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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Phillies pull out thriller


By Rob Maaddi
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Carlos Ruiz is greeted at home plate by Maui’s Shane Victorino after scoring the winning run in the ninth.

DAVID J. PHILLIP | Associated Press

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PHILADELPHIA — Jimmy Rollins curled up to protect himself in the pile and took some playful punches from his teammates.

One more win and the Fightin' Phils will have another World Series trip to celebrate.

Rollins lined a two-run double with two outs in the ninth inning off All-Star closer Jonathan Broxton and the Philadelphia Phillies rallied past the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-4, last night for a 3-1 lead in the NL Championship Series.

The defending champions can earn their second consecutive pennant with a victory at home in Game 5 tomorrow night. Cole Hamels, last year's NLCS and World Series MVP, will take the mound for the Phillies. Clayton Kershaw or Vicente Padilla will start for Los Angeles.

"This is big," Rollins said. "The pressure's all on them."

Trailing 4-3, the Phillies started their rally with one out in the ninth when pinch-hitter Matt Stairs walked on four pitches against Broxton, and was replaced by Eric Bruntlett. Stairs hit a two-run homer off Broxton in Game 4 of the NLCS last year at Dodger Stadium.

Broxton hit Carlos Ruiz with a pitch, but pinch-hitter Greg Dobbs looped a soft liner to third for the second out.

Rollins, just 3 for 18 in the series to that point, ripped a 99 mph fastball to right-center and the ball rolled to the wall. Andre Ethier's throw toward the infield was high and off line, and Ruiz slid home without a play.

Rollins pointed in the air as he rounded second and got mobbed by teammates at third base. Even Jamie Moyer, who just had surgery on his lower abdomen, limped out and joined the celebration.

"I'm all right. I had to curl up in the fetal position and throw some punches of my own," Rollins said before taking a cream pie in the face from a teammate.

Brad Lidge got two outs in the ninth to earn the win. Ryan Howard hit a two-run homer that gave him eight straight postseason games with at least one RBI, tying Lou Gehrig's major league record set more than seven decades ago.

But J-Roll got the biggest hit for Philadelphia.

"He likes the moment," Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said. "He wants to be there, and he can control his adrenaline and he can handle the moment. The bigger the stage, the better he likes to play."

Matt Kemp had a tiebreaking, solo homer for Los Angeles, and Manny Ramirez made a shoestring catch that prevented the tying run from scoring in the sixth.

Before Rollins came through, Dodgers relievers hadn't allowed a hit in 3 1/3 innings.

"They're a very tough lineup to go through," manager Joe Torre said. "You try to be careful."

Dodgers starter Randy Wolf pitched 5 1/3 effective innings against his former team while his "Wolf Pack" fan club sat in seats he left for them — and rooted against him.

George Sherrill struck out Howard with two runners on in the eighth and Broxton retired Jayson Werth on a fly ball to end the inning. At that point, Torre had made all the right moves one day after hearing criticism for starting Hiroki Kuroda in Game 3. Torre let Sherrill face Howard, even though he was 0 for 10 against Broxton.

But Broxton couldn't nail down the four-out save. Now, the Dodgers are one loss from elimination.

"He put some good wood on it and it went to the wall," Broxton said. "It was a good game, just let it get away in the ninth."

Trailing 4-2 in the sixth, the Phillies got within a run on Chase Utley's RBI single. Maui's Shane Victorino tripled into the left-field corner as Ramirez nonchalantly chased after it. Victorino scored on Utley's liner to right.

With two outs and runners at first and third, Raul Ibanez greeted reliever Hong-Chih Kuo with a liner to left on his first pitch. But Ramirez, known more for loafing than sensational grabs, saved the day — momentarily — for the Dodgers. Still, he was removed for defensive replacement Juan Pierre in the ninth.

It was another brisk night — 48 degrees for the first pitch — at Citizens Bank Park. Bundled-up fans kept warm by waving their "Fightin' Phils!" rally towels and screaming "Beat LA! Beat LA!"

They had plenty to cheer early when Howard ripped a 3-1 pitch to the seats in right, giving the Phillies a 2-0 lead in the first. Fans gave Howard a standing ovation and many chanted "M-V-P!" as he came out for the early curtain call.

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