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Tag: MLB Postseason

  • Bernie Williams discusses Yankees’ chances at ALDS comeback, differences between Joe Torre and Aaron Boone

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    Trailing 2-0 in the American League Division Series, the New York Yankees are one loss away from their season ending — a situation that Bernie Williams had been in during his playing days.

    The Toronto Blue Jays demolished the Yankees in each of the first two games of the ALDS up north, and the panic meter in the Bronx is high.

    Williams found himself in a similar hole in 2001, as his dynastic Bronx Bombers were aiming for a fourth straight World Series. Those Yankees lost the first two games of that ALDS at home before winning the next two in Oakland against the Athletics and then winning Game 5 back in the Bronx.

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    Bernie Williams of the New York Yankees runs the bases during Game Two of the World Series against the San Diego Padres on October 18, 1998, at Yankee Stadium in New York.  (Sporting News via Getty Images via Getty Images)

    The cliché may be to have a short memory, but Williams has another piece of advice for the 2025 Yankees.

    “In a way, you want to forget about the downtimes, but at the same time, you want to keep them in your mind, because you don’t want to repeat them,” Williams told Fox News Digital in a recent interview. “So I think there is sort of a little bit of a duality where you really think about how hard it is to lose the way that they have lost the last two games, because one thing is losing, but they’re being clobbered in two games, especially this time of the year, you know, it’s a little embarrassing.”

    There is one “clichéish” mentality, though, that Williams wants the Yankees to abide by.

    “You can’t really think about the future. Just be in the moment and take it literally one moment at a time, one at-bat at a time, one pitch at a time, and being in that moment, doing what you need to do in that particular moment, the future is gonna take care of itself, because you’re doing the steps that are required for you to be successful,” Williams said. “And that’s the one thing you got to hang your hat on. You do everything in your power to make sure that everything happens. 

    “If it doesn’t happen, you can always look in the mirror and say, ‘You know what, I did everything I could.’ And you know, that’s the thing you have to live with. Somebody has to win and somebody has to lose. Might as well be us.”

    With the Yankees’ season on the brink, manager Aaron Boone is once again at the forefront of the finger-pointing from Yankees fans. But Williams knows Boone is in a much different environment than Joe Torre, who managed Williams for 11 seasons.

    Aaron Boone and Joe Torre

    Former New York Yankees manager Joe Torre (R) looks on with current manager Aaron Boone prior to throwing the ceremonial first pitch of a game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on Aug. 18, 2018 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

    YANKEES LEGEND BERNIE WILLIAMS COMPARES BASEBALL AND MUSIC CAREERS AS CARNEGIE HALL PERFORMANCE APPROACHES

    “I think Joe Torre had a lot more to say as far as choosing the team and choosing a lineup. I think Aaron Boone is working with a situation where you have a lot of people, or a lot of mathematicians, checking their analytics and crafting some sort of a lineup for him to make an educated guess, predicting the future outcome of a game that hasn’t happened yet based on past performances,” Williams said. “I think Aaron is playing at a different time. 

    “I think the front office itself is different, especially without Mr. [George] Steinbrenner, which was an ever-present presence and very influential in the decisions that were made. Very low patience, and he wanted to shake things when they needed to be shaken. And I think the front office in this particular reiteration of the club, it’s a little bit more slow to make those changes. And I think they have to deal with that.”

    Williams, though, did hint that this Yankees team — better yet, the entire league — does not put emphasis on “the little things in the game.”

    “Moving runners over, bunting, playing strong defense. It didn’t hurt that we had probably the best closer in the game. They’re playing a different brand of baseball right now. And I think a lot of those teams that we’re playing against have taken this framework of the Yankees and have taken up onto themselves to craft teams in that way. So we’re basically fighting ourselves, all these teams, because they have used the same process to craft their teams,” Williams said. “And it’s kind of hard to have a bull’s-eye on your back and say, ‘I’m the team that you have to beat.’ The Yankees have been that team for so many years.”

    Williams admitted that his dynasty “spoiled” the Yankees fan base into thinking that winning was “as easy as we sort of made it out to be,” but even with their backs against the wall, the five-time All-Star feels this year’s squad can make some magic happen starting at 8:08 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

    Aaron Judge swings the bat

    New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge (99) connects for a base hit against the Boston Red Sox during the first inning of Game 1 of an American League Wild Card baseball playoff series, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

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    “I think that they have the amount of expectations that are expected from that team right now, because those guys in the ’90s did it, why can’t you guys do it? And I think not only the fans and the organization, but the players themselves, they have that burden and say, ‘You gotta get this gorilla off your backs, you got at least win one,’” Williams said.

    “Gleyber Torres, Gary Sanchez, those guys are now a generation ago. But I still think that they still have a great opportunity. They just got to keep doing the things that they need to do to be successful and then just get that little spark of luck. I mean, one game in this series can turn the tide, and we’re hoping that that game is [Tuesday].”

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  • J.T. Realmuto thinks the 2025 Phillies are ‘the deepest team we’ve had.’ This might be their best shot at a World Series.

    The Phillies are about to begin their fourth consecutive postseason run, still in pursuit of a World Series title. 

    They came close when they finally broke out in 2022, and have assembled some strong rosters for October in the couple of years since, but for one reason or another, it all just hasn’t fully added up yet. Something, or multiple things, always stopped them short. 

    But they’re back again, as a 96-win club, as the NL East champions for a second straight year, and as the No. 2 seed on the National League side of the postseason field. 

    If you ask J.T. Realmuto, this might be their best group. This might be their best shot.

    “In my opinion, this is probably the deepest team we’ve had,” the Phillies catcher said Friday. “I think the lineup’s as deep as we’ve had it. I think our bullpen is, in my opinion, the best top to bottom that we’ve had since I’ve been here. Obviously, it’s tough losing [Zack Wheeler]. You can’t replace a guy like that, but our starting pitching is still very deep. We’ve got guys that throw the ball really well and have had success at this stage. 

    “Obviously, we’ve had some good teams here, but I do feel like this is probably our deepest team we’ve had.”

    That’s saying something, and up against superstar Shohei Ohtani and the defending World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers for the NLDS, it’s what the Phillies are going to need if they’re really going to see this October through all the way to the end. 

    As Realmuto mentioned, the Phillies lost their longtime ace Zack Wheeler for the rest of the year due to a blood clot, but in the face of sunddenly having a massive hole at the top of the rotation, left-hander Cristopher Sánchez rose to the occassion as a potentially Cy Young caliber No. 1, while fellow lefties Jesús Luzardo and Ranger Suárez shored the picture up behind him. The Phils’ starting pitching 1-3 can arguably still go toe-to-toe with anyone’s. 

    Their bullpen, in a far, far cry from how it looked to begin the year, also has its clear and dependable order now. Tanner Banks, Matt Strahm, and David Robertson are the immediate arms to call on, and beyond them, Orion Kerkering, and potentially Walker Buehler, Taijuan Walker, or maybe even Aaron Nola. They all just need to get the Phillies to the ninth, then leave it to Jhoan Duran, as the first clear and effective closer the organization has had in a long time, to shut the door. 

    Jhoan-Duran-Save-Phillies-2025.jpgBill Streicher/Imagn Images

    The Phillies have felt like a different ball club since acquiring Jhoan Duran at the trade deadline.

    Then there’s the lineup. 

    Trea Turner went into the season with a renewed emphasis on getting on base in the leadoff spot, and that took him all the way to the NL batting title, while setting up the rest of the order to pile on. Kyle Schwarber, in a noted contract year, took off to MVP level power-hitting numbers; Bryson Stott lowered his hands and rediscovered his swing near the bottom of the lineup late in the year, and further up, Realmuto and Bohm are still a threat to do damage, while trade acquisition Harrison Bader came in and seems to have given the Phils just the kind of complement of outfield depth they were looking for. 

    Then, of course, Bryce Harper still sits at the heart of all of it, as the face of the franchise and the superstar who just seems made for the moment. 

    Against an L.A. lineup that could very well be their toughest competition out of any other club in the mix, the Phillies are going to need everyone, everything, and then some.

    Game 1 at Citizens Bank Park is only a few more hours away on Saturday at 6:38 p.m. ET.

    “I think that’s what this series is going to be all about,” Realmuto said. “In my opinion, the talent is pretty evenly matched across both teams. [The Dodgers are] extremely talented over in that clubhouse, and we obviously have confidence in the guys we have, so the series is going to come down to who’s able to get those big hits in the big moments and command the strike zone, both pitching and hitting. And then not trying to do too much when the runners are on base and being able to shorten up, put the ball in play, find the holes, it’s going to be a very evenly matched series.

    “Whoever comes up in those big spots and is able to put the ball in play, find the gap…It might not necessarily be the big home run that wins the series. I think it’s going to be doing the little things correctly.”

    It might be their best shot.


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  • Bills face backlash after wishing luck to ‘good friends’ Blue Jays over Yankees in MLB postseason

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    Buffalo Bills fans have long wondered why they’re often excluded from the “New York sports” conversation, but they may now have their answer.

    The “New York sports” list has normally been composed of the New York Yankees, Mets, Rangers, Islanders, Giants, Jets, Knicks, New Jersey Devils and Brooklyn Nets – yes, even a team on the other side of the Hudson River would be in that conversation.

    But the Devils play in Newark, which is well within the New York metro area. Buffalo, on the other hand, is a roughly six-hour drive to Midtown Manhattan.

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    Josh Allen, quarterback of the Buffalo Bills, catches balls in the outfield during batting practice ahead of an MLB game between the Toronto Blue Jays and New York Yankees at Rogers Centre on May 15, 2023, in Toronto. (Cole Burston/Getty Images)

    Well, the Bills showed their true colors on Friday by wishing “good luck” to their “friends up north” in the Toronto Blue Jays, who match up against the Yankees in the American League Division Series.

    “Yeah don’t call yourself a New York team again,” wrote one X user.

    Even pro tennis player Jessica Pegula, whose parents own the team, was shocked.

    “Ohhh???” she wrote.

    Josh Palmer and Ernie Clement

    Buffalo Bills wide receiver Joshua Palmer poses for a photo with Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Ernie Clement (22) during batting practice before a game against the Baltimore Orioles at Rogers Centre. (Nick Turchiaro/Imagn Images)

    YANKEES’ CAM SCHLITTLER TROLLS RED SOX AFTER HISTORIC OUTING, EXPLAINS WHY IT WAS ‘PERSONAL’ FOR HIM

    “This is blasphemous,” added Gary Sheffield Jr.

    “Shouldn’t we root for teams that actually play in the great state of New York?” wrote another user. “It’s the National Football League… National to America. The United States. There’s not even an NFL team in Canada.”

    The Blue Jays, however, replied by posting a photo of Josh Allen in a Blue Jays jersey.

    Since the Montreal Expos left after the 2005 season, the Blue Jays remain the only MLB team in Canada. They won the AL East over the Yankees due to the tiebreaker of head-to-head matchups in the regular season.

    Rogers Centre

    The Toronto Blue Jays take batting practice during workouts at Rogers Centre.  (Dan Hamilton/Imagn Images)

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    This is the first time the division rivals will face one another in the postseason.

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  • Phillies will face Dodgers in the NLDS

    It will be Phillies-Dodgers in the NLDS.

    Los Angeles put away the Cincinnati Reds, 8-4, on Wednesday night to take their NL Wild Card Series in a 2-0 sweep. They’ll be on their way to Philadelphia. 

    Game 1 is Saturday night at Citizens Bank Park, with either a 6:08 p.m. ET or 6:38 p.m. ET first pitch, pending the outcome of the Yankees-Red Sox Wild Card series over in the AL. 

    Star left-hander Cristopher Sánchez is set to take the mound for the Phillies. Two-way megastar Shohei Ohtani, since he didn’t pitch in the Wild Card round, is likely to get his turn for the Dodgers in Game 1 now instead. 

    The Phillies won the regular season series over the Dodgers, 4-2, which earned them the postseason tiebreaker for the No. 2 seed and the right to a bye into the NLDS had their 96-66 record not proved enough. 

    The latter part of that series also included the Phillies clinching their NL East title and taking two of three games over in LA the last time the two clubs met midway through September. 

    None of that is to say that the Phillies have an outright advantage, though. 

    The Dodgers are coming in with a ton of star power between Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and the two-way, game-breaking force that is Ohtani, and all as the defending World Series champions.

    That said, the Phillies are bringing their heavy hitters, too.

    Phillies-Bryce-Harper-Game-162-Twins-MLB-2025.jpgEric Hartline/Imagn Images

    Bryce Harper and the Phillies’ journey to a World Series will have to go through the defending champion Dodgers.

    Sánchez, Ranger Suárez, and Jesús Luzardo make up a lefty-heavy, though just as dominant starting rotation in the face of the club having lost longtime ace Zack Wheeler for the year due to a blood clot. 

    At the plate, Trea Turner leads off as the NL batting champion, Kyle Schwarber waits in the wings as the MVP-caliber power hitter who is always ready to launch a ball into the seats, and then, as always, there’s Bryce Harper, who lives to make the moment in October. 

    A big-time best-of-five series is on deck, and for Philly fans, hopefully it’s another Phils-Dodgers playoff matchup that will be looked back on fondly – up there with Matt Stairs ripping one into the night or Jimmy Rollins walking them off in the ninth.


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  • Ranger Suárez, Phillies drop D-backs series, but with focus on final postseason prep

    The Phillies dropped two of three in their weekend series to the Diamondbacks down in Arizona, which Sunday’s finale made quickly apparent when they fell into a hole of a 9-2 final.

    Arizona lefty Eduardo Rodriguez tossed six shutout innings on 93 pitches, while Ranger Suárez had a rough day on the mound because of a blow-up second inning that did him and the Phillies in fast. Suárez received the losing decision and dropped to 12-7 after getting tagged for six runs and lasting just four innings.

    It’s hard to get too up in arms about it, though. 

    The Phillies’ postseason ticket is punched. They’ve already won the NL East, and if they can just stay the course at minimum for the last six games coming home, they should outlast even a crazy surge from the Dodgers for the No. 2 seed in the postseason bracket (which is boosted by having the tiebreaker over L.A., too). 

    They’re October-bound, their roster for it looks mostly set, and they appear on track to getting healthier right before. 

    At 92-64, they’re in good shape. It’s just a matter of putting those finishing touches on to clinch that vital bye into the NLDS, and clear up those last couple of lingering questions. 

    The remaining six games against the Marlins and then the Twins coming home to Citizens Bank Park to close out should be more than enough runway for it. 

    Here are a few beats on how they’re looking coming back to South Philly for the last handful of games in the regular season…

    • Alec Bohm returned on Friday night, and in a big way. He went 2-for-5 with an RBI double in the second, then a two-run single in the ninth for the Phillies’ 8-2 pile on in Game 1. He went 2-for-4 with a fourth-inning solo homer in Saturday night’s Game 2 loss, and went 4-for-4 with a walk in Sunday’s overall whimper of a finale. 

    It’s been a rocky, somewhat injury-plagued season for Bohm, but the Phillies’ best chance in October is with him at third. The same goes for Trea Turner at shortstop and at the top of the order, where he should be able to return from a Grade 1 hamstring strain before it’s playoff time

    Having Edmundo Sosa as that ever-versatile and dependable bench bat is a boost, too, but his stint on the 10-day Injured List ahead of the postseason seemed more like a precautionary measure than anything. If anyone needed time to heal up, these last couple of weeks were when to do it.

    • The Phillies are going to be lefty-heavy heading into the postseason with Cristopher Sánchez, Suárez, and Jesús Luzardo as the leading three in their rotation. 

    Suárez ran into trouble on Sunday, but has an overall body of work this season that points to the idea that he won’t have any trouble bouncing back from it.

    But as far as any right-handed depth goes, well, Aaron Nola’s turn was up Saturday. He got through five innings to maintain a 3-2 lead, then the sixth struck, the signs showed, and Blaze Alexander and James McCann hit back-to-back doubles to tie the game before Nola was pulled. The winning run at second for Arizona was surrendered by Tanner Banks two at-bats later, but was still charged to Nola.

    Was it the veteran right-hander’s worst start? No, but it wasn’t anything more encouraging either, because it was another scenario where fans watching were fearfully just waiting for the bottom to fall out. 

    Nola’s 4-10 and his ERA is at 6.46 in what’s just been a brutal year for a longtime face of the club. It’s a tough argument to say he should be trusted with a start in the postseason.

    The other righty option that might be under consideration, though, is interesting. Taijuan Walker started through four decent innings on Friday night, then essentially handed the ball over to Walker Buehler in a long reliever transition. They combined for 7.2 innings with five strikeouts, allowing seven hits, a walk, and two earned runs (both from Taijuan in the first). 

    Maybe that hybrid sort of bullpen game is a way to catch opponents off-guard when a series pushes later into a Game 4 or 5 or 6.

    • Arizona taking the series does play into the Wild Card picture. As of Sunday night, the Diamondbacks’ consecutive wins over the Phils are keeping them afloat and just a game out from the third and final spot behind the Reds and Mets. 

    Obviously, there are scars for fans from the 2023 NLCS with Arizona, but there are even fresher ones from last year’s NLDS against New York, along with the longstanding and heated rivalry. 

    Even if the Phillies’ work ahead of their postseason run is about 95 percent done, there’s still some intrigue for fans, rivalry-wise, on that last push coming down the stretch.

    The Mets, by the way, dropped two straight to the basement-dwelling Nationals and are 4-6 in their last 10.


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  • Instant observations: Bryce Harper, Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott even NLDS, save Phillies season

    Instant observations: Bryce Harper, Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott even NLDS, save Phillies season

    The Phillies just needed to break the seal.

    And they did in a big way Sunday, as a pair of monster home runs and a late triple evened the NLDS at 1-1 in a come-from-behind 7-6 walk-off Phillies victory.

    After blowing a two-run ninth-inning lead, the Phillies drew two walks and Nick Castellanos called game.

    Castellanos was mobbed in the infield as a party erupted in Citizens Bank Park. It was his third game-altering hit of a roller coaster ride in South Philly, one that will long be remembered as the Phillies are back in business following a lifeless Game 1 loss.

    The Mets were the feel-good story in baseball (or at least one of them this October), and they finally ran into a (red) brick wall in the form of the Phillies’ awakened offense. Things head up I-95 to Queens with the best-of-five series all squared up. Here’s a look at the good, the bad and the ugly from a storybook Game 2 win:

    The Good

    • Bryce Harper’s baseball bat carries the weight of an entire city on it. And in the sixth inning, he uncorked an aura of bliss and relief with one swing:

    The offense was in total muck and mire, but hitting can be contagious — and Nick Castellanos caught what Harper had seconds later:

    New life for a game, a series, and a season after two long balls, as the Phillies and Mets were suddenly tied at 3-apiece. The momentum had discernibly shifted.

    There’s something unique about baseball that makes it rightly worthy of the romanticism the sport gets from its hardcore and longtime fans. Other sports like basketball or football surely have momentum changes or hugely impactful plays. But they’re often anticipated, or extremely situational. Baseball can turn at the drop of a hat and it did on Sunday in South Philly.

    • While on the subject of Castellanos — the Phils got another huge hit from the streaky outfielder, when a single in the eighth allowed Harper (after a walk) to go from first to third. That’s when the birthday boy Bryson Stott hit a two-RBI triple to put the Phillies ahead for the first time in 16 innings:

    These are the kinds of big-time plays the Phillies have made routinely over the previous two falls. Insurance came on a weakly hit J.T. Realmuto grounder that Mark Vientos was unable to come up with, scoring Stott and giving Philly a 6-4 edge.

    • It was a tough call for manager Rob Thomson to push typical Game 2 starter Aaron Nola back for regular-season phenom Cristopher Sánchez, whose home-away splits made a compelling case for him to start at Citizens Bank Park– the lefty’s 2.21 ERA and 7-3 record through 17 starts in South Philly this year stood as the third-best home season for a starter in the history of the ballpark.

    Three innings in, with Sánchez looking like he was in cruise control, a single from Francisco Lindor and a two-run blast from the red-hot Vientos put him on the ropes quickly, and the Phillies yet again in an uncomfortable spot. 

    Ultimately it turned out okay, as Phillies’ All-Star had five solid innings and was interestingly lifted after 88 pitches. He received zero run support. It’s really hard to make much of Thomson’s choice, as he’d sign up for two runs allowed every day of the week.

    Sánchez did not make his career postseason debut in his start Sunday — he actually has one under his belt from last season. The hurler tossed two and a third innings against the Diamondbacks in Phoenix last October, in what was essentially an opener role. He allowed two runs in an eventual 6-4 loss in the NLCS (that would tie that series at two games each).

    • Nice to get the taste of three straight home playoff losses out of the Delaware Valley (dating back to Game 6 and 7 of the NLCS last year).

    The Bad

    • We’ll save the lamentations about MLB’s postseason format, and how the Phillies’ second-best record in the majors over 162 games was almost eradicated with the “reward” of having five days off last week. But clearly the rust had some weight. The Phillies had just three hits before Harper’s homer, and the bullpen, well…

    • After five pretty good innings, Thomson lifted Sánchez for José Ruiz, who gave up three hits but most damagingly a home run to Pete Alonso to put the Phils further behind 3-0.

    Later, after the Phillies tied it, Brandon Nimmo took another ace reliever Orion Kirkering deep, again putting the Mets up 4-3. Make that eight runs allowed by Phillies relievers so far in this series. Is it on the manager, or do the players need to perform?

    The Phillies had a very striated bullpen this season, with four reliable killer relievers — Strahm, Kerkering, Jeff Hoffman and Carlos Estévez. Three of those four couldn’t hang on to shut down the Mets and if the Phillies want to claw out a series win, they can’t do it without clean innings from those four arms. Strahm was the worst offender, following up his ugly Game 1 with a two-run game-tying homer to Vientos in Game 2.

    • Trea Turner had a pair of stolen bases in the first inning, and Johan Rojas had one in the third — the ultra-aggressive base running was a sign of just how much the Phillies were pressing, with base runners few and far between up to that point this postseason. Stott was the Phillies’ third base runner of the game in the fourth and he was caught trying to nab third. 

    Alec Bohm was on the bench to start Game 2 after an 0-for-4 Game 1. He was called on to pinch hit, and popped out on one pitch. Edmundo Sosa made an error replacing him at third. What will Thomson do at third on Tuesday?

    The Ugly

    • The bullpen aces giving up clutch hits and home runs to the Mets will be the story of this series if the Phillies falter in it. 

    Take a look:

    Pitcher Reg. Season Games 1-2
    Matt Strahm 1.87 ERA in 62.2 IP 4 ER in 1 IP
    Carlos Estévez 2.57 ERA in 21 IP 0 ER in 1 IP
    Orion Kerkering 2.29 ERA in 63 IP 1 ER in 1.2 IP
    Jeff Hoffman 2.17 ERA in 66.1 IP 5 ER in 0.1 IP

    • They really should name it a “Philly Cheer” when fans sarcastically applaud and cheer for a player, like when Castellanos swung and missed at two atrocious pitches in a row during his fourth-inning at-bat before taking a pitch in the dirt.

    The boo birds were in full swing for a lot of Sunday’s game, replacing the amped-up, high-decibel roars that defined the previous two playoff runs through South Philadelphia. The Phils’ flat offense and desperate approach at the plate was not pleasing to the 46,000 faithful fans in the stands. They let players know when they’re playing well… and when they’re not.

    • During Kyle Schwarber’s third-inning fly out to right — on a line drive that was very close to being a game-tying home run Rojas got some exercise. After a single, the speedy centerfielder threw caution to the wind as he rounded second base on the Schwarber fly out, put on the breaks and retreated to first after the out was recorded, and then did it again as a throwing error allowed him to take second base. He would later steal third. 


    MORE: Bryce Harper on the Phillies’ postseason mentality


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  • Mets come back to beat Phillies 6-2 in Game 1 of NLDS

    Mets come back to beat Phillies 6-2 in Game 1 of NLDS

    PHILADELPHIA — Kodai Senga slapped the dugout railing in a raw display of emotion, a most unexpected Game 1 starter pumping his fist during an eighth-inning comeback that – have you followed these New York Mets? – should really have been expected by now.

    New York has mastered the art of the late rally, first in Atlanta, then in the Wild Card Series at Milwaukee and now this so-called stunner – five runs in the eighth against two All-Star relievers for a 6-2 win Saturday over the Philadelphia Phillies in the opener of their NL Division Series.

    “Over the long run and you keep doing that time and time again, it should work out,” Mets left fielder Brandon Nimmo said. “And we have enough good hitters that if we all come up with plans and we all take our shots, that we like our chances of breaking through.

    “So I think Atlanta, Milwaukee, very recent examples that you have in the back of your head to give you confidence that you’re never out of it.”

    Senga played his small part in the win pretty well for a pitcher who was an injured afterthought all season. He tossed two innings in only his second start of the year, throwing 31 pitches before giving way to a sensational bullpen.

    The right-hander served up Kyle Schwarber’s leadoff home run on his third pitch and left with the Mets down 1-0. He struck out three and walked one; Schwarber’s homer was the only hit he allowed.

    Senga had thrown just 5 1/3 major league innings all year before he was announced by New York manager Carlos Mendoza the surprise starter for the NLDS opener.

    The Japanese star joined the Mets ahead of the 2023 season on a $75 million, five-year contract and became an All-Star in his first season. He went 12-7 with a 2.98 ERA in 29 starts and finished second in NL Rookie of the Year voting.

    But the 31-year-old made just one start this season as he dealt with shoulder and calf injuries. The team’s projected No. 1 starter, Senga also was slowed late in the year by tightness in his right triceps.

    He impressed enough against the Phillies that Mendoza could call on Senga again for another start in the best-of-five series.

    “If they call on me, I just prepare to pitch that day. That’s all there is,” Senga said through a translator.

    Mendoza, in his first season as Mets manager, said the plan going into Game 1 was two innings or about 35 pitches.

    “We have an idea of what we’re doing there,” Mendoza said. “Hopefully we get to a point where that relationship continues to develop and there’s more conversation, kind of like what I have with the starters, that I have the whole year, and I know when to push and when not to. I don’t think I’m there with Senga.”

    David Peterson, who earned his first career save in the Wild Card Series clincher against Milwaukee, kept the Mets in the game with three innings of shutout relief. Reed Garrett tossed two perfect innings for the win.

    Phil Maton struck out two in a scoreless eighth – Mets pitchers fanned eight – and Ryne Stanek was touched for a run in the ninth.

    Thanks to the five-run burst and a stellar bullpen effort, the Mets could afford to rest closer Edwin Díaz.

    The Mets stunned the Phillies and another packed house at Citizens Bank Park, not with a dramatic drive like Pete Alonso’s go-ahead, three-run homer in the ninth inning of Game 3 at Milwaukee, but instead they henpecked the bullpen with singles and sacrifice flies.

    With Phillies ace Zack Wheeler out of the game after throwing one-hit ball over seven shutout innings, the Mets had three straight batters reach base in the eighth after facing 0-2 counts. Mark Vientos hit a tying single and Nimmo laced a go-ahead single past a drawn-in infield for a 2-1 lead.

    All-Star relievers Jeff Hoffman and Matt Strahm got just one out combined and allowed five runs in the eighth.

    Nimmo added an RBI single in the ninth. All eight of New York’s hits – seven in the final two innings – were singles.

    After the last out, Mets fans crowded the rows behind their dugout and chanted “Let’s Go Mets! Let’s Go Mets!”

    Leave it to the Mets to win this one late – they have scored 18 runs in the eighth and ninth innings over six games since Monday. New York joined the 1980 Phillies and 1999 Mets as the only teams to win consecutive playoff games after trailing in the eighth inning or later.

    No doubt, the Mets will be flying high when they send right-hander Luis Severino to the mound Sunday in Game 2.

    “In Atlanta it was like a two-game series for our lives, and in Milwaukee it was three,” Nimmo said. “So you still go into it understanding you’ve got to win three games, and it doesn’t matter how you get there, just as long as you get there.”

    ___

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  • NLDS: Phillies’ bullpen melts down in Game 1 loss to Mets, wasting brilliant Zack Wheeler start

    NLDS: Phillies’ bullpen melts down in Game 1 loss to Mets, wasting brilliant Zack Wheeler start

    Game 1 played out in the scenario many fans were fearful of.

    Zack Wheeler was excellent, Kyle Schwarber made an immediate statement with an emphatic lead-off homer, but then the Phillies’ bats went silent the rest of the way, sitting on a narrow lead that the momentum-riding Mets have proven they can flip in an instant. 

    And the second the Phils reached into the bullpen late, it happened.

    The Mets put together an eighth-inning rally to win 6-2 on Saturday at what 45,000-plus wanted to be an electric Citizens Bank Park – to kick off a Phillies postseason run hanging on World Series-or-bust ambitions.

    Instead, New York’s still riding their late-year high, while the Phillies are now working from behind 1-0 in the best-of-five National League Division Series. 

    “You can’t harp on this one,” Bryce Harper said from the Phillies’ clubhouse postgame. “You gotta understand, you gotta flush it, and come back tomorrow.”

    Game 2 is Sunday. Lefty Cristopher Sánchez has the nod for it to try and even out the series. But until then, here’s how Saturday fell apart…

    Played with fire

    The Mets showed it not even a full two days ago: You give them even the narrowest of openings and they’ll flip a game completely on its head. 

    They stole the Wild Card series with a ninth-inning rally in Game 3 against the Brewers on Thursday, and the Phillies came in knowing how dangerous they were because of it

    On Saturday, Zack Wheeler more than did his part, throwing a dominant and clutch seven-scoreless innings in a 1-0 game. 

    Then the ball was given to Jeff Hoffman in the eighth. He gave up a single to Francisco Alvarez and walked Francisco Lindor with no one out. 

    The crack was right there. The Mets blew it open. 

    In a 1-2 count, with Hoffman and the Phillies desperately needing an out, Mark Vientos roped a pitch into left, which was more than enough for pinch-runner Harrison Bader to score from second and for Lindor to get to third.

    The game was tied, the Phillies were in trouble, and manager Rob Thomson had to take the ball from Hoffman to bring in Matt Strahm hoping he would hold things there.

    He couldn’t. 

    Brandon Nimmo singled to drive in Lindor, and then Pete Alonso hit a sac fly to center to let Vientos tag up and score.

    The Mets were up 3-1 and the Phillies had lost their grip on the game in an instant as the home crowd fell into a pit of dejection and frustrated boos.

    Strahm and the Orion Kerkering gave up two more runs before it was over. The Mets went up 5-1, and the bullpen had completely melted down.

    “They smelled blood in the water,” Strahm said postgame. “They got scrappy and we got got.”

    Wheeler silenced the Mets’ lineup all day, but they survived him for long enough to get into the Phillies’ bullpen, with the benefit of the Philadelphia bats not doing much to give themselves a cushion outside of Kyle Schwarber’s lead-off bomb in the first. 

    This was the reason to be afraid of the Mets, the reason why Thomson said the day before that the second the Phillies get a chance offensively, they have to put the hammer down

    The Mets came in hot, are playing with nothing to lose, and aren’t ever truly dead. 

    The Phillies played with fire, and they got burned. Now they’re in a 1-0 hole. 

    Offensive power outage

    Schwarber crushed the lead-off home run to make it 1-0 Phils out of the gate, but then that was it. 

    He hit a single in the third, but that was the only other Phillies hit up until Harper doubled and then Nick Castellanos singled in the eighth to put runners at the corners. The Phils couldn’t make something out of it though. Alec Bohm grounded into a force out to end the inning right after. 

    The Phillies only had five hits, a homer, and an RBI on their last licks to show for what was a bullpen game for the Mets.

    New York’s decision to start Kodai Senga after an injury-riddled season and a several-month layoff was a bit of a shocker, but it was an opportunity for the Phillies to pounce early. 

    With Schwarber’s lead-off shot, it looked like they were going to, but then Senga settled in and used that notorious “ghost fork” to get through two innings. 

    Then the Phillies just had no answers for the Mets’ relievers. 

    “There was some chasing there tonight, for sure,” Thomson said postgame. “We gotta get back in the zone, we gotta start using the fields, it’s what I talk about all the time. Just put better at-bats together.”

    This was one of the concerns from the Wild Card bye layoff and one of the lingering fears from how the postseason ended last year. 

    The bats are cold, and they just squandered what should have been a massive opportunity to start the postseason off right. 

    Now the Mets are in the driver’s seat.

    “It’s the same thing, man. Chasing balls in the dirt, didn’t work deep into counts like we should’ve,” Harper said from the clubhouse after. “We gotta understand what they’re gonna try to do to us and flip the switch as an offense immediately.” 

    If they don’t, the immediate hole stands to get deeper real quick, and there might not be any coming back from that.

    Blink and you’ll miss

    It’ll get lost in the shuffle now because of how Saturday ended, but Wheeler was absolutely brilliant in his Game 1 start.

    The Phillies took the field. The crowd roared as the spinning towels created a blinding sea of red.

    Then Wheeler stunned the Mets in their place. 

    The ace right-hander retired the first three batters on 11 pitches, all strikes, and with only one of them put in play – Lindor’s line out to first leading off. 

    Vientos and Nimmo who followed in the 2 and 3 holes? They struck out swinging. They never stood a chance. 

    Against a New York club rolling in with all the momentum from the Wild Card round against Milwaukee, Wheeler stepped on the mound and brought the Mets to a screeching halt as the noise of 45,000-strong caved in from overtop of them. 

    It set the tone right away in favor of the Phils. It just didn’t hold.

    “What can you say, man? He threw the crap out of it again,” Harper said of Wheeler’s effort. “Anytime he goes out there, he gives us a very good chance to win and I thought he just threw the ball great, really good to see. 

    “Obviously, I feel like as an offense we wasted that start.”

    Bang.

    And so did Schwarber catching a 1-1 pitch up in the zone with not a single person in the building having to think twice about it. 

    Leadoff homer to the second deck in right field. 1-0, Phils. 

    Two years ago, when the idea of the Phillies being back in the postseason was still only just a dream, Schwarber, as a pricey new free-agent signing, stepped up to the plate as the lead-off man against Oakland on Opening Day and golfed a pitch into the seats of a South Philly crowd that erupted

    No one knew it at the time, but that was the start of the chain reaction that led to everything this era of the Phillies would become. 

    Last October, in Game 1 of the NLCS, he didn’t wait on Zac Gallen and launched the first pitch he saw from the Arizona hurler into orbit. If you asked anyone right then and there, they would’ve said the Phillies were well on their way back to the World Series – up until they weren’t. In the short term though, the Phils won that game and were in good shape to start.

    Schwarber is a highly unorthodox choice for a lead-off hitter. Always was, and always will be. But it works for the Phillies, and when he gets a hold of one with that lightning-quick swing, there’s no one else in baseball that can instantly dictate the outlook of a game from the jump quite like he can. 

    He tagged Senga right away on Saturday, and though the rest of the offense quieted down after to its own detriment, it got the Phillies’ postseason run instantly rolling – or so it looked. 

    Lead-off home runs from Schwarber are huge, but only if the Phillies build off them.

    Under control (until it wasn’t)

    Kept to a 1-0 game through seven innings, there were moments where the Mets could’ve capitalized – a Jesse Winker walk in the second, a Vientos single and another walk to Nimmo to put two on with no out in the fourth, a pitch that caught Starling Marte’s hand high and inside to put him on first with one out in the fifth, and then a walk to Lindor to start the sixth.

    Wheeler was fazed by none of it. 

    Here’s how he responded to each situation, respectively:

    • A four-pitch Marte groundout on a sinker to Bryson Stott at second to end the second. 

    • Clawing back from a 2-0 count against Pete Alonso to catch him on strikes looking, then forcing Jose Iglesias into another grounder to second that got flipped into an inning-ending double play to nail down the fourth. 

    • After hitting Marte, Wheeler punched out Tyrone Taylor and Francisco Alvarez back-to-back swinging to call the fifth – Taylor went down on fourth pitches and a splitter. Alvarez lasted for six, whiffing on a sweeper. 

    • A three-pitch strikeout swinging of Vientos, a two-pitch pop out from Nimmo to second, and then a huge K of Alonso on a splitter to get through six.

    The Mets showed how dangerous they can be with the ninth-inning surge from Game 3 of the Wild Card round to close out the Brewers. If they have even a faint glimmer with the way they’re playing right now, they can and will hurt you. 

    So Wheeler needed to keep the New York lineup under control, even at the slightest hint of trouble.

    He shut them down. 

    Wheeler’s line after six innings stood at just one hit, three walks, and nine strikeouts. His pitch count was at a manageable 89 pitches (55 of them strikes), and his stuff was so effective that he had the Mets swinging and missing 24 times by that point. 

    Wheeler came back out for the seventh, the lead was still 1-0, and the margin for error was growing thinner. He got Iglesias to pop out, but then he walked Winker. The Phillies got a reliever up in the bullpen. The ace kept his composure. 

    Marte popped out to short on four pitches chasing after a sweeper, then locked into a 3-2 payoff pitch, a 97-mph fastball jammed Taylor into a soft grounder up the middle that Trea Turner had the read on. Wheeler was in the clear after seven, and the fans were all on their feet for him waving the rally towels in unison as he walked back to the dugout. 

    No one was breathing easy, but Wheeler held it together with seven stellar, scoreless innings to give the Phillies the chance they needed. 

    The eighth and on was trusted to Hoffman and the bullpen. They couldn’t hold the line, the bats couldn’t come up with anything else, and it all went to waste.

    “It stings,” Hoffman said. “You definitely want to capitalize on an outing like that. He did everything he could to keep us ahead in that game. Obviously, he did an unbelievable job. We’ll try to hold on to that one next time.”


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  • How Should the Phillies Use Ranger Suarez in the Postseason? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    How Should the Phillies Use Ranger Suarez in the Postseason? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    It’s 4-0 in the bottom of the first inning against the Washington Nationals in the 160th game of the regular season.
    In the previous four games, the lowly Nationals have scored a combined four runs–tonight, they’ve matched that total over 42 meandering pitches from Ranger Suarez.

    Sep 21, 2024; New York City, New York, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Ranger Suarez (55) delivers a pitch during the first inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Lucas Boland-Imagn Images
    PHOTO: Lucas Boland/Imagn Images

    One of those pitches, in a pivotal 3-2 count, was taken 432 feet to left-center by designated hitter Stone Garrett in his very first at-bat of the season. In total, Suarez would scatter 59 pitches over two innings, surrendering six runs on seven hits and two walks in his last start of the season. 

    Just three months ago, Suarez was on top of the world—a leading candidate for the N.L. Cy Young Suarez owned a dominant 10-2 record with a 1.83 ERA in 16 starts through June 25, landing him a spot on his first All-Star team.


    It was a coronation of one of the sport’s top young arms–Suarez had come into the season uncharacteristically healthy and was the team’s best pitcher from Opening Day–no more was he just the team’s best-kept postseason secret; he was a legitimate, top-five starting pitcher in the National League. 

    Unfortunately, Suarez must have flown too close to the early summer sun, and with his innings totaling higher than ever, he began to crash and burn.


    In four starts from June 30 through July 22, Suarez went 0-3 with a 7.71 ERA before landing on the IL with a back injury. Since returning from the IL on August 24, it’s been much of the same: an uninspiring 2-3 record with a 5.74 ERA in seven starts. His velocity has been down. His signature command has wavered. He hasn’t logged a quality start since June 25.In the wake of Suarez’s disastrous second half–and with the emergence of Cristopher Sanchez–the Phillies have demoted Ranger to being the fourth starter in the upcoming NLDS. A decision is to be made as to whether or not Aaron Nola or Sanchez will start Game 2, but regardless, it is known that if the series comes to a fourth game, Ranger Suarez will make the start. 

    Is that the right move?

    I’m not sureif even the Phillies can admit

    that it is at this point. It’s incredibly strange to say that, given just how clutch Suarez has been in the postseason the last two years. It is, however, perhaps the only move that the Phillies can make when your Weapon X turns into a hot mess down the stretch. Behind Suarez–who will assuredly have the shortest of leashes in October–there isn’t much in the ‘pen to eat innings. Taijuan Walker won’t make the postseason roster, and long-man Spencer Turnbull, out since June 26, will attempt to pitch in the team’s intrasquad game this week but hasn’t exactly faced Major League competition in his limited rehab stints in Lehigh Valley.

    While the chances of Suarez making a complete 180 in time for the postseason are unlikely; however, it isn’t all doom and gloom. The depth of the starting rotation, in theory, can allow for one of the team’s top pitchers to not play to the best of their ability while still having success.


    If Ranger can be just 80% of his potential, if he can provide three to five innings of two-run ball and save the bullpen just a little bit, then the Phillies will have a shot.
    And if we’ve learned anything over the last two years, it’s that one chance is all that this team needs to go all the way.

    PHOTO: Lucas Boland/Imagn Images

    Dylan Campbell

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  • Phillies clinch NL East title, Wild Card bye with series win over Cubs

    Phillies clinch NL East title, Wild Card bye with series win over Cubs

    The Phillies got their postseason spot, then their first NL East title in 13 years, and now they have their first-round bye into the NLDS.

    In front of a sold-out Citizens Bank Park crowd for the last time in the 2024 regular season, the Phillies beat the Chicago Cubs 9-6 on Wednesday night to take 2 of 3 in the final homestand, which coupled with a Milwaukee Brewers loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates, bought them a valuable few extra days of rest before the fabled Red October comes back around again. 

    All that’s left now is one more three-game set in Washington against the Nationals, and one last push in a race with the Dodgers to try and claim the NL’s top seed. 

    But it’s been a whirlwind few days for the Fightin’ Phils already. Here’s a rundown of it all…

    The Toast

    The regular-season clock was ticking and magic numbers were shrinking. 

    Red October, at this rate, was a near inevitability, and to an extent, the NL East title, too. But the Phillies still needed to bag a few more games to get there. 

    Last Friday against the Mets up in Queens, the Phils punched their first ticket. 

    Cristopher Sánchez was stellar for five innings, then the bullpen took over and shut New York down, all while the offense teed off for 12 runs on 17 hits. 

    The Phillies won, 12-2, and although they eventually lost 3 of 4 for the series, they clinched their postseason berth at the very least. 

    But the party wasn’t on just yet. 

    In the visiting clubhouse afterward, the team put a hold on the overalls, blaring music, and flying champagne. 

    They made a toast instead, knowing there was more for them to chase after. 

    “This is the first step,” manager Rob Thomson told his club. “We can’t have a countdown, J.T., because we don’t know how many games we’ll have. But when we know, I’ll ask you. 

    “But congrats. This is a huge accomplishment. I love you guys, and this is the first step of many more.”

    The Party

    The Phillies came back to Citizens Bank Park on Monday for their last home series of the regular season. 

    The magic number to clinch the division dropped to one. The first NL East pennant in 13 years was right there for the taking against the Cubs, and in front of the South Philly faithful.

    Aaron Nola, the longest-tenured Phillie, took the mound and tossed through 6.0 innings before the ball was given to Matt Strahm in relief with the bases loaded. But by then, the Phils were already up 6-1, J.T. Realmuto, Kyle Schwarber and Nick Castellanos had put a dent in the Cubs, and Nola was walking back to the dugout with a crowd of 42,000-plus on their feet for him. 

    It was fitting.

    Two years ago, way late into a 2022 season when absolutely nothing felt certain yet, Nola was on the bump with a chance to lead the Phillies into the postseason for the first time in 11 years. He gave them 6.2 shutout innings to kickstart what became the October run of a lifetime. 

    So of course it was him on Monday night, leading the charge on putting another franchise drought of over a decade to bed. 

    And the Phillies did

    The bullpen held the line again and deadline acquisition Carlos Estévez registered the final out to what’s become his signature Dragon Ball celebration as the rest of the team huddled around the mound.

    The white 2024 division pennant was out, the team photo was taken, and now it was time for a party in the clubhouse

    Thomson brought owner and CEO John Middleton in to kick the celebration off. He re-stated the phrase that’s been his whole M.O. since building up this era of Phillies baseball…

    “I want my f—ing trophy back!”

    The champagne flew. 

    But there was still work to do.

    The Hangover

    The postseason spot was clinched, the NL East title was clinched, but the Phillies still had a chase to close out against the Dodgers and Brewers for a bye straight into the NLDS – and possibly the league’s No. 1 seed.

    For the physical toll this season has taken on them throughout, they needed the extra few days’ worth of rest and could’ve moved a step closer to it with another win on Tuesday night. 

    But Tuesday night was the notorious hangover game, and…yeah…

    The Final Touches

    The dullness didn’t linger. 

    On Wednesday night, for the last game in front of the Citizens Bank Park crowd before the postseason, the first-round bye was on the table. The Phillies needed a win and a Milwaukee loss to clinch it. 

    Trea Turner opened with a solo shot in the first, and then Bryson Stott quickly followed up with a two-run double after a Bryce Harper walk and a Castellanos two-bagger to immediately make it 3-0.

    Castellanos came back to homer in third, Kody Clemens put a ball in the center-field ivy in the fourth, Brandon Marsh cleared the deck with a bases-loaded double in the fifth, and then Realmuto drove in a run on a liner in the seventh to withstand two Chicago home runs from Nico Hoerner for the 9-6 win.

    The Phillies did their part, taking the series finale and 2 of 3 from Chicago, while the Pirates held the Brewers to a 2-1 defeat to lock the Wild Card bye in for Philadelphia.

    The series in Washington to tune up and possibly claim the top seed from the Dodgers for full home-field advantage is all that’s left until the calendar flips.

    “I think it’s huge to get these guys some rest, and now we can sort of plan out our pitching for the weekend,” Thomson said postgame. “Our starters, I mean, they’re gonna have to start – [Ranger Suárez], [Zack Wheeler], and Nola – but we can pull them back a little bit.”

    Then it’s on to the real show, which will begin back here at Citizens Bank Park on Oct. 5 for Game 1 of the NLDS.

    “We’re all excited,” Marsh said from the clubhouse. “We worked our butts off for this moment. We’re gonna make the best of it.”


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  • A Silver Lining in a Slow Stretch for the Phillies? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    A Silver Lining in a Slow Stretch for the Phillies? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Baseball, much like life, is a matter of perspective.
    What is most beautiful about Major League Baseball’s 162-game regular season can also be the agonizing aspect of the ensuing six-month schedule: it never stops.

    So, regardless of whether your team is on a record-breaking tear or is finding a different way to lose each and every night, the schedule doesn’t care.It keeps moving, pushing forward relentlessly, a reminder that one bad stretch can turn a team’s season upside. 


    The Phillies have been in the midst of such a stretch lately, going 2-8 in their last 10 games and allowing their hold on the division to drop to a measly six games.

    Since the All-Star break–which served as a de facto coronation for the crowning of the Phillies as the best team in baseball–virtually everything that can go wrong has.


    They’ve lost six straight series dating back to their date with Oakland on July 12. The bullpen has fallen apart, blowing six three-run leads in the 15 games since the break, including a 5-0 lead in Saturday night’s loss to the Mariners. The starting rotation has been pockmarked with injuries and seemingly out of sync with the lineup–when they pitch well, the Phillies haven’t hit. When the Phillies do hit (which has been increasingly rare), the rotation doesn’t pitch well. Sunday’s 6-0 victory over the Mariners, however, could be the silver lining the team has been searching for—at least, one can hope.


    With the Phillies heading into Chavez Ravine to face the N.L. West leading Dodgers on Monday night, they’ll need all the good vibes they can get.

    Here are a few reasons that the tide might be turning for the Phils. 


    Offensive Resurgence?

    The Phillies crushed four home runs on Sunday, including three in a five-run 8th inning to cap off a spectacular, sweep-saving victory. Perhaps most inspiring were the contributions of three key lefties in the team’s lineup: Bryce Harper, Brandon Marsh, and Bryson Stott. Harper, who has been in the worst slump of his career, broke out on Saturday night with a key double and added three hits on Sunday, including a towering two-run shot in the 8th inning. Marsh, who has struggled mightily against lefties this year (.185 with 26 strikeouts entering Sunday’s game), has started to change the narrative. He singled off of Guardian’s pitcher Joey Cantillo last Sunday, tripled off of Mariner’s reliever Jhonathan Diaz on Friday night, and hit singles off of fellow Mariner’s lefty Tayler Saucedo in both Saturday and Sunday’s contests. Also encouraging was Bryson Stott’s eighth-inning solo shot, his eighth of the year. If Stott, who has been unable to find his stride at the plate all year, can look more like the Stott of 2023 down the stretch, then the Phillies will unlock a new weapon for the postseason. 

    The Return of the Rotation

    Zach Wheeler’s dominant outing on Sunday, in which he allowed just two hits and struck out nine over eight scoreless frames, might have done more than just break the team’s six-game losing streak. It might’ve been a glimmer of hope for the rotation. Aaron Nola, the Robin to Wheeler’s Batman, will take the hill for the Phillies in the series opener against LA. Nola, the owner of an 11-4 record with a 3.43 record this year, enters Monday night’s game pitching relatively well–at least for the current standards of the rotation. Ranger Suarez, out with a back injury that could very well be labeled as ‘exhaustion,’ looks primed to return in the next couple of weeks.And while Taijuan Walker hasn’t impressed any scouts in his minor league rehab stints, his hopeful replacement, Spencer Turnbull, is trending for a return later this month. If the team’s offense can start hitting and the rotation can just hold it together for a couple more weeks, this rocky stretch in August could be a little smoother than anticipated.


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    Dylan Campbell

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  • The New York Yankees Encounter An Unsolved Mystery In Houston Astros Pitching

    The New York Yankees Encounter An Unsolved Mystery In Houston Astros Pitching

    During a replay challenge to see if Jose Altuve was safe on a routine groundout, those in charge of playing music at Yankee Stadium whipped out the theme song from “Unsolved Mysteries”

    The haunting tune preceded the hit NBC show that ran for nine seasons while being hosted by Robert Stack, whose voice led into the show by saying “Perhaps You Can Help Solve a Mystery.”

    Through three games of the ALCS, the Yankees are enduring their own version of “Unsolved Mysteries” against the Astros about why despite holding the AL’s second-best record, they are getting dominated by Houston’s standout pitching staff, the one who has shirts reading “No, No, No, No-Hitter and “Framber Valdez’s 2022 Quality Start Tour.”

    Through the first three games, the Yankees are putrid 12-for-94 (.128) with 41 strikeouts. They are one game away from being swept out of the ALCS for the first time since hitting .157 and striking out 36 times against Detroit in 2012.

    By comparison when the Yankees were competitive against the Astros in 2017 and 2019, their averages were better. In the six-game loss in 2019, the Yankees batted .214 and in the seven-game loss two years earlier, the Yankees batted .205.

    In this series, New York has seen 449 pitches from seven pitchers. Perhaps the most astounding stat involves Cristian Javier’s success against the Yankees.

    On June 25, Javier threw 115 pitches in seven hitless innings to combine with Hector Neris and Ryan Pressly on the first no-hitter for some people’s baseball attending life. On Saturday, he threw 52 pitches before Giancarlo Stanton doubled, making it 168 pitches in 10 1/3 innings against Javier at Yankee Stadium this year.

    As you would expect, the mood inside the silent Yankee clubhouse was somber with the theme of trying to get everyone going or enough players rolling. It was most certainly a contrast to the environment of Tuesday when the Yankees celebrated modestly before boarding the plane to Houston.

    “We’ve got a lot of talented individuals in this room and just haven’t been able to get everybody clicking,” Aaron Judge said.

    “Our backs are against the wall now,” Anthony Rizzo said. “As a competitor and as a baseball player, it sucks, but tomorrow we have another game. Obviously, this isn’t ideal, but we just have to win tomorrow. It sucks tonight, it’s going to suck, it’s going to sting, but tomorrow we have to figure out a way to win.”

    “I think they’ve attacked the zone,” third baseman Josh Donaldson said before the YES Network postgame panel opined, he was guessing at pitches. “They have good stuff. They have good arms over there. Can’t take anything away from those guys, but we just need to be better.”

    Rizzo was the fourth leadoff hitter of the postseason which seems like the sign of a team struggling to find it at the plate. Judge batted leadoff for the first two games of the ALDS and coincidentally after Alex Rodriguez said on FOX the slugger should not bat leadoff, Gleyber Torres moved there for four games before Harrison Bader did it in Game 2 of the ALCS and Rizzo led off for Game 3.

    When a team is going as poorly as the Yankees are these days, it hardly takes much to quiet a loud environment.

    The moment occurred about 30 minutes into Game 3.

    First Judge ran in front of Bader in right-center resulting in an error for the center fielder when Gerrit Cole was one out away from getting through the second.

    Three pitches after the error, ninth-place hitter Chas McCormick got enough of a 1-1 fastball.

    At first McCormick thought the ball went foul but then he saw Rizzo give a look of “here we go again” and realized the 335-foot poke bounced into the right field seats. And when McCormick experienced that realization, the Astros did their celebration known as the “Chas Chomp”, a new celebration featuring enthusiastic and exaggerated clapping that was started by Houston fan Scott Agruso who attends game wearing an alligator suit.

    “It’s cool. I like how my teammates are into it now. Around the bases I see them always chomping,” McCormick said. “It fires me up, and I said before in case I hit a home run, I’m going to round third base, hit the chomp a couple of times to my teammates.”

    The chomp was enough to create a feeling of doom for the Yankee fans. Nearly 90 minutes later, Game 3 seemed to be officially over when Cole loaded the bases, exited and Lou Trivino allowed a sacrifice fly by Trey Mancini and a two-run single by Christian Vazquez, whose fourth-inning homer off Zack Britton was the series-clinching run for Boston over the Yankees in Game 4 of the 2018 ALDS.

    As virtually anyone who follows the postseason knows, only one team ever rallied from a three games to none deficit. The struggling offense gets its first attempt at solving the mystery of Houston pitching and joining the 2004 Red Sox as the second team to do so 18 years and three days after Boston made history at Yankee Stadium.

    “You always want to be your best,” Judge said. “I wouldn’t say as I go, we go. We’ve got a lot of individuals on this team that can carry the club. I’ve got to step up and do my job. I haven’t come up with the big hit. Missed a couple the other night. But we’ve still got a lot of ballgame in us, and just got to take care of business.”

    In less than 24 hours, the Yankees will either take care of business to live to see another day or lament everything that went wrong towards the end of a season where they held the best record in the AL until Aug. 11.

    Larry Fleisher, Contributor

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  • New York Yankees Enjoy Surviving ALDS With An Eye Towards Getting Past The Houston Astros

    New York Yankees Enjoy Surviving ALDS With An Eye Towards Getting Past The Houston Astros

    The music was loud, the plastic covering was on the spacious carpeting, the champagne and Bud Light flowed from one player to another.

    In the hour after the Yankees completed the ALDS with their 5-1 win that seemed more like a formality once they took a three-run lead about 15 minutes in, it was a somewhat modest one on the celebration scale, especially compared to some of the others to take place by them and other teams.

    The celebration had all the usual components of winning a postseason series, but it was more a theme of taking care of business in a series that felt more like the extended nature of an NBA best-of-seven first round series.

    After eight days where there nearly were more days off than actual games, the Yankees won a pair of elimination games and enjoyed their first playoff series clincher at home since CC Sabathia’s 121-pitch complete game in Game 5 of the 2012 ALDS against Baltimore.

    Then they got ready to take their bus to the airport for their next order of business – a third ALCS against the Houston Astros.

    “If you’re stuck in the past, you’re not going to go anywhere,” said Aaron Judge, who was entering his final season at Fresno State when the Yankees escaped a tough five-game series with Baltimore. “I’m going to treat it like any other series. We’ll go there with our A game and take care of business.”

    The narrative of the Yankees against the Astros is finally here and whether it was the combination of not having a day off in between the ALDS and ALCS or the recent history, the celebration was more of a loud toast with an eye towards hopefully using the more expensive champagne such as winning a pennant or a World Series like they did exactly 44 years ago in Reggie Jackson’s three-homer game over the Dodgers.

    The celebration was also not like the 2001 version when the Yankees somberly clinched the AL East in their first home game following the Sept. 11 attacks on Sept. 25, 2001. It paled in comparison to ones as recently as Oct. 9 when the Padres toasted often with Brut 1818 Champagne after eliminating the Mets in Game 3 of the wild-card round in a game that was highlighted by Joe Musgrove’s futile ear check as he dominated the Mets and could hardly compete with the party going on footsteps from their large clubhouse under the elevated tracks on River Avenue.

    It had the touches of a raucous celebration, especially since you could hear someone yell “Who’s Your Daddy” in reference to the Josh Naylor celebration he displayed while connecting in Game 4 off ace Gerrit Cole, who was so locked in he hardly paid attention to it.

    “Yeah, whatever. It’s cute,” Cole said Sunday with the look of someone still locked in while speaking at the podium in Cleveland. “It wouldn’t have bothered me in the moment and it just is kind of funny.”

    Naylor’s celebration is officially called “Rock the Baby” and it annoyed Yankee fans when it was unveiled against Cole Sunday, the same way it irked White Sox fans in Chicago when he hit a grand slam earlier this season.

    By the time Tuesday afternoon arrived, fans were well-versed in this and yelled “Who’s Your Daddy” every time Naylor batted. And when Wandy Peralta (in his fifth straight game) recorded the final out, Gleyber Torres perhaps showed how the Yankees truly felt.

    Torres recorded the final putout when he completed the force play from Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Then after stepping on second base, Torres swung his arms back and forth four times while throwing a steely glare at Naylor in the Cleveland dugout although later on in a somber clubhouse the first baseman said he was honored at being recognized in the form of a chant.

    “We got our revenge. We’re happy to beat those guys. Now they can watch on TV the next series for us,” Torres said “It’s nothing personal. Just a little thing about revenge.”

    The Yankee celebration was modest with more talk about what lies next, Round 3 with the Houston Astros. The Astros won the first two rounds of the looming trilogy and as it became apparent what was on the horizon some fans could be heard chanting their favorite four-letter word before the name “Altuve.”

    Altuve ended the last meeting between the teams with his famous homer off Aroldis Chapman, who was following the ALDS win from his home base in Miami after being instructed to stay away by the Yankees. In the month after Altuve’s game-ending homer, the details of Houston’s cheating scandal emerged with details about what they did during the seven-game ALCS over the Yankees in 2017 when the home team won every game.

    Those revelations further fueled the fire and even in limited capacity due to the COVD-19 pandemic in May 2021 it was clearly evident.

    Full-capacity Astros-Yankees games returned in June when a combined 180,703 fans spent a portion of their weekend watching a compelling four-game series. Over the course of 13 hours, 28 minutes, the Yankees wound getting two wins on game-ending hits in games they did not lead, got no-hit (to the delight of some people there) and got dominated by Future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander.

    “We’ve seen each other a lot in years past in the postseason,” Judge said nearly four months ago. “Anytime we play, it’s always gonna be a good ballgame. I think the fans anticipate that and they bring their energy from the first pitch on. That’s what you love, you look forward to playing good teams, and seeing where you stack up in the AL.”

    Now after their somewhat subdued celebration, seeing where they stack up in the AL is here for the Yankees.

    “We know what we’re going up against,” Nestor Cortes said. “We’ve just going to battle it out. It’s going to be a tough series for both of us. Let the best team win.”

    Larry Fleisher, Contributor

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  • Gerrit Cole Answers Skeptics By Shining Under The Yankee Stadium Lights

    Gerrit Cole Answers Skeptics By Shining Under The Yankee Stadium Lights

    Gerrit Cole produced plenty of good moments through the 99-win regular season but also did enough things wrong to provide skepticism among fans, especially on the social media portion of the internet.

    Perhaps scarred by the AL-worst 33 homers allowed, including the nine to Boston and possibly fearful of a reprise of last night’s nightmarish appearance in the wild card game at Fenway Park, the apprehension was there along with this question:

    Should Gerrit Cole start Game 1 of a postseason series?

    It was not only a topic among fans but a private discussion by the Yankees in their postseason planning meetings, though it seemed like a brief conversation before Cole ultimately was tapped for the start.

    On Tuesday, there were a few anxious moments such as the 2-0 fastball Steven Kwan hit into the right field seats, sending pitching coach Matt Blake for a quick consultation. The next few at-bats that followed were also a little apprehensive for some when Cole loaded the bases as part of throwing 60 pitches through three innings.

    The early 60-pitch sequence ended with a nasty slider Andres Gimenez swung at for strike three, one pitch after not getting a call on a close offering. Then quick innings and Cole only allowed two more baserunners allowed while the Yankees took a lead.

    “It was just a really awesome experience overall,” Cole said. “Just sometimes when you feel the crowd or the energy, it sometimes can become a little easier just to quiet things down because it’s so loud. I don’t know if that makes sense, but it does to me. I mean, just what a great atmosphere.”

    A few hours later, Cole was the talk of the first of the of 11 wins the Yankees hope to get in their first championship since 2009 and it was more special for everyone involved since it was the moment he waited since being introduced at the standard lavish press conference on Dec. 18, 2019, the day he was accompanied by his famous childhood sign: “Yankee fan forever, Yankee fan today”.

    That sign made its appearance in the 2001 World Series 18 years before he signed the record $324 million contract but for various reasons, the postseason under the lights in a packed house in the Bronx eluded Cole until Tuesday.

    First there was the COVID-19 pandemic that led to the 60-game season. During the truncated season, a midseason slump kept the Yankees from hosting an home game in an empty stadium and they traveled to Cleveland where Cole dominated the opener. Then there were two games in the ALDS against Tampa Bay being played in San Diego and Cole did his part in Games 1 and 5 where the Yankees in a normal setup would be in Tropicana Field.

    Last year as baseball trickled back towards normalcy, the Yankees sputtered through an inconsistent first half that likely cost them an AL East title. Eventually they found their footing but sputtered again in September and wound up not clinching the postseason until their final at-bat of the regular season and when they did it was merely for the trip to Boston where Cole could not get out of the third while pitching on a hamstring he tweaked during the Yankees’ seven-game losing streak a month earlier.

    Cole was the runner-up in the Cy Young voting to Robbie Ray, who was last seen allowing a 438-foot homer to Yordan Alvarez in Houston as the Yankees lined up for their baseline introductions.

    On Monday, Cole seemed locked in with his answers with short clipped answers at the podium, talking as if he would rather be in the high intensity setting of a bullpen session than in a big room with pictures of Yankee history on the side walls and offering his common detailed answers. It was there he relayed an exchange with catcher Brian McCann upon joining Houston:

    “You know the postseason is a drug, right?” I said, “Yeah, it is. It is.” You just can’t get enough of it.”

    If Cole pitches as well as Tuesday, he and the Yankees may get more than enough of the postseason. There’s still a long way to go but this was a good start and validation of Boone’s defense of Cole, who sometimes can appear flustered at circumstances.

    “Really good season,” Boone said Monday. “Obviously because it’s Gerrit Cole and because he came here and signed a huge contract, the long term, and the ace of this staff, the New York Yankees staff, nothing will ever be necessarily good enough. But I think he’s had a very strong year.”

    And for one night it was good enough just like his six scoreless starts, his two flirtations with no-hitters in June.

    “Gerrit was really good,” Boone said. “He did a really good job of owning the moment and being unpredictable. And I thought his breaking ball was really on point.”

    Larry Fleisher, Contributor

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