PHILADELPHIA (AP) _ A terrible start and a slew of injuries
couldn't keep the Philadelphia Phillies out of the playoff race.
For the third straight year, Philadelphia's post-season hopes
will come down to the final week. Six games remain and each is at
home. It's almost do-or-die every night, starting Tuesday against
the Atlanta Braves.
Can the Phillies finally end a 14-year playoff drought?
Considering the obstacles they've overcome this season, anything
is possible. This is a resilient team that's been counted out
several times only to fight its way back into contention.
An 8-2 road trip that started with a three-game sweep over the NL
East-leading New York Mets left the Phillies 2{ games out of first
place and only a half-game behind wild-card leading San Diego. New
York hosted Washington and the Padres played at San Francisco on
Monday.
Catching the Mets will require a lot of help from the Nationals
and Florida Marlins _ the two worst teams in the East. But the
Padres have a tougher schedule with three road games against the
Giants and four in Milwaukee. Philadelphia finishes with three
against Washington.
Of course, the Phillies (85-71) have to win and not worry about
watching the scoreboard.
``We have to have a big homestand,'' manager Charlie Manuel said
after a 5-3 loss to Washington on Sunday. ``If we win all six, we
get to 91 wins, and five of six is 90. Ninety or 91 wins might get
us something.''
A month ago, it seemed individual goals would be all that's left
to play for this week. After losing to San Diego on Aug. 25, the
Phillies were seven games out of first place and four behind the
Padres. Then they got hot, going 19-9, including 7-0 against the
Mets.
Manuel has found a way to get the most from a patchwork pitching
staff, especially a bullpen that struggled much of the season.
Before allowing four runs against the Nationals in the series
finale, the relievers had a 1.84 ERA on the road trip and 15
straight scoreless innings.
Left-hander J.C. Romero and setup man Tom Gordon were outstanding
and closer Brett Myers pitched well, going 1-1 with four saves in
five chances. The trio appeared in five straight games and eight of
nine before getting Sunday off.
The starters have kept them in games long enough for the league's
highest-scoring offence to make up any difference. And, the Phillies
lead the majors with 48 come-from-behind wins.
Given all the injuries this season, it's quite an accomplishment
for Philly to be in the playoff race this late. When Jimmy Rollins
boldly predicted the Phillies were the team to beat in the NL East,
he didn't expect guys like John Ennis and J.D. Durbin to start
important games in September.
Of the original starting rotation, only 44-year-old Jamie Moyer
hasn't been hurt. All-star Cole Hamels missed a month. Adam Eaton
was sidelined two weeks and has pitched poorly when healthy. Freddy
Garcia, acquired in the off-season to anchor the rotation, had
season-ending shoulder surgery after going 1-5. Jon Lieber went down
for the season in June. Myers moved to the bullpen after three
starts.
Overall, the Phillies have used a team-record 28 pitchers,
including 13 different starters. They've also dealt with injuries to
key position players and relievers. Ryan Howard, last year's NL MVP,
missed almost a month, all-star Chase Utley sat out 28 games and
right-fielder Shane Victorino still isn't starting because of a calf
injury sustained in late July. Myers and Gordon were out two months
and Ryan Madson hasn't pitched since July 29.
``We feel like we got momentum right now,'' Victorino said.
``We're definitely going to keep upbeat.''
If it weren't for a 4-11 start, the Phillies would be getting
chased right now instead of looking up at other teams. They've been
here before.
In 2005, Philadelphia walked off the field after beating
Washington in the final game with a chance. But the Houston Astros
won later and earned the wild-card spot by one game.
Last year, the Phillies held a half-game lead over Los Angeles in
the wild-card race with seven games remaining. But they lost three
of the next four games, including two of three to the last-place
Nationals in Washington, and were eliminated on the next-to-last day
of the season.
A strong finish this week could finally get the Phillies in the
playoffs for the first time since they won the NL pennant in 1993.
``It's not daunting,'' said centre-fielder Aaron Rowand. ``It's
exciting.''