Saturday, April 6, 2013
Saturday, April 6, 2013
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Cliff Lee masterful as Phillies top Braves

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    ATLANTA - Before Charlie Manuel tasted victory in this, his 69th year, he was salty. Maybe it was the brutal, see-your-breath weather. Maybe it was his lineup, which had not produced. Maybe he was just tired of answering questions about a small swatch of a long season.

    "We've played two ball games," Manuel deadpanned before Thursday's 2-0 Phillies victory. "I'm going to panic. I'm going to go up there and jump off the top of the stadium. It'll be my luck to live."

    The manager laughed. His point was made. So he took his chances with Cliff Lee on the mound rather than a free fall from the top of Turner Field.

    Good idea.

    Lee was masterful in eight innings against the Braves. If it were not April and 40 degrees, maybe Lee would have attempted the shutout. But 106 pitches of dominance against a lineup that battered Cole Hamels and Roy Halladay were sufficient.

    "The last three innings he even got better," Manuel said. "He was clicking. Command and location. He had good tempo and rhythm. He used his pitches, man. He was aggressive with his fastball. That was a typical Cliff Lee game."

    A typical Cliff Lee game did not guarantee victory in 2012. The lefthander was not awarded a win until his 14th start, and the Phillies were 12-18 in his outings. The new year provided a new narrative.

    By beating Atlanta, the Phillies ended one of the more incredible streaks. Atlanta had won 23 straight regular-season games started by Kris Medlen. That was the longest such run in baseball history.

    The Phillies received one quality starting performance and they won one game in this opening series. They avoided their first 0-3 start since 2007. The home opener at Citizens Bank Park awaits Friday afternoon.

    Lee allowed two hits, the fewest in any start of more than six innings in his career. He walked none, struck out eight, and threw 78 of his 106 pitches for strikes. He neutered a potent Atlanta lineup with the help of the weather, which was not conducive to hitting. The wind killed a few deep flies.

    Atlanta posted a league-leading .621 slugging percentage by blasting 10 extra-base hits in the season's first two games. They were held to two singles Thursday. No Braves runner reached second base.

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    Staked to a second-inning lead, Lee followed his simple plan.

    "It makes it easier to attack the zone," he said. "You're not as worried about a solo home run. Make them swing their way on base. Try not to walk anyone. Be aggressive. Throw fastballs over the plate, and let the defense make plays."

    He required a mere 31 pitches to record nine outs from the sixth to the eighth innings. The cold weather, Lee said, made it less taxing to eclipse 100 pitches so soon in the season.

    Lee's effort masked another lackluster offensive performance. The Phillies stranded nine runners on base. The grand total for the three-game series was 26.

    They cornered Medlen in the early innings. The 27-year-old righthander, making his first career start in April, tossed 49 pitches in the first two innings. He stranded the bases loaded in the first when Domonic Brown bounced to second. In the second, the Phillies loaded the bases with none out and scored twice.

    Laynce Nix, making his first start of the season, singled to begin the inning. Erik Kratz doubled to left. Lee drew a seven-pitch walk in what was possibly the most important plate appearance of the night.

    When Ben Revere tapped a grounder to shortstop for a run-scoring fielder's choice, the Phillies had their first lead of 2013 in the season's 20th inning. The other run scored on a Chase Utley sacrifice fly.

    With Lee's relentless assault of the strike zone, it was enough.

     


    Contact Matt Gelb at mgelb@phillynews.com. Follow on Twitter @magelb.

    Matt Gelb INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
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    Comments  (84)
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:27 AM, 04/05/2013
      God Bless Cliff Lee! My kids and I love the guy for all he was for us in 2009 and all he did to come back here for 2011.

      Joining the debate about who our #1 is - for me, it's General Lee. If the offense supported the guy, there'd be no debate!
      advantasux
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:40 AM, 04/05/2013
      If The Phillies put Howard out on the block ... owed 85 Million for the next three years. And ate 10 million per >>> they'd cut 55 million from their payroll and play Ruf at first. Thats not an albatross. There would be ALL 15 American League teams lining up to pay him 15 Mill a year to DH for 3 years. NO DIGGITY !

      So stop with the albatross stuff. It is an easy option IF they want to move him. But the fact is, without Pujols and Fielder ... Howard is probably the best power hitter in the NL. No ?
      zubzub
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:14 AM, 04/05/2013
      I respect your baseball acumen @zub, and even if I disagree, would certainly be civil in response.

      However, don't you make a huge assumption the Phillies would "EAT" TEN million dollars? This is a team whose ownership let players walk for far less. Look at their free agent signings. That is proof alone, with respect to the OF and starting pitching, players speculated to be pursued. They went the tried and true Bill Giles carnival route. The Braves got Upton, the Phillies never serious contenders in OF help or starting pitchers. The continuing nightmare of Kendrick is still here. Herndon and Martinez were kept to preserve Rule 5 draft status.

      No, your counter argument makes assumptions belied by reality. As to Howard, he runs hot and cold like a faucet, but with correctable problems....if he works at it. Three years and counting, the outside slider in the dirt is another 3rd strike.

      When he hits, who can complain? But, those days are as fleeting as Halladay's fastball.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:32 AM, 04/05/2013
      Think back to how much the Phils paid to get rid of Thome. That's how Howard got here in the first place. If, and I say if, Ruf can produce 80% of Howard's numbers for $400K per year, they would SAVE $15 Mill per year.

      Gillick is the one who made that move. And he's still here.

      Not sayin it will happen. Just that it could. Howard's contract ain't stoppin the Phils from doing anything. That was my point.

      Carry on PhillyBoy !! :)

      Gotta sleep.
      zubzub
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:19 AM, 04/05/2013
      Sleep well zub and see you around.

      Asa huge collector of Bowman Chrome Rookie Cards, I was all over a kid named Ryan, blocked by Thome. I remember it as Thome got injured, allowing Howard's ascension.

      You are excellent with stats, but you tend to remember an investment in a card that went up 300%, earning a tidy profit. The only other player I went "all in" on, was Hamels in 2002, following him since college.

      I quit the hobby, but I'm pretty sure Thome was injured, and the Phillies ownership had money pouring in from public funded CBP.

      This "group" ownership is unaccountable, and impenetrable, as Montgomery is only a front. You will never see their books, and the lucrative TV deal for all MLB, has seen a 600% rise in the valuation of the team.

      I can see your points, but memories dim over time. They didn't lose money on Thome, as much as made $$ on Howard, who filled seats and ownership coffers.

      Later, my friend.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:26 AM, 04/05/2013
      I’m not ready to give up on Howard yet; this is typical of power hitters; when he/they get hot they carry the team. Wait till Ruiz and (hopefully) DYoung get here.

      American league teams would take Howard as a dh; if Ben Francisco is acceptable as dh...
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:50 AM, 04/05/2013
      wow, great night by cliff! this team can't lose! but halladay, hamels and howard (oh my) stink, we're doomed!....uh, maybe i'll wait for the season to actually play out before i jump on or off any bandwagons.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:09 AM, 04/05/2013
      It's not like the Phillies offense is dead. More like broken. So far they're top 5 in a few offensive categories (not all the ones that matter but enough to show they have life): Batting average (3rd), hits (4th), OBP (5th). There's a big hole in the middle of the lineup the way Howard and Michael Young are hitting. Young is providing no RH thread behind Howard which is part of the problem (and Howard is cold at the plate right now). If I were Charlie -- a thought that scares the living hell out of me -- I would have gotten Frandsen into at least one of these games -- more than the one PA he's had so far. He's already setting up for his usual mode of playing his starters to a fault.
      s
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:09 AM, 04/05/2013
      Not only did I enjoy Lee and a victory tonight, I also learned something. The Sarge explained how the standings work. He said that the more games you lose, the further you fall behind.

      They can't pay this guy enough for the rare insights he provides.
      dasher
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:15 AM, 04/05/2013
      What a treat it was to watch Lee pitch! He looks as though he is locked in right now, which usually translates into a dominant month or so of pitching. NL Pitcher of the Month for April maybe?

      Was great for them to get out of Atlanta with a win and slow down the momentum the braves had going...they are a dangerous team though with those bats.

      ...and as for Howard, not what I expected in this series, although he did beat the shift tonite with a single and just missed hitting a dead center HR. I think being at CBP will do him some good, hopefully he goes on a tear. Either way he'll put up numbers again this year...
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:16 AM, 04/05/2013
      Lee's effort masked another lackluster offensive performance.

      Scoring two runs in a game won't produce wins on games when Kendrick & Lannan & Halladay pitch.

      What a waste of $25mil/yr on an overated 1st baseman!
      johnpaulcpa
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:31 AM, 04/05/2013
      Papelbon is a completely different pitcher in non-save situations. I think he uses those situations to experiment with his pitches.
      altoonaaslan
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:52 AM, 04/05/2013
      Great to see Lee off to a great start! Go Phils!
      BMan
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:24 AM, 04/05/2013
      No cheap shot gripes about Kratz today.
      NewMick314
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:31 AM, 04/05/2013
      why not? the guy killed us the first two games. he is barely passable as a backup. would have been nice if ruben had gotten someone to led the staff while Chooch was out and back him up the rest of the season. could have gone even two years with someone because I don't think Joseph will be ready next year.


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