Bill Lyon: Start spreadin' the news: The Fightin's live

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We come bearing eulogies.

We come bearing scrapbooks and photo albums, mementos of almost two full years of winning, here in a city unaccustomed to such largesse.

We come to celebrate the Fightin's, who finally, gallantly, succumbed last night to the Evil Empire. We come . . .

Oops.

Hold it right there, Pilgrim.

Reports of the demise of the major-league baseball franchise of Philadelphia are grievously premature.

The Fightin's live.

Pass it on.

Call what the Phillies have bounceability. It's the second cousin of resiliency.

They were presumed to be roadkill after the Yankees had beaten them three straight and taken a 3-1 stranglehold in the World Series. Last night was going to be the crash landing of the magic carpet.

Enter bounceability.

Enter, also, Chase Utley, whose at-bats go something like this: "Mission Control, New York here. We have a problem."

The Fightin's live. Pass it on.

They came wobbling in on bald tires last night, but they have given themselves one more tomorrow.

It's only a temporary reprieve, but it beats the alternative.

An elimination game is supposed to be boiling with passion and this one was, from the start. The Phillies led with their savior, whom many inquisitors had wanted to start in Game 4, meaning one day less of rest. Manager Charlie Manuel was not swayed.

The Yankees promptly dented Lee for a run on Johnny Damon's first inning parachute single into center field and Alex Rodriguez's RBI double, on an inside-out swing, into the right field corner, the ball skittering away like a rabbit hunting for its hole.

One run? That's, oh say, about 15 innings worth of Cliff Lee pitches.

But the Fightin's, feeding on desperation, leaped on Yankees starter A.J. Burnett. Jimmy Rollins - "We've done it before, win three in a row" - lashed a first-pitch single, and that was significant because the last time the Phillies faced Burnett, they had allowed him to get away with first-pitch fastballs, and never seemed to adjust.

Burnett drilled Shane Victorino on the knuckles and your first thought was that it was retaliation for the triple plunking of Rodriguez during this series. But Victorino was trying to bunt and Burnett followed the rule - throw at the bunter.

Which brought up Chase Utley in a situation that has haunted the Fightin's during this series - runners on, but they get left there. You have too many LOB, eventually you'll be DOA.

"We haven't been getting the big hit," Victorino had said.

Well, no more.

Utley put that phone-booth swing of his on the first pitch to him and clubbed it into the right field seats, thereby demonstrating the worth of the old Earl Weaver theory of managing the three-run homer.

And then his next time up, Utley, who is an instinctive and intelligent baserunner, played small ball. He stole second (he almost never gets caught stealing) and then dashed home on Jayson Werth's hit. Raul Ibanez followed with a two-men-on RBI single, and at last the Phillies were cashing in on all those runners-in-scoring-position opportunities they had been squandering.

That was enough for manager Joe Girardi. He hooked Burnett, who had paralyzed the Phillies in Game 2. This time around, however, the Fightin's employed what they had learned about sitting on Burnett's first-pitch strike-one.

After three innings, the Phillies had gifted Lee with half a dozen runs. That, you thought, should be ample support, assuming he had his A game. Or even his B game. The cushion enabled him to operate with a wider margin for error.

There is, by his own analysis, no smoke and mirrors about Lee. Heat. Change. And a menacing sounding thing called a spike curveball. He works both sides of the plate. And, to the everlasting appreciation of his mates and spectators, he does not tarry in between pitches. Opponents spend a game, usually in vain, trying to disrupt his rhythm, nudge him out of his groove, try his patience.

He lasted seven full, then left after allowing five runs. He spoiled us - we began expecting shutouts every time he took the ball.

Chan Ho Park worked a perfect eighth. And for the crucial ninth, the inning that has bedeviled the Fightin's at too many turns, the bullpen door opened to reveal . . . Ryan Madson, who has electric stuff but at times has suffered lapses.

The air was thick with trepidation. Sure enough, first batter, double off the left-center wall. Next batter, single. Next batter, Derek Jeter, 6-4-3 double play, but a run-scoring double play, making it 8-6.

Next batter, single. Next batter, power man Mark Teixeira, representing the tying run. Strikeout.

The Fightin's live. Pass it on.

 

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Posted 04:29 AM, 11/03/2009
scribbles
"Jimmy Rollins lashed a first-pitch single, and that was significant because the last time the Phillies faced Burnett, they had allowed him to get away with first-pitch fastballs, and never seemed to adjust." Uh, actually Rollins swung and missed at the first pitch. He hit a 1-2 pitch for a single. Go Phillies!
Posted 04:48 AM, 11/03/2009
loccoerrec25
Let me say Im a Phillie's fan that attended game three of the world series. As I left the stadium that night I knew the Phils had lost the series. Its nice to have hope but in all reality only 6 teams in major league history in 102 world series have ever come back to win the series after being down 3-1. And lets be honest the yankees, although we hate to admit it, are the better team. They had already taken 2 in our house and were down 8-2 in game five. Most teams would have said, we did out job, and mailed it in. They didnt, they kept coming at us, so much so that every person in the delaware valley was cringing, and just hoping we could get that final out. We all know as life long Phils fans whats coming. The end is inevitable, and the prognosis for us just doesnt look good. Can we win, I suppose, but it would take a miracle, and there are no miracles in baseball anymore.
Posted 04:56 AM, 11/03/2009
jimmyeagles
It's good to see your by-line out here again, Bill. I've always loved your work.
Posted 05:21 AM, 11/03/2009
JamesJ
Gee locc, it must be awful going thru life so miserable
Posted 05:53 AM, 11/03/2009
stoneman
It's a game per night and the right to win but you, doomsday loccerrec25, cry about the past. In sports we play the games for a reason...one never really knows. Ignore the Yankees and history and just believe the Phillies can win ONE game...............and then one more........THEY CAN!!!!
Posted 06:13 AM, 11/03/2009
hobbesteroo
I agree with loccoerrec25. I love the Phils, and I'm happy they made it this far, but your are in denial if you think they are going to take this series. The only way they can pull this series off is if Howard gets his mojo back and the field stops making stupid mistakes like they did in game 4.
Posted 06:57 AM, 11/03/2009
Eddie Spaghetti
Enjoy the ride! we are in a golden age of Phillies baseball. I know for myself at 50 years old I may never witness a team like this again. It aint over til its over and I love how these guys represent our city. GO PHILLIES!
Posted 07:01 AM, 11/03/2009
daryl b
the team got some of it's magic back last night....if they keep it....anything is possible...
Posted 07:02 AM, 11/03/2009
He had high apple pie in the sky hopes.
"And there are no miracles in baseball anymore." Well, it's a miracle somebody as miserable & pathetically cowardice as you hasn't offed themselves already . . . so why not in baseball?
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Posted 07:09 AM, 11/03/2009
philsfan
But they also said the winner of game 1 has gone on to win the series the last 11 times. So how is that for statistics. The past means nothing, The Phils play game to game, that's what makes them so special!!!! Baseball is a funny game that is why there are 7 games in the series. It ain't ovet til its over. Pedro has to come out with his best game. The Yankees won 3 in a row, we can do it, too!!!
Posted 07:12 AM, 11/03/2009
samkula
Let me tell you about the Phils. They have more come from behind 9th inning games than any other team in both leagues. The fans are the most intense than any other town/The Vet had a police holding facility and a judge They have more out of town Phans that any other team in La they have a whole section of red hats, Florida too. We Crushed NYY's can in NY last week, We ate up the Dodgers & the Rockies,and we ain't stopped rolling. So show a little respect in Tug's Memory when he coined it "YOU GOTTA BELIVE" We Beat the Yankees in May 09 2 out of 3 at NY We spanked than last week 6-1 We Will Do It! p.s & I am In Florida since 1969
Posted 07:42 AM, 11/03/2009
gluteman
Game 7 is ours if we get there. Thats my worry. Getting there against Petitte with Pedro.
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