
NEW YORK – Finally, there was life in Ryan Howard's bat, energy in his words. "Come on man, let's go," he shouted upon crossing the plate, as if adding a hardy exclamation point to his two-run homer in the sixth inning would spark whatever the defending champions had been missing since they took a brief World Series lead way back in October.
The Philadelphia Phillies brought the bravado, for sure. On the eve of the Fall Classic, Jimmy Rollins made one of his many extemporaneous observations, saying on the Jay Leno Show, of all places, "If we're nice, we'll let it go six. But I'm thinking five. Close it out at home." So here's the first lesson, to any budding big leaguers: try not to mouth off when playing the wealthiest, hungriest, most talent-stacked team on the planet.
On a wintry, raucous night in the Bronx, the New York Yankees captured their 27th World Series title, beating the Phillies, 7-3. The last out of Game 6 came at 11:50 PM ET Wednesday, when the incomparable Mariano Rivera threw his 41st pitch of the evening. Shane Victorino, playing despite a bruised right finger, battled through a gutsy final at-bat, fouling off cutter after biting cutter, until his groundout sealed the inevitable.
Nine years removed from their last ticker-tape parade, there will be another one through the Canyon of Heroes, probably on Friday, as millions of New Yorkers line the downtown streets and hail the Yankees as they wave from flatbed trucks. Yankee haters will mock the excess, the fans' cocky entitlement, but there is no denying this collection of ultra-millionaires in old-world pinstripes epitomizes everything a modern team is meant to be.
"They just beat us on all levels," admitted Rollins, as the party outside the visitor's clubhouse reached a level not heard in these parts since 2000. "Fair and square, they are the legitimate champions."
But the more reporters poked, the more Rollins snapped at the bait. "Do I think we're the better team? I really do," Rollins said. "They just executed. I think we weren't playing bad, but they were playing that much better. They got the hits, we didn't. It's that simple."
The Phillies buckled across the board: Starter Pedro Martinez, effective in Game 2, lasted only four innings Wednesday night, victimized by the flashback strokes of Hideki Matsui; Chase Utley, Mr. November, went without a homer in Game 6; Howard decided to show up, albeit briefly, before ducking like a turtle back into his shell and notching his 13th strikeout, a World Series record.
And there was Charlie Manuel, hardly enjoying his finest managerial moment. Manuel, as loyal as a pup liberated from the pound, left Martinez in to face Matsui in the third inning, after Matsui had taken Pedro deep in the second with a two-run homer that snuck inside the right field pole. Matsui had worked back from an 0-2 count in that at-bat, and now the bases were loaded one inning later, the count again 0-2, Martinez pitching against the same team in back-to-back starts for the first time this season.
Lefty J.A Happ was up in the bullpen, ready to replace the laboring Martinez, who could barely hit 88 on the radar. Manuel chose to stick with Martinez, hoping guts and guile would prevail over power. Somewhere, Grady Little screamed at his TV.
Martinez, the self-declared "old goat," had vowed to get by on survival skills and "frog's blood," which must be a concoction he mixes up under the mango trees, but the high fastball he threw to Matsui was ripped to centerfield, scoring two runs for a 4-1 Yankee lead. Matsui (Mr. November-san), with his aching knees and uncertain future (he won't be joining the Seattle Mariners to join Ichiro, a prediction we can guarantee), finished the Series with a ridiculous .615 average (8-for-13), three homers and eight RBI, along with a shiny MVP trophy he dedicated to all the good folks in Japan.
"They just beat us on all levels. Fair and square, they are the legitimate champions."
-- Jimmy Rollins "When he got there, Pedro, he knows how to pitch. He's got experience, he knows how to pitch and everything, and you know, I had to let him face that guy, " Manuel said later. "Also when we were down, if Matsui got a hit, of course, but we can go down 4-1 and we can definitely rebound there. But I had to let him -- it wasn't time for me to take him out.
Said Martinez, as he left Yankee Stadium, probably for the last time as a player: "It's over with and he got me and that's it." Was this it, his last call after returning to baseball in late summer, when the Phillies signed him for the rest of the season? Martinez had hinted he would retire if Philadelphia won the World Series, but now he would only say reporters should come find him at his Dominican ranch over the winter, and maybe he'd have an answer.
As Martinez hedged, and as Manuel attempted to put a positive twist on Philadelphia's downward spin, the revelry in the $1.5 billion House that George Built grew to a fever pitch. Amidst a sea of popping flashbulbs and corporate feng shui (no bunting brought over from the old digs across the street -- that would get in the way of advertisements), the Yankees' new guard, led by Joba Chamberlain and Nick Swisher, took a flag-waving celebratory romp around the warning track. Rivera told the crowd he was thinking of retiring but now he just might stay another five years. After declaring the trophy was right back where it belongs, Derek Jeter said it was in spite of hearing "a lot of predictions," a dig presumably aimed at Rollins. Manager Joe Girardi, the No. 27 between his shoulder blades a season-long reminder of the Yankees' quest, jokingly told family members he reckons his job is now safe.
These were the Phillies one short year ago, all delirium and muscle-flexing promise. Drenched in champagne and joy, they dreamed out loud of building a dynasty.
So what happened? They took a 1-0 Series lead, stealing Game 1 in the Bronx behind Cliff Lee's masterpiece. But in Game 4 in Philadelphia, Johnny Damon singled and stole second and third -- on the same play -- and the Yankees jumped ahead, three games to one. Something shifted within the Phillies after that Damon play. They grew tight, lost their typical feistiness and joie de vivre. The psyche of Cole Hamels and Brad Lidge turned into running distractions, seemingly more of a concern than the Yankee lineup. Howard looked like a lost victim in a Cold Case rerun.
Howard's home run in the sixth off Andy Pettitte offered momentary hope. It was nice of Howard to join the Series, his dinger putting the Phillies within four runs, with a wobbly Yankee bullpen still to come. When Chamberlain left with two Phillies on base and two outs in the seventh, left-hander Damaso Marte came in to face Utley, a threat to get on base however possible. With his fourth and fifth homers in Game 5, Utley tied Reggie Jackson's single 1977 World Series record, but Marte got the dangerous Utley out on a checked swing, a call that signaled it was time for the plastic to be readied in the Yankee clubhouse. There's no disgrace in losing to the Yankees, winners of 103 games in the regular season and the most decorated team in modern sports. (Wealthiest too, if you haven't heard.) It was certainly different for the Phillies last October, with Tampa Bay on the other side, but the American League wasn't bound to be without the Yankees at the top of the heap for long.
"I'll tell you something, we will be back," Manuel promised. "As MacArthur said, I guess, we will be back."
Something tells us, so will the Yankees.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
11-05-2009 @ 2:11PM
zinn757 said...
The Phillies goat was that they played a team full of cry-babies,since i stopped watching after game 4,I could care less,Phila. couldn't play agains't the Yankees,umps,Fox medid sway,and the stein's. What was funny,was the MVP couldn't even say baseball has been very,very good to me',so weak.
Reply
11-05-2009 @ 3:20PM
chilly16 said...
You stopped watching because you aren't really a fan! I wanted the phils to win. Pretty lame excuses. Bad calls were going both ways.
11-08-2009 @ 2:38PM
JOANN said...
the yankees umps.....? your kidding right, those umps are MLB umps.
11-05-2009 @ 2:30PM
billyp01 said...
you too can buy the world series tropy for a cool 201$mil!
Reply
11-05-2009 @ 2:59PM
calistogakid2u said...
I have no idea if $201,000,000.00 is a good price for a tropy but you have to be a great team to win the World Series trophy.
11-05-2009 @ 3:02PM
calistogakid2u said...
What’s really weak is that Matsui is probably more literate in English than you.
Reply
11-05-2009 @ 3:14PM
THE HAWK said...
It's sad that the all volunteer team from Philadelphia couldn't beat a team that pays their players. As we all know, only the Yankees get paid for playing baseball. All other teams only have players who play for free.
'The Yankees bought their title!' Get off it you losers. The Yankees win because they are the best. The Phillies SUCK!!!
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11-05-2009 @ 3:16PM
THE HAWK said...
Does Rollins still think that the Phillies will win it in five?
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11-05-2009 @ 3:27PM
chilly16 said...
People like you are the reason that people like me didn't care about 9/11. New York is full of scumballs like yourself. Seriously, you rats are disgusting! Your arrogance is part of the reason everyone in the country hates your cespool of a city.
Reply
11-05-2009 @ 5:15PM
solidfaith2 said...
what kind of human are you im not from new york far from it but how could you sit there and say something like that you are a going to burn in hell. I sure do wish you would come down south and talk like that in person i would be happy to woop that ass for you but you never would have the balls to talk like that in person to anyone
11-05-2009 @ 6:56PM
JOANN said...
scumballs...? it was the philly fans who rioted in the streets. you should really get your info right be-4 trashing someones city, who by the is the capital of the world. millions of ppl from all over the country come here all the time.
11-11-2009 @ 9:47AM
ftheyanks said...
Why would anyone go thier you must be joking or something.911 very serious issue and doesn't belong in this forum.you should apologize to eveyone who read this B.S. FTHEYANKS
11-05-2009 @ 3:30PM
axt7118 said...
Let's see Philly's 165 mill payroll is 6th in baseball,,, Do I hear Crying now , And wear is Pee Wee Rollin's with his PREDICTION of Philly's in 5, Or those Fans who said We took 2 outa 3 from the YANKEES in the Reg,season. I said Yanks in 6. And as for the Umps and calls just ask Fanhouse who got more calls Philly's Phantom DP, Howard missing HOME PLATE, 28in strike zone for Lee and Pedro, next time Philly fans what to Cry , try crying about your FLOPS, Rollin's 2 RBI's ( 1 more than Pettitt ) Howard's ( 13 k's New WS Record )Werth's 3 for 22 2 Hrs. or Victorin's Crying why me,,,
Lee 1 great start 1 so-so but still 2 win's, the Rest of you pitching staff needs to go back to AA Ball. And the Guy u call a CLOSER well Maybe in the NL , But not the AL, Owe and for RICK,,,, These are the NY Yankees not the Met's.
Tom Hank's said it best, Ther's No CRYING In Baseball
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11-05-2009 @ 3:33PM
The Elkester said...
hey Scumbag if you made that remark about 9/11 to my face I'd rip your heart out and feed it to your kids.
Reply
11-05-2009 @ 5:42PM
jbellacero said...
The Phillies are a good team. I can't speak for every Yankee fan, but the ones I know couldn't sit down during the game, did NOT want to see a game seven and were well aware that these things can turn on a dime. That's what made this a great series and for me, the fact that the Phillies DON'T suck, the fact that they really do know how to play this game, is what makes this World Series so sweet. We didn't beat a bunch of bumblers, we beat are good, professional team. That's what makes the Yankees the greatest. (By the way, ignore the ignorant troll he just likes to pick his nose in public.)
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11-05-2009 @ 6:06PM
coneyloveme said...
OH PLEASE I HEARD THAT TOO MANY TIMES FROM PHILLY FAN !!! THE YANKEES WERE READY AND THIS IS THE YANKEES YEAR START FROM JULY COME ON! STOP WHINING AND CRYBABY FROM PHILLY FAN !!! I RESPECT TO THE PHILLY FAN AND THATS IT !
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11-06-2009 @ 1:30AM
Frank and Angela said...
To be the man, you have to beat the man. The defending world champion Phillies were beaten by the Yankees who are now the reigning world champions. Congrats to the Yankees and their loyal fans for a great victory. As a Phillies fan I look forward to spring training and hopefully a rematch next year in the 2010 world series. Celebrate NY, you earned it.
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11-06-2009 @ 1:13PM
kukulichadams said...
I'll never understand how the Series MVP can go to a position that doesn't exist in the National League. The DH is a joke and should not be allowed in the World Series for there to be a level playing field.
Reply
11-08-2009 @ 12:08AM
nabpdcop said...
Hey STUPID. The Yankees won two games in Philly, so shut your pie hole. The man had SIX RBI, take that and shove it. God you're DUMB.
11-08-2009 @ 2:47PM
JOANN said...
the nat'l league needs to get their head out of their butt regarding the dh. its used every where, little league, high school. collage etc. every where except..... nat'l league.