Archive for the ‘Everything Else’ Category

The King Of South Philadelphia

October 7th, 2010 by Matt

I didn’t know what to do after the game ended.

Do we just leave? Like it is a regular game? Really? We just head to our cars? Are they even parked where we left them?

Nothing felt right after the baseball landed in Ryan Howard’s glove in the top of the ninth inning, courtesy of a solid defensive play by Carlos Ruiz that sealed only the second no-hitter in postseason history.

Against the Cincinnati Reds. Who led the league in runs scored, among other hitting statistics. A team that boasts the prohibitive favorite for NL MVP in Joey Votto.

Seriously, we just walk out when it’s over?

I’m still processing what happened yesterday when I went to a baseball game hoping for the Phils to take a 1-0 lead in the NLDS and left having witnessed a game that will go down not just in Phillies history, but baseball lore.

I watched from behind the right field seats on the first level with a throng of complete strangers who became my closest friends for 3 hours. Once the Phillies disappeared into the dugout for good, we embraced and wished each other good luck for our Phillies the rest of the way.

We all know the details by now – 28 batters faced, a walk the Doctor’s only blemish. 25 of 28 batters saw a first pitch strike. No defensive gems were needed to save the no-hitter. The Reds were rendered impotent by a sick array of pitches that had them bailing …


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Yo Charlie, Both Roys Can Go Nine

August 29th, 2010 by Matt

It would have never happened to Halladay, and it should never have happened to Oswalt.

In the top of the ninth inning on Friday night, with the Phillies leading the San Diego Padres 2-1, Charlie Manuel pinch hit for Roy Oswalt.

After the game, Charlie argued that the Phillies needed more offense and that Oswalt had already “done his job”. Domonic Brown pinch hit and popped out.

We know how the rest went. The Phillies didn’t score those extra runs that Manuel wanted so badly and Brad Lidge blew his first save in weeks. Even he has found new ways to cough up leads – this time with a bases loaded, two out balk.

The Phillies won the game in 12 innings on a highlight reel slide by Jimmy Rollins that prevented Padres catcher Yorvit Torrealba from tagging the Phils’ shortstop before he smacked his hand on home plate.

There has been plenty of hand wringing over Lidge’s latest meltdown, but this really has nothing to do with Brad. He is going to blow saves and we know what we have with him at this point.

The issue is Manuel’s thought process regarding yanking Oswalt. His argument was that the Phillies needed more runs. That’s good logic were the Phillies LOSING at the time. In fact, they were winning, and Oswalt was dealing. There was no reason to believe that Lidge gave the Phillies a better chance than Oswalt to protect a one run lead. Has Charlie let Oswalt hit for himself, the Phillies would …


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The Phils Turn Back The Clock

July 9th, 2010 by Matt

We won’t know right away if 2 walk off wins against the class of the National League Central will begin an ascent back to the top of the East for the Phillies, but it is a hell of a place to start.

The Phillies remain 5.5 games behind the Atlanta Braves, but there is cause for optimism even after a brutal outing by Kentucky Joe Blanton. Ryan Madson is back, Carlos Ruiz isn’t far behind – neither is Placido Polanco. Brad Lidge may have blown a save last night, but he’s also looked brilliant at times since returning from injury, something that pretty much never happened last year during his lost season.

With an impatient fireworks crowd booing everything that moved tonight, the Phils were able to find that magic that was part and parcel of their runs of the last 2 years. After the first few torrid weeks of winning this year, the Phils have not been the team you couldn’t give up on. They felt more like a team that had given up on themselves. Exhibit A? An uninspiring 1-2-3 bottom of the ninth in a 1 run game against the lowly Pittsburgh Pirates on Roy Halladay bobblehead night. Impatient at-bats, unfocused pitch selection and disinterested swings seemed to be the hallmarks of the 2010 Phillies.

The fans have been noticing too, as the bloom began to fully disengage from the rose in the last couple of week, resulting in some of the more sensitive of Phillies like Shane Victorino to …


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Halladay Ends Crazy Week With Perfection

May 30th, 2010 by Matt

With the exception of playoff baseball, I’m not sure the Phillies are capable of taking us on a regular season roller coaster as unpredictable, annoying and ultimately exhilarating as the week we’ve just been through.

It started last Saturday night with the Phils being nearly no-hit by Red Sox righthander Daisuke Matsuzaka. Then a rubber match on Sunday looked very winnable on paper with Phillies ace Roy Halladay matching up against Tim Wakefield. The Phillies couldn’t connect with the flutterball all day, and only scored runs in the 9th inning when it hardly mattered.

An off day Monday preceded a 3 game set with the Mets in Flushing. By the time the Phillies headed south from New York to Florida on Thursday evening, they were mired in an epic hitting slump, having been shutout in all three games by an uninspiring Mets pitiching staff. In the final game of the series, the Phils had runners on base, but couldn’t help but hit into double play after double play, destroying any momentum that could have developed courtesy of baserunners.

Finally, on Friday night in South Florida, the Phils offense finally broke through, albeit in modest fashion. They scored 3 runs and held on for a 3-2 win to not only end a 5 game losing streak, but more importantly they got off the scoreless schneid.

Then on Saturday night, a pitching duel between Halladay and Floirida ace Josh Johnson lived up to the billing, with the only run being scored off an error …


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Silent Bats, Deadly Arms

April 21st, 2010 by Matt

Once the Nationals left town after the Phillies’ opening series last week, the Phils were in for a more challenging brand of hardball with pitching-rich Florida on their way into town and then a road trip starting with the Atlanta Braves.

After a strong offensive showing on Friday night supporting Roy Halladay’s 3rd win of the season, the Phils offense went cold. Ice cold. They scored just 1 run in Saturday night’s game at chilly Citizens Bank Park and were shut out in the series finale, spoiling a great 2008-esque start by much-maligned lefty Cole Hamels.

In the first 2 games of their current road trip, the Phils offense has mustered just 5 runs, but they were just one competent pitch from Ryan Madson away from taking both games from Atlanta by way of shutouts.

The last few games have stood in stark contrast to the first week or so of the season, when the Phillies simply out-slugged any issues that their pitching staff may have been going through. Despite losing 3 of their last 5 games, the Phils pitching has given more cause for optimism than any cold hitting could possibly negate.

Consider:

5 strong innings from Jamie Moyer after a disastrous first inning on Saturday night.
An 8 inning return to form for hard luck loser Cole Hamels on Sunday.
An 8 inning masterpiece by punching bag Kyle Kendrick.
A complete game shutout of the Braves by Roy Halladay.

In a 162 game season, hitting is going to come and go. Especially with this crop of …


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Opening Day Notes From Section 230

April 6th, 2010 by Matt

The Phils blew the doors off the Nats yesterday in the 2010 opener. Roy Halladay threw 7 strong innings and looked like the guy we’ve been told about all of these months. The Phils offense was on fire, hanging an 11 spot on the Nats pitching staff.

The box score is only a sliver of the story. It was quite a day in the Nation’s Capitol:

Our football team trades our quarterback to the Redskins the night before, making for an interesting twist as we headed down to DC.
Half of Philadelphia jumped on 95 South as well, based on an unscientific eyeball check of the assembled throng.
Got politics? The President was in the house, giving everyone the rare opportunity of knowing the political leanings of the random guy sitting next to you at a baseball game.
The game got off to a weird start, with the Jimmy Rollins squandering his own lead off single by trying to take home on an error by shortstop Ian Desmond. Then Roy Halladay had a shaky first inning, giving up a run and compelling the guys behind me to utter, “This isn’t how this was supposed to be”. True. I don’t think anyone traveled from Philly thinking that the Phillies had a prayer of losing this game. Luckily, the first inning was just a cruel tease for Nats fans, as the Fightins obliterated them the rest of the way.

**********************************

Wait, there’s more. Did I mention the ridiculous number of idiots wearing Mets …


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With A Strong ’10, Moyer Could Justify Contract

March 29th, 2010 by Matt

After a 2008 season in which he led the Phillies in wins and win pct. and won a World Series for his hometown team, no one would have blamed a soon-to-be 46 year old Jamie Moyer from retiring from the game he’d been playing for over 2 decades.

Instead, the Phillies ageless lefty expressed a desire to continue pitching, and he doubled down by searching for a two-year contract for his services.

On Dec. 11, just a month and change after the World Series triumph, David Murphy reported that Jamie Moyer was being courted by the Milwaukee Brewers. It was one of the few reports linking Moyer to a team other than the Phils.

On Dec. 15, Moyer agreed to a 2 year, $13 million deal with the Phils.

At the time, it seemed like a lot to pay for a back of the rotation starter who would be on the verge of 48 at the end of the contract.

By the end of last June, a 6.05 ERA and several really ugly starts (including a 2.1 inning 7 run drubbing at the hands of the Mets), that 2 years and $13 million seemed like a really bad idea. Moyer was maintaining his standing as the staff Yoda that the likes of Cole Hamels and J.A. Happ would gravitate to, but $13 million is a lot of money for Rich Dubee’s assistant.

Jamie’s second half performance improved, as he posted a 6-4 record and a 3.78 ERA before his season was ended by …


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Brad Lidge Is Pissing Me Off

March 17th, 2010 by Matt

In my real job, I manage people. Sometimes my folks come dragging themselves into work despite having no business being in the office due to some contagious malady.

The last thing I want to hear from one of my employees is something along the lines of, “I’m not feeling too good today. Damn, this stomach bug is kicking my ass.”

Umm…go home. Right now. Don’t even get your coat. We’ll burn it for you.

In 2009, Brad Lidge had the pitching equivalent of the loosey juiceys. Luckily, it wasn’t something that anyone else on the pitching staff contracted, but he had no business coming to work regardless.

What’s worse, his bosses let him do it. Over. And over. And over.

I offer as new evidence the article in today’s Inquirer about Lidge using the Johnny Damon 2 base swipe in Game 4 of the 2009 World Series (referred to on this site as “Ruiz to Feliz to no one”) as motivation for improving his ability to hold runners on first base.

Lidge had this to say about the hoops he had to jump through to get the ball to the plate:

In order to minimize pain last year, he took to twisting the knee at the beginning of his motion, which relieved some of the pressure but slowed the pitch’s arrival at home plate.

“I had to twist, but that gave the runner extra time, about 0.4 [seconds],” Lidge said. “All of a sudden it becomes almost impossible for [catcher] Carlos …


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The “Times” Lands 10 Seed in The Phield

March 16th, 2010 by Matt

The fun of filling out a March Madness bracket has created the opportunity for all sort of iterations of the seeding and one and done mentality of the NCAA tournament.

More often times than not, these types of brackets are annoying and stupid.

But not when The Shibe Times gets a 10 seed in the Lauber Region of The Phield. Sweet!!!

I’m going to need some serious help from my miniscule legion of readers, my Mom, and whoever else has an internet connection. I am up against Phinally Philly, an all-Philly sports blog with a killer design and far more updated content than this thirty-something father of 3 with no co-bloggers can muster.

There were 65 blogs (naturally) chosen for the bracket, and that certainly doesn’t cover all of the Phillies blogs out there. So I was happy to be seeded PERIOD, let alone get greedy for a better seed. Based on my less than robust posting frequency during the offseason, I gotta love a 10 seed.

Anyway, I don’t know which day our matchup will be, but this is a David vs. Goliath matchup. Phinally Philly has 2400 followers on twitter. I’d love to get to 150 by opening day.


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Pujols To Phils A Silly Roster Buster

March 15th, 2010 by Matt

Buster Olney is no dummy. He worked the Yankees beat for the New York Times, he’s an author and a Hall of Fame voter.

But, man, he laid an egg this weekend.

Olney is the subject of much criticism right now for a report he filed with ESPN that cites a source that said that the Phillies have kicked around the idea of trading Ryan Howard for all-world slugger and first baseman Albert Pujols.

So let me get this straight. The Phillies have spoken about trading one of their players for the best player in baseball? I’m sure the other 28 teams that don’t employ Pujols have never sat in the conference room and daydreamed about scoring Pujols and plugging him into the 3 hole of their lineup.

It’s just a stupid article, and Olney’s comments since his article has gone viral are no better. He is quick to let everyone know that this trade is nowhere near complete and that he was simply reporting that the Phillies have kicked around the idea. If that was “all it was” – just a harmless little note about the Phillies kicking around Pujols as a possible trade target – why even write it? At least at this point when there is nothing more than a source saying the Phillies discussed it and an adamant denial from Ruben?

Sometimes a story shouild be allowed to gestate a little to see if it has a chance to go anywhere or at least add some meat to a …


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