Bill Lyon: Team now faces ultimate math test

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The defending champions of Major League Baseball played Game No. 175 of their season last night. It was also the most important.

The math confronting them was as cruel as it was simple - the Yankees could afford a loss, the Phillies couldn't.

For the first time over the last two enchanted postseasons, the Fightin's found themselves behind. Not an especially scenic view. One more defeat and they would be down to their last tomorrow.

Desperate is, as Forrest Gump might say, as desperate does.

So now, having fallen, 7-4, in Game No. 175, the math against them is even more daunting. They cannot lose. At all. And they have to win three in a row.

It's not the end of the world, but like they say, you can see it from here.

The Fightin's have spent the last two years demonstrating uncommon resilience. Now that trait will be tested as never before.

From the start, Game No. 175 had the feel of one of those legendary sparring wars in one of those storied Philadelphia gyms.

It was an intriguing pitching matchup, Joe Blanton of the Fightin's working on 12 days' rest, which qualifies as being on a cruise, and CC Sabathia working on only three days of recuperation.

Blanton is a beefy bulldog, stolid if not spectacular, generally reliable. In another time, he would wear red suspenders and a bowler hat and draw you a beer at the corner watering hole and come to your defense if a brawl broke out. He is a 6-3 pitcher - six innings and three runs, cranking them out like a mimeo machine.

Sabathia is a power forward disguised as a pitcher; from atop the mound he looms menacingly. The Yankees opened their considerable vault to acquire him, and were, for the most part, satisfied with the return on their money. The Fightin's, however, had mussed him up in other meetings.

The Phillie who remains an unfathomable mystery to Sabathia is Chase Utley and his short, jolting stroke. Utley could take BP in a phone booth. He swatted two home runs off Sabathia in Game 1, and last night in his first at-bat bounced an RBI double that was just shy of another homer.

The Yankees had leapt to a quick 2-0 lead after only five had batted. This included the third plunking in 24 hours of Alex Rodriguez, who was pardonably peeved. There was no intent, however, though both dugouts were issued warnings.

The heavyweight entertainment portion of the evening was provided by Ryan Howard. The Big Bopper flailed and failed his way through a horrid 0 for 9, including eight strikeouts, before finally lashing a single in the fourth. And then he turned on the jets.

He stole second.

With ease.

And then, propelled by Pedro Feliz's hit, Howard steamed around third and never broke stride. He barreled home with a belly slide into catcher Jorge Posada, elbowing the ball loose. It was a play he couldn't have made last year and 30 pounds ago.

It was also the sort of play that can rouse a team, and the Fightin's were in dire need of such a charge.

Blanton was lifted after six, and he was pretty much as advertised - six innings, four runs. Workmanlike. He left having permitted a robust offensive team only five hits. He left as he usually does, keeping his team in it, leaving the Phils with a change to win it.

Enter Utley. Sabathia had him buried in the count at 1-2 and then Kapow! High and deep and long gone. That walk-in closet swing is a thing of beauty.

Sabathia exited, also having done a commendable job - 62/3 innings and three runs.

Enter Joba Chamberlain and his flamethrower. He was gunning strike after strike past the Fightin's, about to fan the side in the eighth, when, without warning, Pedro Feliz got a bat on one of those flame balls and jacked it into the left-field stands, where the loyalists fell all over themselves scratching for the souvenir.

4-4.

The Fightin's were back to even.

Enter Brad Lidge. He was one strike away from retiring the side when Johnny Damon singled, stole second and then third when no Phillie covered, and came home on a ringing double by A-Rod. There followed two more runs. Just when you thought Lidge had been redeemed, well . . .

Enter Sandman. Mariano Rivera. Greatest relief pitcher of all time.

That sound you heard was the door being slammed shut.

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Posted 05:26 AM, 11/02/2009
sweetlynn
I love the Phillies, spend thousands of dollars to go to the regular season and playoff games, but have had this feeling every since the begining of the World Series that we are going to lose, especially since we let the bullpen performance. Blanton in game 4 are you kidding me. Brad Lidge finally become the Lidge of the regular season. We might win game 5, but going to lose game 6. Good Luck Phillies!!
Posted 07:11 AM, 11/02/2009
Fritz and Alice
Tough loss. But, this team has fought back from the brink all year. That is one thing I love about these guys. With the exception of maybe J-Roll, this is a team first group that never gives up. Unfortunately, they have run into a great yankee's lineup and the best pitching staff money can buy. The pitching will have to stiffen-up quickly and the hitting has got to come alive. Very unlikely, say less than 5%. But, let's enjoy it while we have and apprecaite the accomplishments over the last two years and to come. Go Phillies!!!!!!!!!!
Posted 07:26 AM, 11/02/2009
fuss77
I'm most perplexed by the fact that Arod thinks they're trying to hit him. If his head wasn't so swollen from steroid injections maybe he could see beyond his cromag man brow that those are inside pitches. Those are intended to back him off the plate not hit him. Utley goes through it too. No one's ever heard him whine.
Posted 07:34 AM, 11/02/2009
Kenny Junod
don't understand why mole was in the game & was not covering 3rd base. very annoying
Posted 07:36 AM, 11/02/2009
gluteman
LIDGE??? MY GOD!! WHY???? Girardi is playing this all correctly and Charlie has made every mistake.
Posted 07:40 AM, 11/02/2009
goyankees
Fritz, I'm not questioning your teams ability to 'fight back from the brink all year', but The Yankees have too - and much better...A) Cole Hamels is so gutless. He can't wait for the season to be over?? MAN! What's THAT comment about? B) The second I saw Lidge warming up, I knew we'd get to him for the THIRD time this year! Think about that. Only in Interleague did they face each other and the Yankees have gotten to him 3 times already. He's no Mo....and C) These are not your 2008 Tampa Rays, folks....The Trash Talk actually has made me laugh, just knowing the over confidence was going to make your Winter that much colder in the end....
Posted 07:45 AM, 11/02/2009
tellsitlikeitis
I like Charley a lot. But he blew the game before it started. You have to pitch Lee in games 4 & 7. Blanton should have pitched game 5 and Cole should have not have pitched game 3 with his record. You must go with the best especially when playing the Yankees. Now, if It happens to go 7, which I doubt it will, who do you put in there, Cole again? FACE IT PHILLIE FANS, IT WAS A GREAT RUN BUT IT'S OVER! GO FLYERS!
Posted 07:48 AM, 11/02/2009
tellsitlikeitis
Thanks Phillies for a great season.
Posted 07:56 AM, 11/02/2009
mikejgrant
ya know, that poll above asking whos fault it is to lose game 4 doesnt have "entire team". You win together, you lose together. 2 years in a row at the World Series for a team with 10,000 losses. Not bad. Thanks Phils, I still love you because you are my local team.
Posted 08:00 AM, 11/02/2009
step219
Joe Blanton, Please retire. You helped the Phillies lose game 4. What, were you paid off by the Yankees? Not only were you giving away pitches, but you cant hit the ball either. You need to practice batting, to say the least. You should have never been in the World Series pitching lineup, nor batting lineup. Please resume your job with the Phillies as a Bat Boy or a Ball Girl.
Posted 08:09 AM, 11/02/2009
Jill
Fox 29's John Bolaris, a die hard Yankees Fan, was rubbing it in everyone's face last night. Of course, when he got on the air he acted like he like- but he said he is going up for the parade in New York. I wish he would stay there.
Posted 08:14 AM, 11/02/2009
malaysian mink
Even if we lose the Series, Alex Rodriguez will still be a bad person. No matter what he wins, who he bangs, what sweater he wears when he tells the world that he uses PEDs. He is still a waste of life. Nothing can change that.
Posted 08:20 AM, 11/02/2009
Peacemaker
It's over.
Posted 08:29 AM, 11/02/2009
Bob5247
hey step 219...there is no way anyone can pin that loss on Joe Blanton. True, he's not Robin Roberts, Steve Carlton, or Cliff Lee. What he is, is a workhorse who will give you exactly what he gave you last night...5 or 6 good innings, giving up a few runs. The offense, ranked in the top 3 in baseball, should be able to 'cover' 4 runs. The pitching has not been the problem in this Series...it's been the top four batters in the lineup. Yes, Lidge blew another one last night, but had someone besides Chase Utley been able to hit Sabathia, the Phils would have had a good lead in the ninth, and Madson could have closed it out. And as for Blanton's hitting? No NL team expects their pitchers to carry the offense. Leave Blanton alone and put the blame squarely where it belongs..on the offense.
Posted 08:30 AM, 11/02/2009
Conshy04
Thanks Phillies... We will be back next year....
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