PHILADELPHIA — Phillies
fans waved rally towels, giddy at their good
fortune, and chanted "Sweep! Sweep!" as the
Phillies stomped on the Brewers again Sunday. They
have gained four games on Milwaukee in three days.
Out of nowhere -- here come the Phillies, making
another late-season surge toward the playoffs.
Good times, all around.
"I believe in momentum -- what do you call it --
attitude, charisma; when you come to the ballpark,
everything is OK," Phillies manager Charlie Manuel
said. "Everybody is in a good mood, upbeat. Everybody's
happy. People ain't walking around sulking because they
ain't making enough money, or something happened at the
house. I don't know; those things happen. "We're
totally focused on playing the game. It shows you we're
starting to get it together."
The word Manuel was searching for was "chemistry," but
whatever. For the Phillies today, it's all good. They
are taking advantage of a momentous collapse -- again.
Among the many sins the Brewers committed Sunday,
losing a doubleheader and folding faster than Superman
on laundry day, was this: They got Pat Burrell going.
Burrell re-joined the Phillies lineup Sunday, driving
in the game-winning run in the opener after a grievous
insult -- and adding a home run in the nightcap.
Burrell was hitting .165 with a .289 slugging
percentage since Aug. 5, with just 10 RBIs in 121
at-bats. Still it was a heck of a thing to see Brewers
manager Ned Yost bring in a lefty to face Chase Utley
and Ryan Howard, and then walk Howard intentionally to
let the left-hander face Burrell.
Weird -- and an open admission that Yost thought
Burrell wasn't much of a threat. Burrell smoked a
single to left that broke a 3-3 tie and sent the
Phillies to a win in the opener. Asked if it was an
important hit for him and for his confidence, Burrell
said it sure was.
"To be able to help us win was important," Burrell
said. "I can't lie; it was big. I needed to get a hit
in that situation."
In the eighth inning of Game 1, Yost brought in lefty
Brian Shouse for Utley and Howard. Utley inexplicably
bunted, opening up first base. Yost ordered Shouse to
walk Howard, bringing up Burrell. Then he let the lefty
face Burrell.
Shouse allows right-handers almost a hundred points
better batting average than left-handers. Burrell is
hitting 15 points better against lefties. Howard is
hitting .208 against lefties. Just weird. But that's
how bad the Brewers are going -- 3-10 in September, and
going all to pieces in front of the Phillies.
And that's how good Howard is going. With a homer in
the opener, Howard has hit safely in eight straight
games, driven in at least one run in seven straight and
he has seven homers and 19 RBIs in September -- both
tops in the majors.
"It's only a matter of time, because he's been swinging
the bat so well," Burrell said. "I'm not surprised they
pitch around him. All that does is put some pressure on
the guy behind him. I need to get base hits there."
Burrell then homered in the second game, as Brett Myers
pitched the Phillies into a tie for the wild-card lead.
Myers was brilliant, again. That Myers and Moyer both
pitched in this series on short rest proved an obvious
point -- Manuel is going all-in on the Brewers, and for
good reason.
This apparently is the Phillies' plan every season --
to lurk in the weeds, waiting for the teams ahead of
them to throw up on themselves, and then waltz past
them into the playoffs. The Phillies are a dynasty that
way, as long as somebody else falls apart every year.
This year, that somebody may be the Brewers. The two
teams traded hit batsmen Sunday, and there should have
been a fight. The Brewers needed a fight; there was
every reason for this to go haywire -- but the Brewers
have no more fight left in them, and the Phillies
couldn't have cared less. Bigger fish to fry.
Asked if the Mets and Brewers should be worried about
the Phillies, Howard smiled before dodging the question
this way: "We're worried about ourselves," Howard said.
"Everybody else would probably say the same. We'll take
care of our business."
It gets a lot easier if Burrell gets going again. This
may indeed be his last stand in Philadelphia; he's in
the last year of his contract and Burrell's fade in the
last month has put a return in real doubt. He knows it;
Burrell has admitted he's thought this month might be
the end for him here. Unless, of course, he's playing
in October. Reach Kevin Roberts at
kroberts@courierpostonline.com
(courierpostonline.com)