Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
 SECTION: NEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA
Search The Web:
DOMAIN NAMES
AS LOW AS $2.99 / YR.
Utley Homers Twice As Phillies Top Yanks In Game 5
Tuesday, 03-Nov-2009 12:34AM AP
USTINET NEWS

 » Front Page

 » Top Stories

 » U.S. News

    Government

    Focus U.S.A.

    The White House

    U.S. Politics

    Social Issues

    Local Editions

 » World

 » Politics

 » Business

 » Sports

 » Health

 » Tech/Science

 » Living/Entertainment

 » Off Beat Stories

 » News Photos

 » Weather


Special Editions

 » Iraq & Conflict

 » Israel/Palestine

 » Crimes & Laws


MultiMedia

 » Interactive Features

 » News Photos


POLL: Your Opinion

 » What Do You Think




The Philadelphia Inquirer PHILADELPHIA -- Charlie Manuel was smiling in his office, 16 hours after his team handed the New York Yankees a nearly insurmountable lead in the World Series.

SAVE MONEY ON TRAVEL DEALS

"I feel fine", the Phillies manager said, leaning back in the chair behind his desk. "Ready to go. Looking forward to it. ... We came to the ballpark to win today."

On this team, Manuel sets the mood. The manager did not need to hold a meeting or deliver a speech; his players knew him too well. They knew that he expected them to worry only about playing a focused baseball game, and have fun doing it.

That in-the-moment mind-set has always been the team's strength during the Manuel era, and it allowed the Phils to extend their season Monday night. They defeated the New York Yankees, 8-6, in Game 5 of the World Series, and now trail by three games to two. The Series moves back to New York on Wednesday.

They did it despite falling behind in the first inning, and suffering through a sweaty finish by Ryan Madson. They did it despite Brad Lidge's horrific ninth inning the night before, in which Johnny Damon outlasted the Phils closer in an at-bat and stole two bases while the infield bumbled. They did it because of another strong performance by Cliff Lee, until the ace tired in the seventh and allowed three runs.

Lidge did not have the chance to atone for Sunday's loss, and Madson created a nervous ninth. He allowed leadoff hits to Jorge Posada and Hideki Matsui, but got Derek Jeter to hit into a run-scoring double play.

After the persistent Damon singled, Mark Teixeira struck out to end the game.

Ultimately, the win was made possible by Chase Utley's two home runs, which tied him with Reggie Jackson for most in a World Series, with five. Jackson accomplished the feat in 1977, playing for the team the Phils beat Monday night.

For the first several minutes, the Yankees appeared ready to romp. Game 1 master Lee allowed as many runs in the first inning Monday night as he had during his entire complete-game World Series debut. The Yanks' early offense came from the two players who snatched Game 3 from Brad Lidge.

Damon, whose tenacious hitting and alert baserunning decided Sunday's game, began this rally with a one-out single to center. After Teixeira flied out, Alex Rodriguez, whose double scored Damon in the ninth on Sunday, drove in the leftfielder with another double. Before escaping the inning, Lee walked Nick Swisher, and threw an uncharacteristically inefficient eight balls in 19 first-inning pitches.

A.J. Burnett's shutdown pitching in Game 2 reversed the tone of the Series after the Phils took the opener, but the Yanks' starter gave his opponents fresh life Monday night. Jimmy Rollins hit a leadoff single, and when Shane Victorino squared to bunt, Burnett whacked him on the hand with an inside fastball.

Phils pitchers plunked Rodriguez three times in the previous two games, so the Victorino play drew pointed jeers from the crowd and barking from the player. Utley batted next, and provided the game's defining moment: The second baseman crushed a curveball that arrived on the outer part of the strike zone.

The three-run homer gave the Phils an important early lead, and signaled to the Yankees that a clinching celebration would not come easily. Lee worked quickly through the bottom third of the Yankees' order in the second, made weaker by an injury to Melky Cabrera that landed Brett Gardner in center field, and by Jose Molina's start at catcher to accommodate Burnett.

Early in the game, Lee was not as sharp as in his previous playoff starts, but he managed to be effective. Through three innings, he threw nearly as many balls as strikes and walked one fewer hitter than in all of his previous postseason appearances combined. But he found a way to get outs, and Rodriguez's RBI double in the first was the last Yankees hit until the fifth.

Burnett's struggles were far more pronounced. After 44 pitches, he had thrown an equal number of balls and strikes; soon after, he was gone. The righthander walked Utley and Ryan Howard to begin the third, and suffered for it by allowing a Jayson Werth single that made it 4-1.

Raul Ibanez followed by bashing a single to right that scored Utley and ended Yankees manager Joe Girardi's experiment of starting Burnett on three days' rest. Reliever David Robertson entered and got Pedro Feliz to pop up and Ruiz to ground into a run-scoring fielder's choice. The inning ended with the Phils leading, 6-1.

With Lee handed a generous lead, his pace accelerated, and he blew through Swisher, Robinson Cano and Gardner in the fourth. He worked out of a tricky situation in the fifth, after pinch-hitter Eric Hinske drew a one-out walk. Jeter moved him to third on a single, and Damon scored him with a groundout.

That brought up the powerful Teixeira, who could have reduced the Phils' lead to two with a home run. Lee induced a key pop-up instead, ending the inning. He stranded another base runner in the sixth, striking out Gardner after Cano hit a two-out single, and strengthened with a perfect seventh.

Utley's second home run came in the seventh. Ibanez added another blast in that inning, giving the Phils an 8-2 lead.


(c) 2009, The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Visit Philadelphia Online, the Inquirer's World Wide Web site, at http://www.philly.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.


PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): series For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA. 1080262

A service of YellowBrix, Inc.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Related News Topics:

Top sports stories
News of Pennsylvania
General sports briefs
Other sports news
Mixed Sports News and Releases
Sports photographs
Miscellaneous sports news
Miscellaneous sports news

 BREAKING STORIES

Songbirds may help solve speech disorders

Chickens found wandering Pittsburgh campus

Sun-Earth day to be marked by NASA webcast

Scientist urges better cancer cell tests

Pa. Muslim group condemns book series

2010 energy prize competition begins

Date set for Oprah defamation trial

One dead in Pennsylvania train collision

NWS expects flooding in Pa, W.Va.

Jihad Jane had troubled past, records show

Investigators to probe Roethlisberger case

Target sued over trunk used as toy box

Bank sued over 'invasive' repossession

Musk Oxen decline due to climate change

Families sue serial killer for damages

Study looks at nanoplankton extinction

Oldest mammalian genome is sequenced

11 minutes enough to remember Westbrook's 8 years of brilliance

Feds investigate school's webcam policy

Carbon monoxide sickens 34 worshippers

Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
Home :: My Page :: My WebMail :: My Calendar :: My Portfolio :: Chat :: Help Center :: Sign In :: Sign Out

MY.USTI.NET PORTAL  -  © 1996 - 2004 USTINET CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Please see our Privacy Policy, Security Guarantee, Terms of Use for additional information.