball. Who outmanged who tonight? Bochy had the guts to pull P Burell for the pinch runner who scores the winning run, where Pat is at third. Leaves a high pitch count freak in for the 7th, when pitch count and a sub-par day suggest pull him, puts in the perfect anti-lefty specialist to neutralized two dangerous hitters, then Wilson to handle the pressure in the 8th. All tough calls, but smart moves.
A Phil's loss is bad luck due to baseball's randomness? Yes a close game, but the Giant's made the plays the Phil's didnt. They have done it all Sept. Good luck against Sanchez. He can be inconsistent, but if he brings his best stuff he will own your lineup if they don't step up. Just like several have said. steveinoakland
@cancles. Typical. You make a blanket statement painting all fans as one thing, then criticize others, call the Giant's fans clueless, but then offer no insights and nothing as an example to support any of your points. Useless. Let's discuss some baseball. Who outmanged who tonight? Bochy had the guts to pull P Burell for the pinch runner who scores the winning run, where Pat is at third. Leaves a high pitch count freak in for the 7th, when pitch count and a sub-par day suggest pull him, puts in the perfect anti-lefty specialist to neutralized two dangerous hitters, then Wilson to handle the pressure in the 8th. All tough calls, but smart moves. A Phil's loss is bad luck due to baseball's randomness? Yes a close game, but the Giant's made the plays the Phil's didnt. They have done it all Sept. Good luck against Sanchez. He can be inconsistent, but if he brings his best stuff he will own your lineup if they don't step up. Just like several have said. (HTML deleted) steveinoakland
When asked about the whistles and cat calls as he batted in the fifth inning, he said, "I was thinking I must have a really nice butt."
Classic. His post game interview dressed as the grim reaper was also classic. I love the BIG TIME TIMMIE JIM!
StaunchGiantsFan
P.S. SFGATE comments beating PHILLY.COM comments about 4 to 1 (roughly 280 vs 80). My favorite: Cody Ross spelled backwards is 'Ssory Doc'. 2 Jacks do beat One Ace. steveinoakland
If a Philly fan lives in Philly which is a tough town (just watch Animal Cops)or even the general metro area I have some respect for you. However if you run away to Vermont or Colorado to your little picket fences and B and J Ice cream then you are soft and don't deserve to claim the Phillys as your team. Get it you hippe cowards, Philly Zucks Giants in 3 more. ErinRowhand
Why is Manuel keeping Rolins in the lineup when he has proved he is afraid to extend his running and he looks bad hitting i.e. strike outs/pop ups?????? tulsaphil


