Tag: NLDS (Page 2 of 2)

Dodgers proving playoffs truly are MLB’s second season

Alfonso SorianoThe Dodgers lost 14 more regular season games, won their division by a significantly less margin, and finished with a team batting average 14 points lower. And yet it’s the Cubs that are one more loss away from playoff elimination, and not the boys in blue.

You hear players and coaches say how the regular season truly doesn’t matter when the playoffs start. But the Dodgers-Cubs series is actual proof. L.A. is making Chicago look like a completely different team. Granted the Cubs have a large hand in that, but Joe Torre’s bunch is beating their opponent in every phase of the game and their dominance was once again on display in a 10-3 rout in Game 2 Thursday night.

The NL West was largely a laughing stock this year. Not only did the division champion Dodgers finish with only 84 wins, but only two clubs (L.A. and Arizona) finished above .500. Meanwhile, the NL Central had four teams finish above .500 (Chicago, Milwaukee, Houston, St. Louis), and yet two of those clubs are about to get swept right out of their respective divisional series.

The Cubs are proving that a league-best record in the regular season means nothing in October. A team’s level of play has to rise in the playoffs and clearly Chicago’s hasn’t. In fact, the Cubs’ production has once again dipped below even respectability. And unless they have a miracle up their sleeves, the Dodgers are moving on to the NLCS.

Cole Hamels saves Phillies in Game 1 of NLDS

As Philadelphia Daily News columnist Rich Hofmann noted in his piece about the Phillies’ 3-1 victory over the Brewers in Game 1 of the NLDS, ace Cole Hamels saved Philly’s poor bats with an exceptional pitching performance.

Cole HamelsBecause the truth is, the Phillies did not hit a bunch in their 3-1 win over the Brewers. They had only four hits on a rainy, dreary afternoon. All three runs were unearned, thanks to some sloppy third-inning defense by the Brewers. The Phillies’ great fear after hitting .172 in last year’s playoff series against Colorado was upon them again. They worked some counts against Milwaukee starter Yovani Gallardo and got him out of the game quickly, but they really did not hit. It was a concern last year and it is a concern this year, especially with CC Sabathia pitching Game 2 for the Brewers.

But Hamels saved them. Cool, calm, collected and with a killer change-up, Hamels had the Brewers off-stride all day. Masterful is not too strong a word. Through eight dominant innings, he allowed only two singles, one in the fifth inning and one in the sixth, and struck out nine. Only one Milwaukee runner reached second base with Hamels on the mound. Again, masterful.

What that does for a team is hard to explain. What it does for a team that didn’t hit last year in the playoffs, and sometimes struggled to score runs this year, and didn’t really hit all that much during the game, is impossible to understate.

He calmed them. He bolstered them. He was as soothing as Brad Lidge was nerve-wracking in the ninth.

With how much firepower Milwaukee has in their lineup, there has to be some concern among the Philly faithful about the lack of offense the Phillies showed today, because obviously the team won’t get a Hamels-type pitching effort every game. But the fans and team can certainly enjoy this win, which was the club’s first postseason victory since Game 5 of the 1993 World Series when the Phils beat the Toronto Blue Jays.

Brewers’ unorthodox move pays off

It’s not often that a team fighting for a playoff spot fires its manager in the waning moments of the season, but that’s exactly what the Milwaukee Brewers did when they fired Ned Yost on September 15th, with just 12 games remaining on the schedule. At the time, the club had lost 11 of its last 14 games and the front office felt that the team’s postseason chances were slipping away.

Third base coach Dale Sveum took over, and it looked like the move was for naught as the Brewers lost four of their next five games and fell behind in the NL Wild Card race. However, the club surged down the stretch, winning six of seven games, including a sweep of the Pirates and winning two out of three from the Cubs, to clinch a playoff berth.

This is the first time the Brewers have made the most season in 25 years, and the management change now looks like a brilliant move. It was unorthodox, but it worked.

The Brewers face the Phillies in Game 1 of the NLDS today at 3 PM ET on TBS.

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