Jul/14/08 05:50 PM Filed in:
Pat Burrell
PHILADELPHIA -- This should
make Pat Burrell feel better about not making the
National League All-Star team.
Big home runs, like the left fielder's three-run poke
in Philadelphia's stay-in-first-place 6-3 win over
Arizona on Sunday, have a way of soothing
disappointment. Judging by Burrell's smile and curtain
call, he's over it.
"It's one of those things where I'd like to go,"
Burrell said. "But the focus is on winning games."
Emboldened after tying the game off D-backs starter
Brandon Webb, the Phillies began the eighth inning with
singles by Chase Utley and Ryan Howard off reliever
Chad Qualls. Burrell worked the count to 2-2 before
depositing a slider into the left-field seats.
The 31st sellout crowd of 45,277 wanted a curtain call
from Burrell on an 87-degree afternoon. The win
guaranteed the Phillies of a first-place finish at the
All-Star break for the first time since 2004, when they
led the Braves by a game.
Ryan Madson worked the eighth for the win, on a day
when Cole Hamels matched Webb for seven innings. Hamels
was helped by bad Arizona baserunning in the seventh to
escape a jam.
With runners on first and second and one out, Orlando
Hudson drove the ball to right, and Stephen Drew
started back to second, thinking Geoff Jenkins would
make the catch. When Jenkins couldn't make the play,
Drew could only reach third, halting Conor Jackson at
second. Hudson was halfway to second and fell down,
making him an eventual easy second out after running
out of the baseline.
After a brief meeting on the mound with manager Charlie
Manuel, Hamels went after Mark Reynolds and struck him
out on his 98th and final pitch of the afternoon.
Then came Burrell, the non-All-Star.
"He's been hitting home runs, game-winning stuff like
that all year long," said closer Brad Lidge, who drove
to New York after the game for his second All-Star
appearance. "I think they both should be there."
Both, meaning Burrell and Hamels, who received a
no-decision and finished the first half at 9-6. Though
a trip to the Midsummer Classic would be nice, Hamels
has other items ranked higher on his baseball to-do
list.
"Making the playoffs and being in the World Series is
the only true goal, besides the small goal of making
the All-Star Game every year," Hamels said.
(mlb.com)