NEW YORK -- The good A.J. Burnett showed up at Yankee Stadium Thursday night. Scratch that, this wasn't just the good Burnett on the mound, his pitches dancing across every tiny speck of the plate's corner, his psyche remaining as calm as a summer day. This was a great Burnett, an imposing Burnett, a Burnett who managed to keep his evil side stowed away in the broom closet for one entire game. And what a game it was, with Burnett and Philadelphia starter Pedro Martinez daring each other to blink first, to crack slightly, to make consecutive bad pitches. When it was over, when Burnett and the Yankees had held tight to a 3-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies in Game 2 of the World Series, New York manager Joe Girardi still looked as if you could bounce subway tokens off the bulging veins in his neck.
"Extremely impressive. [Burnett] was great tonight," said Girardi, breathing slightly easier now that the Yankees can head down the turnpike with the World Series tied 1-1, and his team's bats itching to break out in Philadelphia's warm weather.
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Game 2: Yankees 3, Phillies 1 | Box Score | Series Home
Game 2: Yankees 3, Phillies 1 | Box Score | Series Home
Who knew that it would be Burnett, of all players, who could relax the shoulders of New York's tightly wound manager? Burnett's outing – one run, four hits, nine strikeouts, two walks across seven innings – was so spectacular, his arsenal so nasty, it had observers wondering how he's ever lost a game. There are times when Burnett makes you question why the Yankees thought it wise to blow $82 million on him, and then there are games like Thursday on a cool, clear night in the Bronx, when the tattoo-covered, pie-tossing enigma is worth every cent.
"You try to prepare for yourself for these games and this city and this crowd and the team you're going up against, that's an outstanding lineup right there," Burnett said. "But I think I fed off the crowd tonight. They were up every time I got one strike, they were up every time I got two, and instead of over-throwing, I kind of just stayed within myself and they started to cheer a lot. They were cheering all the time, but when I struck guys out they really got loud, so I was just trying to keep that going for them."
There are times when Burnett makes you question why the Yankees thought it wise to blow $82 million on him, and then there are games like Thursday on a cool, clear night in the Bronx, when the tattoo-covered, pie-tossing enigma is worth every cent.
Burnett and his personal catcher, Jose Molina, engaged in a few of their usual therapy sessions on the mound, but this time their conversations had to go something like this: "Hey, there's Kate!" "Did you hear Jay-Z and Alicia?" "Wonder if we can still make Nobu?" For some reason even Burnett can't quite explain, he's usually good for one wild inning, a meltdown that often ends with balls sailing toward the backstop, but it never came. He was all about throwing first-pitch strikes and heartbreaking curves and stuff that had more movement than Alicia Keys and Jay-Z combined. He threw 108 pitches and probably could have gone another inning if the Yankees didn't have Mariano Rivera, the ultimate comforter, ready for a six-out save.
"That was a beauty. We needed it," said Mark Teixeira, who tied the game 1-1 in the fourth by ripping a changeup off Martinez into the Yankees' bullpen in right field.
"A.J. was just on. That was incredible to watch," said Hideki Matsui, who golfed a two-out pitch at his knees in the sixth to put the Yankees up, 2-1.
We interrupt this well-deserved love fest to pick a few nits off Burnett's teammates. Alex Rodriguez, in particular, is ripe for questioning, which tends to happen this time of year. He had been so spectacular though the first two playoff rounds, practically carrying the Yankees to the World Series on his back. But now he is hitless in the Fall Classic, striking out three times for the second straight night to make it 0-for-8 in the Series, and you can tell the pressure is getting to him by the way he chomps his gum. What's happened to Kate Hudson's good luck Buddha beads? What becomes of the Yankees if his slump continues? These are pressing concerns for Gotham.
It was Rodriguez who also waved like a matador at Matt Stairs' sharp grounder in the second inning, the ball sailing past A-Rod's glove and allowing Raul Ibanez to score from second for an early 1-0 Philadelphia lead. If Burnett hadn't been so masterful, A-Rod and his pal Derek Jeter would share the evening's devil horns and tail. Jeter struck out three times, including a very non-Jeter-like at-bat in which he tried and failed a sacrifice with two strikes.
The drama reached its tipping point in the seventh inning, when Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel had his Grady Little moment and decided to allow Martinez to start the inning. Jerry Hairston Jr., who came into the night batting 10-for 27 against Martinez (but hadn't faced him since 2004), hit a flare to right, and with Brett Gardner pinch running for Hairston, Melky Cabrera singled, moving Gardner to third. Pedro was done, with zero outs, with runners on the corners, with old friend Jorge Posada at the plate.
Martinez pointed to the sky, walked to the dugout and cracked a smile that lit the night. He had pitched with a sniper's nerve and a mad scientist's guile, giving up homers to Teixeira and Matsui that were more the product of great swings than bad pitches. If Pedro isn't quite the most influential player to ever play at Yankee Stadium -- a hyperbolic boast on his part -- he sure is still one of the most compelling.
Naturally, as if the Babe and Ted Williams and Mickey Mantle and all the other influential ghosts got together and decided to have a little fun, Posada smashed a line drive off reliever Chan Ho Park, making it 3-1. "I knew it was going to be crazy," Burnett said of Martinez. "I knew he was going to be on his game. I focus on myself, but you can't help but watch his game. It's the funnest I've had on the field."
Burnett toyed with the Phillies from the second inning on, Carlos Ruiz's double in the fifth one of his few blips. He struck out Howard staring at a backdoor curve in a breezy 1-2-3 sixth inning, and then turned the heat up even higher in the seventh. He whiffed both Ibanez and Stairs, again on pitches that made the heart stop, and topped the inning off by getting Pedro Feliz on a soft grounder to short.
"I went out tonight with confidence, and just, you know, the game just rolled by," Burnett said, after putting his first playoff win in the books. "I was in a good rhythm. Stairsy hit a good pitch to get his RBI but it never stopped me, and I just continued to stay in that rhythm and just continued to try to get strike one."
Can he do it again, on three days' rest? That's impossible to predict, considering we still don't know which Burnett is going to roll out of bed each morning – the one who needs coddling, or the one who oozes confidence. Burnett said he watched Cliff Lee's interview after the Philadelphia ace's brilliant Game 1 win here Wednesday, and he decided to channel the belief that all his pitches would work in harmony.
"Cliffy, he was a man against boys last night. He talked about confidence a lot, and that was huge for me tonight going up against Pedro because you know what he's going to offer," Burnett said. "He's going to throw strikes and he's going to make our guys work a lot, and that's what he did tonight."
Burnett was an antsy observer in his first World Series, sidelined with arm troubles in 2003 when his Florida team won it all. Postseason in the Bronx is a whole different animal. Burnett picked a fine time to earn his money.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
10-30-2009 @ 3:13AM
Jetfan said...
For half a billion payroll they SHOULD get lucky!!
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 6:07AM
sonchopanza said...
aint dat da truth! It's gotta be hard to be Pro-Yankee knowing that your SUPPOSE to win the world series every year. I can only assume that IF they do win they have to fake their celebration. It's not as though they were a team built from the bottom but rather a team purchased.
10-30-2009 @ 11:30AM
tonytiger18 said...
Hey Jeffan, they have a 200 million payroll not a billion, besides do the Phillie players play for nothing?
Lucky? How about the ball that landed on the foul line, was that skill?
The Yankees were dominated Weds night and the Phillies were dominated last night by great pitching.
10-30-2009 @ 5:42PM
PADDY said...
LISTEN DUM DUM...PEOPLE ARE TIRED OF HEARING ABOUT THE YANKEES PAYROLL...CHECK THE REDSOX PAYROLL OR THE METS.
IF YOU HAVE A GRAND FRANCHISE YOU SPEND MONEY TO KEEP THE FRANCHISE SUCCESFUL. 5 PLAYERS ON THE YANKEES ARE FROM THE FARM SYSTEM.
DID YOU KNOW THE YANKEES CUT PRICES ON SEATS AND DO A HELL OF ALOT OF CHARITIBLE THINGS AND ORGANIZATIONS..DO YOU KNOW THE FOOD THATS NOT SOLD AT HE STADIUM IS GIVING TO THE POOR AND HOMELESS. NO OTHER TEAM DOES THIS .NEXT TIME THINK
10-30-2009 @ 6:48AM
Cattani said...
Ted Williams? Oy.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 7:07AM
Buck said...
The umps were bad. Bad calls at first base. Also, the home plate ump was horrible. In the 8th inning, Rivera threw 5 straight balls to Utley. The ump called two of them strikes. He should have walked. Bases loaded with one out for Howard and Werth coming up. Utley hit into a double play...oops he was safe at first on the replay.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 7:41AM
Ralph Garcia said...
Buck, are you Buck Showalter? Those pitches of Mariano Rivera are cut fastballs. They break when they reach the plate. Of course it's not going to land straight in the glove. If it did, it would have been a room service fastball. As a Yankee fan, Mariano has been throwing that pitch since 1996. As you saw McCarver and Jack Buck didn't criticize that pitch because it had movement. That's how Rivera breaks bats. By the way, he easily handled Howard and Werth. I don't know what game you saw. You Yankee haters have to realize that if the Yankees were a country, they'd be America. Yes both the Red Sox and the Dallas Cowboys are like France because they are arrogant and not humble.
10-30-2009 @ 8:01AM
Bill3JoanA said...
Buck, part of your statement is true, the umpires in general do not know what a strike looks like. The shape of the zone has changed. Rule book still basically says letters to knees of batters "normal stance" and a 17 inch wide plate. But rarely is anything above the belt called a strike (although often hit for a home run). And homeplate would appear to now be not 17" but closer to 24 to 26 inches wide. But before you rag on the Utley call at first on the DP (?) you really should start with the phantom "catch" by Howard I think the inning before that.
10-30-2009 @ 8:46AM
roughpucker said...
WHAAA
10-30-2009 @ 8:27AM
theburghk said...
something has got to be done to improve the umpiring,the way it is now,anything goes.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 8:38AM
Mark said...
Ralph you are an idiot. What the hell do the Sox and Cowboys have to do with this?
Show some class, no need to be a sore winner...
The Yanks deserved to win. AJ to his credit was great. Pedro was pretty good so all in all it was a fun game to watch. The bad calls evened out as Howard trapped that line drive so that shouldnt have been a double play either. I think he knew he didnt catch it because he started towards 1st base seemingly to get the sure out. The umpire was in the right place but really couldnt see it so in that case shouldve asked the home plate umpire who wouldve had a good view for a ruling.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 8:48AM
Steve said...
Buck here
Ralph...hate is not in my nature...I am a baeball fan and would like to see better umpiring....I based my comment on replays showing the pitches were out of the strike zone...just as the called third strike on Howard in the 9th...even McCarver and Buck confirmed this after the replay
B3JA.....I did say "bad calls"
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 8:59AM
dbadanbet said...
I checked my crystal ball and the score tonite will be 8-3 Yankees - and, A-Rod will have 2 homeruns! Anybody wanna bet?
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 10:17AM
rugbymom said...
Wait to the Skankees come to Philly. The fans will have them shaking in their boots.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 9:49AM
DontBluesMe said...
Again, I have to straighten out some idiots who say the Yankees 'buy' their championships. Cliff Lee is not a Phillies home-grown prospect. Or Pedro, or Ibanez, or Wurth. The Yankees happen to draw alot of fans to their ball park and every team in baseball feeds off of the revenue they bring on the road. Some people just don't understand the word 'success'.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 10:09AM
Bobby W said...
?
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 10:38AM
elpgolfer said...
So here's the deal. The calls made by the umps are at a pace that they have to make the call as they see it. They don't have the luxury of going over every play with a replay. The only reason we know it was a missed call is because of replay. Thats the nature of the game. It has only been since television started using replay in the studio that we saw that the umpiring in most games is not completely accurate. They do the best that they can and yes calls are missed but its been like that since the beginning of baseball.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 11:00AM
sgtmike132 said...
O.K. Everybody just relax and remember that Vegas controls the outcome. Scream,cheer, name-call; you are all smart enough to realize that money runs the world and sporting events are no different.Money,money,money..........
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 11:09AM
ftheyanks said...
yanks fans you take it anyway you can and feel good about it.half billion dollar payroll tells me the games might be fixed in your favor.bad calls at first bad strike zone what a cheap way of winning your first and we all hope LAST world series win.phillies still win in five ftheyanks.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 11:42AM
tonytiger18 said...
Hey ftheyanks,
Your screen name says it all.You aren't a real fan but one that revels in hate and excuses.
Yesterday, you were pumping your chest and flexing your arms and predicting that the Phillies were conquering the world.
Today, making excuses and pointing to the payroll
and the bad calls by the umps.
I do realize that you are an uneducated bozo from STHITADELPHIA, so I find your rants extremely entertaining, please keep up your great posts.