Bob Ford: Short rest for pitchers was once routine in Series

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If you want to win the World Series despite a three-games-to-one deficit and need to finish off the comeback with a pair of wins on the road, the best formula to follow would be the one employed by the Detroit Tigers in 1968.

For the final three games of that Series, manager Mayo Smith had the good fortune to look at his pitching staff and come up with this rotation: Mickey Lolich, Denny McLain, Mickey Lolich.

Mickey Lolich had three complete-game wins as Detroit overcame a three-games-to-one deficit to beat the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1968 World Series. His third came on two days´ rest.
Associated Press
Mickey Lolich had three complete-game wins as Detroit overcame a three-games-to-one deficit to beat the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1968 World Series. His third came on two days' rest.

It worked out well for the Tigers, one of just three teams in World Series history to pull off exactly that sort of comeback. The New York Yankees also accomplished it in 1958 against the Milwaukee Braves, as did the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1979 against the Baltimore Orioles.

The Phillies painted the first panel of their difficult triptych Monday, when they beat the short-rested A.J. Burnett of the Yankees to win Game 5. They resume the quest tonight in Yankee Stadium and, weather and outcome permitting, look forward to taking their chances with a Game 7 tomorrow.

Unlike Smith, however, Charlie Manuel does not have the luxury of throwing McLain, merely a 31-game winner in 1968, and Lolich in the final two games, both of whom worked on two days' rest, by the way. If Manuel did follow the same philosophy - and if he had lost his mind - he would send out Cole Hamels on three days' rest and then Cliff Lee on two days' rest. That's the way the game used to be played.

Lolich had three complete games in the 1968 Series, working on three days' rest for the second start and then two days' rest for that final start, a matchup against Bob Gibson in the bright sunshine at Busch Stadium.

Pitching a shutout until the ninth inning, Lolich gave up just one run as the Tigers won the championship. He helped himself along the way by picking Curt Flood and Lou Brock off first base - a nice idea - and the final pitch was thrown a sprightly 2 hours, 7 minutes after the first one.

In the 41 years that have passed since that World Series, baseball has changed in many ways, but perhaps nothing has changed more than how pitchers are used and in the physical limitations ascribed to them that are now assumed to be gospel. In that same span, the world record for the mile run has been reduced by only eight seconds, so not very much has changed about the overall physiology of the human race. But asking most major-league pitchers to throw a complete game or to pitch on short rest is like asking them to empty the Augean Stables with a thimble.

Manuel, who is old enough to have batted against Mickey Lolich (0 for 1, lifetime), has accepted these changes as well as the next guy, but that doesn't mean he either likes or understands them. He said after Monday's game that he'd ask if Lee would be available on two days' rest. Lee indicated he would do whatever was necessary, which is the right answer. A five-hit complete game probably won't be required.

The position Manuel finds himself in is more like what faced Casey Stengel in 1958 or Chuck Tanner in 1979 as they cobbled together their comebacks. Stengel had to mix and match his pitchers throughout the Series. Most notably, he got a complete-game win from Bob Turley in Game 5, used him to get a one-out save after just one day off in Game 6, and then brought him back in the third inning of Game 7 the following day to finish the clincher.

In the three-game comeback over four days, Turley pitched in all three, compiled 16 innings, allowed just one earned run, and was named the most valuable player. Not bad for a guy whose start in Game 2 ended after one-third of an inning and four earned runs.

For the Pirates in 1979, Tanner played musical pitchers with John Rooker, Bert Blyleven, John Candelaria, Bruce Kison, and Jim Bibby. They started, they relieved, they did everything to get the game into the hands of Kent Tekulve. It wasn't pretty, but it worked.

Manuel needs that kind of luck to drag the Phillies past the Yankees for the next two days. He certainly needs Pedro Martinez to give him a reasonable effort into the middle innings with no more than three or four runs allowed. Anything less and the Phillies will either have to tax their bullpen too much in order to force a Game 7, or there won't even be a Game 7.

For the potential final game, Manuel should actually be sitting perfectly. He has the MVP from the previous season's World Series lined up on his regular four days of rest. That would be the case if Hamels had not suffered a crisis of confidence and performance so profound that he's blathering nonsense about wishing the season were over. If that's really how he feels, then his season should be.

If no better option arises, maybe Manuel can check on the availability of Mickey Lolich. On 30 years' rest, he should really be something.

 


Contact columnist Bob Ford

at 215-854-5842 or bford@phillynews.com.

Read his blog at http://philly.com/postpatterns.

 

20
Comments   
Posted 03:29 AM, 11/04/2009
djmarco
I remember those days well. But today, pitchers are so expensive that they are trained in the minor leagues to go on 4 days rest. Strange that Charlie has had Lee go 9 so many times but won't pitch him on 3 day rest
Posted 05:21 AM, 11/04/2009
EJAY
Or, as they said in '48 "Spahn and Sain and pray for rain"
Posted 07:22 AM, 11/04/2009
janus
Lee should be the closer in game 7 cause Charlie don't surf...
Comment removed.
Posted 08:47 AM, 11/04/2009
kjuggs77
Theyve got to do anything and everything to get to game 7...and especially if they get to game 7, I wouldn't care if Lee, Happ, Myers, and Hamels all pitch 2 innings each in game 7...I agree with the thought of Lee closing out game 7 if possible... all rules go out the window for game 7
Posted 08:48 AM, 11/04/2009
longshanks
It must be the Yankees fault the way the World Series schedule is setup. Must be setup that way to benefit them only huh? The way my fellow Phillies fans sound is ridiculous and disgraceful. From reading comments on the other articles you wimps will find anything to cry about. Stop acting like children and hating every opposing team and fans that you play and get the chip off your shoulder already.
Posted 09:08 AM, 11/04/2009
Your Majesty
Sabathia and Burnett were both worse on short rest, Pettitte has been throughout his career, but Cholly's an idiot for not pitching Lee on short rest. Go figure.
Posted 10:06 AM, 11/04/2009
p-diddy
Hear that? Longshanks wants us to get the chip off our shoulder.
Posted 11:03 AM, 11/04/2009
nmlawyer
Excellent article, Bob. I started watching baseball with the '67 and '68 WS. Guys like Lolich and Bob Gibson not only pitched on short rest, they could still throw 95 mph fastballs in the late innings. I couldn't believe that Charlie didn't let Lee pitch Game 4. We might have won, and we might have won Game 5 with Blanton pitching, considering the Phils scored 8 runs. So, we could be up 3 to 2 with Lee available for Game 7. That's why I strongly disagreed with Phil Sheridan's article that Manuel was a genius after we won Game 5.
Posted 11:08 AM, 11/04/2009
notch44
why are you getting down on Cole Hamels Bob. We need him to perform to win this thing. You choose to write that he wants to "quit". You could have easily spent time writing how he went to Cholly and asked to pitch in game 7. It makes no sense that he would actually want to quit just shy of a consecutive World Series victory but the fact is he's not had a great year and that is what he was referring to. Give it a rest. Philly stop eating your own!
Posted 01:42 PM, 11/04/2009
GoingPostal10
Hamels is experiencing the same thing that happens to any pitcher whose innings pitched jumps drasticly from one year to another. All we need is for Pedro to get us to game 7 and then have Hamels hold it together for 5 or 6 innings. Then Happ and Lee if need be. I am so pumped for tonights game!!!! Maybe we should DH a lefty against Pettite. I know he controlled our lefties in the last game, but for the season lefties are hitting .282 and righties .249. Just a thought. GO PHILS!!!!
Posted 02:06 PM, 11/04/2009
T3rdEyevisual
World Series Champions, redux.
Posted 02:07 PM, 11/04/2009
hillgs
If Pedro pulls off a miracle tonight, I would like to see Charlie turn to JA Happ for the final game. I know that sounds crazy: Putting a rookie in a pressure cooker like that. But Happ is not your typical rookie: He is the most unflappable pitcher in the Phillies' arsenal. He may not be quite as good as Cliff Lee at this point in his career, but he is a really fine pitcher, he is very well rested, and the Yankees do not know what to expect from him. That might just be the ticket to a second World Series Championship, assuming Pedro can pull off a miracle tonight, and pitches far enough into the game that Charlie does not have to use Happ tonight.
Comment removed.
Posted 02:42 PM, 11/04/2009
TBear
I very well remember the '67 and '68 World Series'. I got quite a kick seeing "The Mick" (the Detroit version) pitch those games, especially the last game against "bullet" Bob Gibson. (Whom by the way, established a mark probably never to be broken, a 1.12 ERA in the '67 season) Wonderful games, each with memory tags attached to them. Hope ours turns out as well tonight and tomorrow. GO FIGHTINS!!!
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