Phillies-Rockies scouting report
Join Daily News baseball writer Paul Hagen for a live chat before Game 1 of the Division Series today at noon on philly.com
FIRST BASE
Rockies: Todd Helton. He has played in five All-Star Games, is a .332 lifetime hitter and has 303 career homers. He's also above average on defense. But, maybe since he's also played in 1,578 games without making the postseason before this, Helton's profile isn't as high as it should be. He's the player the Rockies rally around. "When you have a player who has meant as much to a franchise as Todd has meant to the Rockies . . . it makes what we are going through that much more meaningful," Matt Holliday said recently. "Most of us have been around 3, 4 years and we think about the struggles we've been through. Todd's been playing 10 years waiting for this."
Phillies: Ryan Howard. The conventional wisdom coming into the season was that Howard would have a hard time matching his .313-58-149 MVP numbers of 2006, but could still have an outstanding year. And that's pretty much what happened. While his batting average went down (to .268) and his strikeouts went up (from 181 to a major league-record 199) he still finished second in the league in both homers (47) and RBI (136). And he showed signs of coming on strong at the end, hitting .412 with seven homers and 16 RBI in the last 10 games.
ADVANTAGE: PHILLIES
SECOND BASE
Rockies: Kaz Matsui. A switch-hitter, he generally faces only righthanded pitchers, although he's expected to get the start in Game 1 against Cole Hamels today. During the season, he had only 70 at-bats against lefties, hitting .271, compared with .291 vs. righthanders. He ended the season in a 9-for-43 (.209) slump, but the Rockies were 10-1 after he returned from the DL (right hamstring pull). He was also successful on 32 of 36 stolen base attempts. Jamey Carroll picks up most at-bats against lefties.
Phillies: Chase Utley. When he signed his 7-year, $85 million contract before the season, Utley promised it wouldn't change his take-no-prisoners approach. It didn't. He had a career-high 48 doubles, despite missing a month of the season with a broken hand that probably cost him a shot at the NL MVP Award, but he never missed a beat after returning to the lineup. Against lefthanders, he batted .318, including .349 after June 4.
ADVANTAGE: PHILLIES
SHORTSTOP
Rockies: Troy Tulowitzki. His numbers make him a strong Rookie of the Year candidate, but he brings more to the table than the fact he had more homers (24) by a rookie shortstop than any player in history besides Nomar Garciaparra. He doesn't turn 24 until next week, but is the take-charge guy in the infield.
Phillies: Jimmy Rollins. Everybody knows by now that Rollins established himself as a legitimate MVP candidate. In fact, it appears that the voting could be a showdown between him and Rockies leftfielder Matt Holliday. One more time: He's the fourth major leaguer ever to have at least 20 doubles, triples, homers and stolen bases in a season. He played every day, helped set the tone and drove in an amazing 81 runs from the leadoff spot . . . Rollins has never won a Gold Glove, but that could come this year, too.
ADVANTAGE: PHILLIES
THIRD BASE
Rockies: Garrett Atkins. After batting only .223 with three home runs and 20 RBI through May, Atkins came on strong in the final 4 months. The rest of the way, he batted .338; he finished the season with 25 homers and 111 RBI, and went 12-for-18 (.667) with six RBI and seven runs scored in his last five games. An average defensive player, he is steady on the balls he gets to, but doesn't have great range.
Phillies: Greg Dobbs/Wes Helms/Abraham Nuñez. Helms didn't provide the production the Phillies hoped for when they signed him as a free agent last winter. But the emergence of Dobbs and the defensive brilliance of Nuñez allowed manager Charlie Manuel to mix-and-match effectively at the position for much of the year.
ADVANTAGE: ROCKIES
CATCHER
Rockies: Yorvit Torrealba. After starting the year as the backup, the role he has been in most of his career, Torrealba displaced Chris Iannetta as the starter. He can hit mistakes, so pitchers must be careful; nine of his last 15 hits were for extra bases. He's also batting .215 (34-for-158) since Aug. 1 and has thrown out only two of his last 32 runners attempting to steal.
Phillies: Carlos Ruiz. After being hit on the left elbow by a pitch Sunday, Ruiz is doubtful for at least the NLDS opener. That's a concern, since he went from a question mark going into spring training to establishing himself as the everyday catcher as the season progressed. Veteran Chris Coste will get more playing time than expected, and pitchers enjoy throwing to him.








