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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Phillies rally in 9th, gain NLCS


By ARNIE STAPLETON
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Philadelphia Phillies' Shane Victorino celebrates after his first-inning home run against the Colorado Rockies.

WILL POWERS | Associated Press

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DENVER — Chase Utley ducked near second base. The rest of the Philadelphia Phillies never flinched.

Ryan Howard hit a two-run double with two outs in the ninth inning and scored on Jayson Werth's single as Philadelphia rallied past the Colorado Rockies 5-4 in Game 4 yesterday to reach the NL championship series.

Brad Lidge, bouncing back from a ragged regular season, earned his second consecutive save by again retiring cleanup batter Troy Tulowitzki with runners on first and second for the final out.

Tulowitzki, who flied out to end Game 3, struck out this time and the Phillies celebrated on the infield at chilly Coors Field before retreating to the clubhouse to spray champagne. Werth and Maui native Shane Victorino added solo home runs for the Phillies.

"I can't see and it hurts," Howard said. "But it hurts good."

Next, the World Series champions play Thursday night against Los Angeles at Dodger Stadium in an NLCS rematch from last season. This marked the fourth straight year that none of baseball's first-round series went to a winner-take-all Game 5.

"These couple of games have been kind of character builders," Howard said. "This is just step two of where we're trying to get to."

After Dexter Fowler's hurdle of Utley sparked Colorado's three-run rally in the eighth, Howard and the Phillies responded with a three-run rally of their own against closer Huston Street.

Street was 35 of 37 on save chances this season, but took the loss in Game 3 when he allowed Howard's tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the ninth.

"We had gotten to Huston Street the night before, so we knew we had a shot to make some things happen," Howard said.

Colorado had lost just once all season when leading after eight innings, and Street started the ninth with a strikeout of pinch-hitter Greg Dobbs.

Jimmy Rollins singled with one out and Utley drew a two-out walk on a full count. Howard tied it with two strikes when he doubled to the right-field wall. Werth followed with a soft single to right-center.

"We were a strike away from making a trip to Philadelphia," said Rockies manager Jim Tracy, who went 74-42 after taking over when Clint Hurdle was fired May 29.

The Phillies, the NL's best road team, swept both games at Coors Field, where the wild-card Rockies went 44-17 under Tracy's tutelage.

"We stood toe to toe with the defending world champions," Street said. "I take full responsibility for there not being a Game 5 and not keeping us alive."

The Rockies looked as if they were going to send the series back to Philadelphia when Yorvit Torrealba's two-run double broke a 2-all tie in the eighth. That came after Fowler scored the tying run on pinch-hitter Jason Giambi's two-out single.

Fowler hurdled Utley, who stepped into the basepath to field Todd Helton's slow grounder, and his quick flip to second base was wide right and mishandled for an error by Rollins.

"That was a football play," Rollins said. "That was like jumping over a defender trying to get to the end zone, and he made it."

Fowler, one of several promising rookies on the Rockies, said it was an instinctive move.

"I saw Utley coming, I saw the ball and I thought, 'Don't get tagged out.' I think I was going too fast for me to stop, so I just kept it going," Fowler said.

That put two on for Tulowitzki, and Ryan Madson relieved starter Cliff Lee in a double-switch that also brought in left fielder Ben Francisco to replace Raul Ibanez.

It paid an immediate dividend when Francisco raced in and made a diving catch of Tulowitzki's bloop to left for the second out. But Francisco couldn't get to Giambi's single fast enough to keep Fowler from scoring the tying run from second base.

Then, Torrealba sent a two-run double to right-center for a 4-2 Rockies lead.

Still, with a crowd just shy of 50,000 going crazy, the Phillies bounced right back.

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