Today was a day when the drama on the field seemed too-well scripted for the scribes in search of an angle.
Here's our account:
Christine and I had to run quickly to a store this afternoon.
"What's your prediction?" Christine asked.
"You win, but Pedro pitches poorly. Yours?"
"Pedro pitches into the 7th."
After leaving the store, we were surprised to hear that the game was still in the first inning. Even better was when the announcers said that Pedro Martinez could bat before taking the mound against his old team. Things kept looking up as Carlos Ruiz homered (the second three-run blast of the inning) and then when Oliver Perez was yanked (in the middle of an at-bat!) after throwing three straight balls to Pedro.
We hit some red lights and heard Pedro give up an inside-the-park home run to Angel Pagan on a ball that was stuck in the wall but not ruled dead.
The Phillies scored three more, but never seemed to put the Mets away. Pedro was out of the game after the 6th.
Eric Bruntlett, playing because Chase Utley got a day off, had three hits. He had 11 coming into the game.
"Charlie Manuel's having one of his hunches by playing him today," Christine said.
Bruntlett seemed poised for another hit when, in the 9th with the Phillies up 9-6, he hit a ball to right. It was initially ruled a trap by Jeff Francoeur and a triple for Bruntlett. But upon review, perhaps with illegal assistance from the replay on the scoreboard, the umpires ruled it a clean catch. Charlie Manuel was ejected arguing the call, and the game remained a save situation for Brad Lidge, who actually converted one cleanly the night before.
It started ugly. Ryan Howard couldn't handle a grounder by Pagan, who wound up on third. Luis Castillo then hit one to second, which was booted by Bruntlett, allowing the run to score. Then, Daniel Murphy hit a smash up the middle that was ruled a hit, but could have been handled been Bruntlett.
"Charlie's hunch, huh?" I said sarcastically.
"I totally absolve Lidge of this one," Christine said, expecting another bright blown save for Lights Out.
Francoeur (remember him from the trap?) was up. Smash up the middle that seemed destined to be another blow for Lidge, but Bruntlett snared it, touched second and tagged Murphy, who had been running with the pitch. I couldn't decide whose jaw was more agape: Francoeur's or Christine's.
We're still in shock.
That's just the 15th unassisted triple play in baseball history and just the second to end a game. There's already some confusion about that last bit of trivia, but the Pirates lost the 1925 game in which Glenn Wright turned the trick in the 9th inning.
So, in a nutshell, my prediction was correct. Christine redeemed herself with the Bruntlett prediction. Pedro is 2-0 but hasn't pitched well. Ollie P's last two starts against the Phillies have been classic meltdowns. The Phillies still own the Mets. And I'm predicting that this freaky 9th inning will be what jolts Lidge out of his season-long slump.
Ace high: We'll take a breath before two behemoths, CC Sabathia (physically) and Josh Beckett (ability), battle tonight. It's their first matchup since Beckett turned the tables on the Indians in the 2007 ALCS. Tonight's winner could get a huge boost to their Cy Young chances. Hopefully, it's a 5-0 win by Beckett that's done by 10:20 p.m. Yeah, right!
Aug 23, 2009
Gift wrapped
Labels:
Brad Lidge,
CC Sabathia,
Eric Bruntlett,
Jeff Francoeur,
Josh Beckett,
Mets,
Pedro Martinez,
Yankees
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1 comment:
Well, facing the Mets for the first time since leaving them, I figured Pedro would either pitch a gem or get lit up. I suppose it turned out to be something in between. When your team spots you a 6-0 lead and you haven't even thrown a pitch yet, you need to shut them down. He allowed them back in the game right from the get go, and that can take the air out of your sails.
Bruntlett is what he is. He didn't turn the unassisted triple play.....the 2nd baseman did. If it were Utley or someone else, it still would have been turned because the runners were in motion.
And Lidge? Scary! Very very scary!! Every time he comes in with the game on the line, he keeps you on the edge of your seat. Can't he just come in and go 1-2-3 without allowing base runners?
Bottom line, Phils 9, Mets 7.
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