Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Phillies Recap: Phillies-9, Diamondbacks-2

Game Recap:
The Phillies took advantage of mistakes by Arizona in the seventh and eighth innings to break away and win the second game of their series, 9-2. Cliff Lee pitched seven strong innings to pick up the win, his 13th on the season.

What went right?

Jimmy Rollins started the game with a home run on the very first pitch he saw, and finished by going 2-3 with two RBI, a run scored, a walk and a stolen base.

Shane Victorino went 2-4.

Hunter Pence was 2-2 with two walks and three runs scored.

John Mayberry went 3-4, scoring twice and driving in one.

Wilson freaking Valdez went 1-4 with a huge two run double in the seventh. He also scored twice.

Cliff Lee pitched very well, going seven innings and allowing just two runs on three hits. He struck out seven and walked two.

Antonio Bastardo and Ryan Madson worked the eighth and ninth innings and kept Arizona from coming back.

What went wrong?

Chase Utley was 0-5.

Yep, that's all tonight.

Game Analysis:

Those of you that were worried about the Phillies on offense after last night, please sit down. Tonight, the Phils only scored two runs in the first six innings, but came alive when the Diamondbacks made mistakes, scoring seven runs between the seventh and eighth innings for a 9-2 win. Couple that with the Atlanta loss, and the Phillies are once again eight and a half games up in the National League East.

It was just another good night at the ballpark for Cliff Lee, who has followed up a shaky July with a great August. Aside from a walk and home run that he gave up in the second inning, Lee was lights out all night long, and looked just like the pitcher who is second in the National League in strikeouts this season. Yes, believe it or not, Lee has somehow become even more of a strikeout pitcher this year, while still keeping his walk total down. Lee has struck out 184 batters this season while walking only 36. Think about that for a second. Tonight, Lee struck out seven and walked just two. That's not quite on par with his numbers for the season, but it's more than good enough for me. He's pitched well enough to win at least two or three more games than he has this year, and is two strikeouts away from a new career high. It's safe to say he's going to get there.

Aside from Lee, the bullpen pitched well once again tonight. Antonio Bastardo might be the most unrecognized great setup man in baseball at this point. When Bastardo comes into a game, you might as well start planning for the next inning, that's how good this guy has been this year. In 45.2 innings this year, he's struck out 51, walked just 16 and given up 18 hits. That's a WHIP of 0.74. Couple that with his eight saves, and you have a man that can pitch the ninth inning if he has to, and the eighth inning any day of the week. Ryan Madson pitched the ninth tonight to stay loose, and while he allowed a base runner, nobody crossed the plate, so it was a good night for him as well.

The offense had some issues in the middle innings, but was alive to start. Jimmy Rollins swung at the first pitch and took it into the stands for a lead off home run. After Arizona took the lead in the top of the second, Hunter Pence doubled to start the bottom of the inning, and John Mayberry drove Pence home, despite Pence's slide into third base. After that, it came down to taking advantage of the mistakes Arizona made. The Diamondbacks are a young team, and they'll slip up from time to time. Tonight was no different. In the bottom of the seventh, Pence started things with a walk, and went to third on Mayberry's single. Wilson Valdez drove in the eventual game winning run with a two run double, and Ben Francisco hit a near home run that ended up being a sacrifice fly that scored Valdez. It wasn't as pretty as home runs, but it worked. The Phillies had a 5-2 lead.

In the bottom of the eighth inning, it was more of the same, as the Phillies scored four runs, with only one of them being earned. That's what good teams do when they have to win. They take advantage of mistakes by the opposing team. Tonight, Arizona had two errors in the eighth inning that the Phillies turned into four runs to put the game out of reach. That's the killer instinct that this team was somehow missing last year against the Giants. This year, they seem to have found it again, at least right now anyway.

Save for the Brewers, the Diamondbacks are the hottest team in the National League, and the Phillies may have just cooled them off a little bit. We'll see what happens the rest of the season, but I'd rather see them in the playoffs than the Giants.

Tomorrow, Vance Worley (8-1, 2.85 ERA) tries to lead the Phillies to their 80th win of the season. He'll face off against Ian Kennedy (15-3, 3.12 ERA). Where the hell did Kennedy come from?

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