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Barbaro's career ends like Ruffian's

This was supposed to be a column about victory. It was supposed to be about joy and triumph and promise and all of the things that make sports great. After all, isn’t that why we watch? Every day life is sometimes filled with hardship and losing battles. Sports gives us a chance to feel invincible.

This was also supposed to be a column about a little corner of the world tucked into the rolling hills and farms just an idyllic country drive away from Center City. There, in bucolic and rustic Chester County, amidst the Amish farms, Mennonite Meeting Houses, and roadside stands selling pies and jams like some sort of anachronism in our world of ozone-zapping SUVs equipped with GPS guides, DVD players and satellite radio, live some of the best race horses in the world.

Imagine that. In a sport filled with sultans, sheiks and blue bloods, it’s puritan Chester County, in the Garden Spot of Pennsylvania, where the top thoroughbreds of the 21st Century are raised.

Who would have guessed?

But surely no one would have guessed that Saturday’s 131st annual Preakness Stakes would have turned out the way it did, either. To say nothing went right would be an understatement of biblical proportions.

Which usually isn’t the way things go for star athletes like Barbaro, the three-year-old colt from West Grove, Pa. who already won the Kentucky Derby so easily that it was akin to a Harlem Globetrotters’ game against the Washington Generals. Barbaro toyed with his competitors in Kentucky. Embarrassed them by 6½ lengths, which is kind of like winning a baseball game 10-0 with the starting pitcher throwing a three-hitter.

So dominant was Barbaro in Kentucky that only eight other horses bothered to show up at Baltimore’s venerable old Pimlico Race Course for last Saturday’s Preakness, making the latest Chester County super horse a 1-3 odds-on favorite and conjuring images of Smarty Jones. The talk was that only five horses were going to bother to show up at the Belmont Stakes on June 10 in New York to attempt to thwart Barbaro’s bid to be racing’s first Triple Crown winner since a young Stevie Cauthen rode Affirmed past Alydar in 1978 in three of the most dramatic horse races ever.

Instead, Barbaro is currently resting down the road from Smarty Jones’s old farm on Route 10 at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center for Large Animals, his prognosis to live to see four still very much touch and go.

No, things didn’t go well in Baltimore. First, in an inconceivable scene in a major stakes race, Barbaro burst through the starting gate in attempt to run away from the pack while the last horses were still being loaded in.

A false start in horse racing? Who ever heard of such a thing?

Then, just seconds into the chaos of the race, something was amiss. Barbaro was nowhere to be found as the TV cameras swept from the head-on shot from the backstretch to the sweeping aerial view of the entire field thundered through the first turn and along the straightaway with the view of the barns and the surrounding clapboard houses in the distance.

But dramatically, a quick shot caught jockey Edgar Prado aside his mount, holding it upward to prevent it from putting any more weight on its rear right leg. And then there was the heartbreaking shot of Barbaro, lifting his shattered leg delicately into the air and not knowing what to do next.

Yes, the race continued, but did it really matter anymore? Especially when the crass oxymoron “humanely destroyed” was bandied about.

So 31 years later, images of Ruffian, the star-crossed filly that so tragically yet romantically “died in the lead,” is conjured as the area’s likely final shot at horse racing glory attempts to recover from an intricate five-hour operation. To save Barbaro, 23 screws were used to repair a broken cannon bone above the ankle, a broken sesamoid bone behind the ankle, and a broken long pastern bone below the ankle.

Dr. Dean Richardson, the veterinarian who performed the surgery, said the pastern bone was shattered in “20-plus pieces” and now they must stave off the possibility of infection from the surgery and laminitis, a potentially fatal disease sometimes brought on by uneven weight balance.

“Realistically, it's going to be months before we know if he's going to make it,” Richardson told CBS’ “The Early Show.” “We're salvaging him as a breeding animal.”

Ruffian, undefeated like Barbaro was, never made it that far. After her 12-hour operation to repair the shattered sesamoids in her right foreleg, a star was laid to rest in the infield near the finish line at Belmont Park.

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Tuesday, May 23 - "Hey Marcus Hayes, the Phillies suck."

During the late innings of Friday night's game against the Red Sox, two young men walked past the press box and, upon recognizing Marcus Hayes from his court-appointed community service work, as well as contributions to literacy in the tri-state area, decided to shout at him.

Hey, it's what people do.

Anyway, one of the fellows yelled: "Hey Marcus Hayes, the Phillies suck."

Well, there's not much one can say to that. However, no one has ever really asked Marcus what he thinks sucks. I didn't either, but by some sort of divine intervention, I channelled the spirit of Marcus, sat down with him and asked him what he thought sucked.

Here's the list of suckitude we came up with (in no particular order):

  • Robert Novak
  • Tucker Carlson
  • Delays (such as "Tom")
  • David Norris
  • Alan Keyes
  • Karen Hughes
  • Karl Rove
  • people who wear fur coats
  • Ann H. Coulter
  • Bill O'Reilly
  • George W. Bush
  • The Governator
  • Enron
  • cooked books
  • Rick Santorum
  • the price of gas
  • Blackouts
  • Halliburton
  • Raymond Peebler
  • Saddam Hussein
  • Uday Hussein
  • Strom Thurmond
  • Kim Jong Il
  • David Gest
  • Hair loss
  • TMJ
  • Trent Lott
  • Botox parties
  • Fruitcake
  • Hairballs
  • Slugs
  • Carson Daly
  • Charlton Heston
  • Osama bin Laden
  • relaxed emmissions laws
  • Suhrco Mgmt. Co.
  • Cottage cheese
  • Virginia McMillan, D.D.S.
  • Margaret Winkels
  • Blindness
  • Sickle cell anemia
  • Pimento cheese
  • Ashlee Simpson
  • Insect bites
  • Fights/Arguments
  • L. Ron Hubbard
  • LFO
  • Collective Soul
  • Slobodan Milosevic
  • Potholes
  • The Offspring
  • Artistic differences
  • Propaganda
  • Alcoholics
  • Braggarts
  • Brussel sprouts
  • "just be(ing) friends"
  • Animal Circuses
  • When Animals Attack!
  • P.M.S.
  • Hypocrisy
  • Ethnic cleansing
  • Child abuse
  • Federal Records Service
  • Shipwrecks
  • Melodrama
  • Cafeteria food
  • Paranoia
  • Wannabes
  • Nightmares
  • Guilt
  • Crowds
  • Drunk people
  • Earthquakes
  • Missing puzzle pieces
  • the American Family Association
  • Bad hygiene
  • Bunions
  • Guns
  • Puff Daddy/P. Diddy
  • "Goth" freaks
  • Full parking lots
  • Jellyfish stings
  • Aggressive drivers
  • Local news coverage
  • Smoking
  • Tobacco
  • the 7-10 split
  • Vanilla Ice
  • Milli Vanilli
  • Double-dippers
  • Scientology
  • Road rash
  • Getting dumped
  • Close-talkers
  • Nasal congestion
  • Toothaches
  • Doom
  • Dread
  • Hate
  • Babies with pierced ears
  • Getting struck by lightning
  • Ignorance
  • Heroin
  • Intolerance
  • Last call
  • Paparazzi
  • Rejection
  • Road construction detours
  • Road rage
  • Constipation
  • Alzheimer's disease
  • Short Notice
  • Being broke
  • Rape
  • Divorce
  • Pedophiles
  • Cocaine
  • Fur coats
  • Burning the rainforests
  • the Confederate flag
  • Jet lag
  • Teasing
  • Soap operas
  • Toll booths
  • Ineptitude
  • Uday Hussein
  • Depression
  • Repression
  • Ralph Reed
  • the Christian Coalition
  • the Plague
  • Forgetting how a dream ends
  • Almost sneezing
  • Growing apart from your friends
  • Lice
  • Beggars
  • Sunburn
  • Tardiness
  • Religious Cults
  • Montgomery Burns
  • Refolding a map
  • Suckers
  • Charles Manson
  • Reverse discrimination
  • Yappy dogs
  • Coitus Interruptus
  • Plotless movies
  • Fighting with your best friend
  • Generic brand products
  • Leaky pens
  • Math classes
  • Melrose Place
  • Leftover Christmas lights
  • People who name their kids "Barbi," "Candi," "Buffy," etc.
  • The Grammy Awards
  • Conformists
  • Seafood
  • Mistaking baking chocolate for real chocolate
  • Fingernails on a chalkboard
  • When someone steals your idea
  • When someone takes your place
  • When you hit your funny bone
  • Magic: The Gathering
  • Dungeons and Dragons
  • Female Circumcision
  • Priapism
  • Meteors
  • ATMs That Charge for use
  • Charles Keating
  • Rubberneckers
  • Cheaters
  • Fat guys in Speedos
  • Drive-by shootings
  • Slow downloads
  • Liars / Lies
  • Dust mites
  • Indecision
  • People who leave their engine running at gas pumps
  • Leprosy
  • Violence
  • Pessimists
  • Accidently setting your alarm for p.m. instead of a.m.
  • Mondays
  • the Ku Klux Klan
  • Dot matrix printers
  • Running out of Halloween candy
  • PEOPLE WHO TYPE E-MAIL IN CAPS
  • Pork rinds
  • Smudgy newspaper ink
  • Dirty public restrooms
  • Having to work on a holiday
  • Headaches
  • Infomercials
  • Olestra / Olean
  • Stale potato chips
  • Unwanted romantic advances
  • When dogs sniff your crotch
  • When innocent people get convicted
  • When guilty people get off
  • Overpaid/Underpaid people
  • Denial
  • Being a latch-key kid
  • Pollution
  • Trial Consultants
  • Kathie Lee Gifford
  • Sweat shops
  • Elitism
  • When things roll under the couch or fridge
  • Dying (but not quite dead) roaches
  • "Vote for (whomever)" signs left up from the last election
  • Drive-through window clerks who drop your change
  • Broken election promises
  • Wrapped patties of butter that are too cold to spread
  • the Macarena
  • Grungy buildup at the mouth of a ketchup bottle
  • Bald Tires
  • 3-Way light bulbs that only work 1-way
  • "Baby On Board" Signs
  • G. Gordon Liddy
  • Boxing
  • Worms
  • Vampires
  • Leeches
  • Dentures
  • Militia Groups
  • David Duke
  • The Menendez brothers
  • Mad cow disease
  • Homophobia
  • Stalking
  • Poor sportsmanship
  • Dropping something jelly-side down
  • Broken bones
  • Computer Viruses
  • Dentist visits
  • Leftovers
  • Having a stupid song stuck in your head
  • Just missing something
  • Funny smells in small rooms
  • Physical therapy
  • Exhaustion
  • the I.R.A.
  • That not-so-fresh feeling
  • Dandruff
  • Dander
  • Women who complain that they're fat, when they really aren't
  • Learning Calculus
  • 9-Pin printers
  • the Energizer bunny
  • Tabloid newspapers
  • People who don't tip
  • Pretentious middle initials
  • Rainbow-colored horizontal rules
  • No more Far Side cartoons
  • Touching ice with wet hands
  • Movies based on Saturday Night Live characters
  • Popcorn stuck between your teeth
  • Allergies
  • Morning Breath
  • Bob Dole
  • Gum stuck to your shoe
  • The Spot / Web Soap Operas
  • Double spacing after a period.
  • The hole in the ozone layer
  • People who don't believe there's a hole in the ozone layer
  • Net Censorship
  • People in theatres who talk during the movie
  • 13
  • Cold toilet seats
  • Sanitary napkin / tampon commercials
  • Spaghetti splatter on a white shirt
  • Hairs in your shirt after a haircut
  • Renting 2 movies, but watching just 1
  • Knock-knock jokes
  • Kevin Costner movies (except "Fandango")
  • "404, not found"
  • Drooling on your pillow / desk, while take a nap
  • Pringles commercials
  • When you get together with friends, but can't decide what to do
  • "Freeing Willy" ... again
  • When cool TV shows get cancelled
  • Driving behind a truck that's carrying logs
  • When you can't get the fire started in the fireplace
  • People who take over 10 minutes at the ATM
  • Home Shopping channels
  • When people hang up on your answering machine / voice mail
  • "No U Turn" intersections
  • Running with scissors
  • Thieves
  • Pickpockets
  • Felons
  • Bigotry
  • Blink
  • Herpes
  • Eggnog
  • Ephedrine
  • Gold Teeth
  • The Grinch
  • Cats that bite and/or scratch
  • That tingly feeling when your foot falls asleep
  • Hypothermia
  • Frostbite
  • "If it bleeds, it leads."
  • Canker sores
  • Blisters
  • the way Ivory soap disintegrates after a few days of use
  • The new Pert Plus formula
  • Mold / Mildew
  • Parents who don't put their kids in car seats
  • Gnats
  • Fleas
  • Hurricanes
  • Tropical Storms
  • When the electricity goes out
  • When the cable goes out
  • Resetting all your clocks after the electricity goes out
  • Hiccups
  • Mosquitos
  • Flies
  • Fraud
  • Traffic Jams
  • The Sunshine Slowdown
  • When the bottom of your foot itches
  • Exploding Ink Pens
  • Debt
  • D.U.I.
  • War
  • Poodles
  • "Attention K-Mart Shoppers..."
  • Speeding tickets
  • Pat Robertson
  • Hootie and the Blowfish
  • Busy Signals
  • Mind games
  • Splinters
  • Termites
  • Roaches
  • MSG
  • Congressional deadlock
  • Mudslinging
  • Postscript errors
  • Crack
  • Traffic Court
  • Taxes
  • Bruises
  • Braces
  • Static Cling
  • Stamp glue
  • Asbestos
  • Litter / Litterbugs
  • Nuclear weapons / waste / fallout
  • Cigarettes
  • Second-hand smoke
  • Barney the dinosaur
  • Bounced checks
  • Rabid dogs
  • Styrofoam
  • People who can't pronounce: nuclear, amphitheatre,...
  • Dry heaves
  • Full parking lots
  • Waiting in long, slow lines
  • Frivilous lawsuits
  • Parties where you don't know anyone
  • Rats
  • Last place sports teams
  • Inflation
  • Disgruntled Postal workers
  • Bullets
  • Telemarketers
  • Rust
  • Plaque / Cavities / Tooth Decay
  • Cold Feet
  • Warts
  • Pencils without erasers
  • Lost keys
  • Going Bald
  • Toupees
  • Rush Limbaugh
  • Car mechanics that change your radio, mirrors, and seat position
  • Morning people
  • the Flu
  • Country & Western Music
  • Homework
  • Deadlines
  • Dirty Diapers
  • Halitosis
  • Diaper Rash
  • Toxic Waste
  • Long lists
  • I think I'm missing a few things.

    Todd spent the offday staring at the wall in his house. Eight hours later, he got up and wrote this little off-day thang about Ryan Howard. Todd thinks YOU suck.

    Marcus doesn't think Cole Hamels sucks so he decided to write his off-day story about the rookie lefty.

    Also in the Inquirer, a writer went to Venezuela to get an update on Ugueth Urbina as he waits in jail for his attempted-murder trial.

    Midway through Ken's off-day story about Chris Coste, the term "reach around" enters one's mind. At least that's what I'm told... I didn't read it.

    On his way up to Shea, Mike Radano wrote that the series against the Mets is very, very meaningful. Very meaningful.

    Meanwhile, smirking columnist Kevin Roberts wrote that streaks... well, they can mean anything.

    On the other hand, grinning columnist Jack McCaffery went to RFK and wrote about Delaware County homeboy Taylor Buchholz and his strong season with the Houston Astros.

    Also in the Delco Daily Times, Dennis chatted with media gadfly Cory Lidle who told him that the Mets ain't won nuthin yet. Bitch.

    On the slowest-loading web site this side of a dialup 56K modem, PhillyBurbs' Randarino wrote about the "Showdown at Shea." They might even have t-shirts printed up already.

    Scott Lauber was a busy little guy on his day off, writing about Chris Coste's long-awaited call to the Majors as well as Shane Victorino's strong showing while filling in for Aaron Rowand. Lauber's dateline even says New York, which means he's already there. Or maybe he's making it up... in that regard, perhaps he could have gone to Walla Walla or even taken a Carnivale Cruise or something.

    Finger wrote about a horse, of course, for his weekly column that is full of overwritten imagery and other bullshit, while his intern handled the baseball stuff and wrote something about Chris Coste.

    Here's the Transaction analysis thing from Baseball Prospectus:

    Announced the retirement of INF-R Alex Gonzalez; recalled 1B/3B/C-R Chris Coste from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. [5/21]

    It's been a long, long, long road for Coste to the big leagues, but he's always hit, he's not embarrassingly bad at either infield corner or behind the plate, and how can you not root for a guy whose big break was four years as a star on the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks, contending against the evil empire St. Paul Saints in the Northern League? The guy played with Darryl Motley of the '85 Royals, human fire hydrant Brian Traxler, the ageless Jeff Bittiger, famous sibling Ozzie Canseco, and the always-wandering Blaise Ilsley. Anybody else remember the too-large Mike Busch playing third for the Dodgers? He washed up in Fargo too.

    Anyway, Coste has been through a lot, but he was being scouted, getting a first shot courtesy of the Pirates, and then finally sticking with the Indians' organization. He's basically someone to root for, proof positive that the Indy leagues have done more than give us the occasional pitching find, they've also given us guys good enough to stick in the upper levels of affiliated farm systems, and even crack The Show.

    As for Gonzalez, while he's certainly the not-so-secret beneficiary of the Bartman incident, and although he was always seen as somewhat disappointing, he did turn out to be a pretty useful ballplayer. If he wasn't one of the American League's trinity at shortstop, he was a good glove, a hitter with modest pop and modest patience. He could bunt, and that's the sort of thing that might get Buster Olney lathered up and tingly. Because A-Gonz arrived young yet ready, a lot of us were quick to expect that he'd blossom into something more, but that's our fault, not his.

    Here's an interesting one that has nothing to do with baseball -- In The New Yorker, Malcolm Gladwell writes that Allen Iverson probably isn't so good. On another note, is it possible that Gladwell and Iverson have the same hair stylist?

    Meanwhile, in Budapest researchers learned that wine keeps apes feelin' fine all the time. You ought to see what it does to Mandel.

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    Monday randomness

    Things got pretty busy as they are wont to do during a weekend series against the Boston Red Sox, so this is my mea culpa for not offering any posts for a couple of days. I really wanted to, and certainly had plenty of stuff to write, but duty kind of called. It happens.

    So what was so interesting last weekend. Well, Tito Francona was in town, which is always a treat. If anyone deserves success in this game, Francona is up there at the top of the list. He certainly has sacrificed quite a bit during a long career as a player, coach, scout and manager.

    Curt Schilling was back in town, too. He's gone now and certainly the scribes are much happier, though the TV-types kind of like him. In case anyone hasn't noticed, writers and TV folk are very different. One group works for a living and the other, well... they wear makeup.

    Come on, it's a joke...

    Anyway, everytime I see Schilling I think back to the June, 2004 series at Fenway when I asked a former Red Sox pitcher (he'll remain nameless, though these days he pitches for the Dodgers and had a really good 2004 post-season) if he knew where the "media-friendly" pitcher was.

    "Just follow the cameras," that former Red Sox pitcher said.

    As an aside, that trip to Fenway was one of the most fun (in a baseball and work sense) ever. Any trip to Baltimore and Clearwater rates really high, too, but that particular weekend in Boston was really good.

    As another aside, trips to Washington, my former hometown, are always a blast, too, though that has nothing to do with the baseball. Put it this way: it's hard not to have fun in Washington.

    Anyway, Schilling was up to his old, teasing, preening and flirtatious ways with the local TV types last weekend. He lead them on, danced around and pretended like he had soooooooo many important things to do. But in the end, did anyone really think he was going to turn away from a rolling TV camera? Curt Schilling?

    Of course not.

    The writers, for the most part, ignored Schilling. That story has been told too many times, thank you very much. Besides, as erstwhile scribe Dennis Deitch suggested, perhaps it was time for a statute of limitations on Schilling stories. If a player has been out of town for seven years, it's only proper to ignore him forever. After all, that's how the IRS works, right?

    So yes, Schilling was in town.

    Appropos of nothing: Does anyone out there have doubts about that bloody sock?

    And David Wells was in Philadelphia, too. In fact, the always chatty and round lefty was in town long enough to kind of, sort of allude to an idea that Phillies' pinch hitter David Dellucci had used steroids. From watching and listening to Dellucci speak about the comments, it was very obvious that he was very hurt and disappointed with what Wells had to say.

    Since I wrote it late on Saturday night when most people were out and about doing stuff or inside sleeping, here's a reprint of what went down:

    Much ado about nothing? During a pre-game conversation where he discussed everything from his upcoming minor-league rehab assignment, his age, and Barry Bonds’ 714th career home run, controversial Red Sox pitcher David Wells was his typical self. This time, though, Wells brought a former teammates and current Phillie into the mix.

    While talking about baseball’s steroid controversy, Wells mentioned David Dellucci and the fact that the Phillies’ top pinch hitter has just one homer a season after stroking 29 a season ago for the Texas Rangers.

    "You see a little bitty guy hitting 30 home runs, what, Dellucci, I guess?" Wells told reporters. "How many home runs did he hit last year? 29. Has he ever done that in his career? How many has he hit this year? So, the numbers have gone down tremendously since all this has come up. I know Dave, I've never suspected him of doing them."

    After the game, a visibly upset Dellucci cleared his name.

    “I've been tested. I've been tested this offseason. I've been tested a number of times last year,” Dellucci said. “I leave the stadium after midnight every night because I'm working out. I do that this year, and I did that in Texas.”

    What Wells failed to mention is that Dellucci hit 29 homers last season in 128 games and 516 plate appearances in the hitter-friendly American League. That comes to a home run every 15 at-bats.

    This season Dellucci has appeared in 34 games for 40 plate appearances primarily as a pinch hitter. If Dellucci hits a home run in his next time up, he will be averaging one home run for every 16 at-bats.

    -- John R. Finger

    The next day, Wells issued a kind of, sort of mea culpa through the Red Sox PR staff. Francona, in a classy move that shouldn't surprise anyone who knows him, offered an apology in person to Dellucci. Still, Dellucci was rightly still stinging from Wells' comment.

    As far as the baseball stuff goes, this Red Sox club doesn't appear to be as strong as the one that stormed through Philadelphia last season, which, for me, was one of the best teams I have watched during my years on the job.

    The others (in no particular order): 2001 New York Yankees 2001-02 Arizona Diamondbacks 2003 Seattle Mariners 2004 St. Louis Cardinals 2005 Boston Red Sox

    Finally, Kevin Roberts of the Courier Post writes my new, favorite blog.

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    Observations for early Friday morning

    Maybe this is just me -- and I really dislike second-guessing, but then again, that's what we do -- but I probably would have turned to the bullpen to start the seventh inning in yesterday's game vs. the Brewers. Here's why: Cole Hamels was at 90 pitches after running a bunch of deep counts through the first six innings with a 4-1 lead. His strike to ball ratio, to be frank, was bad. Even more troubling was that Hamels' efficiency was so bad despite the fact that he had been the polar opposite during his quick run through the minors.

    At the same time, after 35 minor league starts, Hamels reached the 100-pitch plateau just a handful of times. Sure, earlier this month he tossed 114 in a complete game shutout, but he was throwing strikes back then. Certainly at 90 pitches, the often delicate Hamels had put the Phillies just where they wanted to be where they could go Ryan Madson in the seventh, Arthur Rhodes in the eighth and Tom Gordon in the ninth.

    That's how it was set up, right?

    Of course there are reasons to allow Hamels to start the seventh, too. For one, he had been pitching well, probably felt good and 100 pitches isn't really that much. Why baby the kid -- he's in the big leagues now.

    Besides, Madson, the demoted starter and now setup-to-the-setup man reliever, has looked lost on the mound in his last few outings. To use the old baseball writer cliché, Madson is a fireman whose best weapon is gasoline.

    Precious, precious gasoline.

    Anyway, perhaps we'll delve more into Madson's troubles tonight, because it's interesting since he is a pitcher who is pretty sharp and definitely gets it. But maybe he would have pitched better yesterday if he had started the inning instead of coming in with runners on base.

    As an aside, Cole Hamels is really good.

    Here come the Red Sox This weekend is shaping up to be a pretty exciting one for baseball fans in Philadelphia. The Red Sox, one of the big-money, trendy glamor teams, have a tendency to put fannies in the seats. But more importantly, the series gives the Phillies a great opportunity to show which team they are.

    You know, who they are with four months remaining in the season.

    But after playing in a bunch of one-run and two-run games during the 3-3 road trip, in which the bullpen wasn't so great, clutch hits came in bunches in the late innings, Ryan Howard went to the hospital with food poisoning but still bashed a pair of homers to win a game, and Hamels made his much-anticipated debut, it should be interesting to see how this weekend shapes up.

    Then they go to New York for three games against the Mets.

    Thank you, sir, can I have another? If you're like me, you drive a lot. Not because you want to, but because the office -- via the Turnpike and Expressway -- is roughly 85 miles away from home. That means money spend on gas can add up, so I refer to this site as much as possible, though some of the better (read: cheaper) gas stations are a bit out of the way.

    Meanwhile, is it me or are hotel rates and airline fares up significantly this summer?

    What's going on? Well, actually, it's not hard to figure out... I just don't want to say it out loud.

    Those who can't do... For the life of me, I never have been very good at fantasy baseball. I can't figure it out, either. I regularly talk to scouts and managers -- both general and field -- and think I have some pretty good insight on which players are regarded as "good" and which ones are not. Based on my insider info, I have put together a team over the past three years that looks good, at least according to traditional baseball folks, but I'm always in the second division of the league.

    What's going on?

    My guess is that I don't have enough statboy in me. I regard player who can actually play the game with more credence than the ones who simply post numbers. That's might be the way to build a winning baseball team, but not a make-believe one.

    Just look at my roster: P Akinori Otsuka, Tex P Brad Lidge, Hou P Francisco Rodriguez, Ana P Jason Isringhausen, StL P Trevor Hoffman, SD P Tom Gordon, Phi P Vicente Padilla, Tex P Keith Foulke, Bos P Bobby Jenks, ChW P Noah Lowry, SF P Roy Oswalt, Hou P Cole Hamels, Phi

    BATTERS C Ivan Rodriguez, Det 1B Nick Johnson, Was 2B Jeff Kent, LA 3B Chipper Jones, Atl SS David Eckstein, StL OF Bobby Abreu, Phi OF OF Torii Hunter, Min OF Jermaine Dye, ChW OF Jose Guillen, Was OF Preston Wilson, Hou 2B/SS Craig Biggio, Hou 1B/3B Brandon Inge, Det Util Wily Mo Pena, Bos DL Jason Repko, LA

    If anyone has any suggestions on how to get this club out of the cellar, send them in. I think my team might be getting old -- too many veterans, right?

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    Lieberthal update

    It appears as if the Phillies are going to have to lean on minor-league lifer Carlos Ruiz and backup Sal Fasano a little more heavily than originally planned. The reason: an MRI revealed that Mike Lieberthal is pretty banged up. According to the Phillies, an MRI on Lieberthal's injured left knee, suffered when he was hit by a pitch on May 4 from the Braves' John Thomson, confirmed a significant bone bruise and stable fracture of the bone. Fortunately for Lieberthal, all muscle, tendons and ligaments are in good shape. That's especially revealing since it was the ACL tear of Lieberthal's right knee that caused him to miss almost all of the 2001 season, and struggle through 2002.

    Of course Lieberthal's age (he's 34, which, of course, is ancient) doesn't help him much either. Injury or not, Lieberthal's future as a catcher in the big leagues is definitely limited. Sure, he's incredibly fit thanks to a stringent workout plan and plenty of yoga, but the numbers don't lie. As catchers age and continue to squat behind the plate where they are prone to everyday dings, aches and pains, their production falls off. It's just an undeniable fact.

    So while Lieberthal rejoins the team to continue his rehab plan with the hope of returning to the lineup in two more weeks, the fact is that the Phillies have a catching problem. Though the fans and certain elements of the local media are much less enamored of the two-time All-Star than his teammates, Lieberthal has always received high marks as a guy who always straps it on and plays through a lot of injuries. After his potentially career-ending injury suffered in Arizona in May of 2001, Lieberthal had never been on the disabled list until now.

    Dependable, every day catchers do not grow on trees.

    Neither do popular, dependable teammates. Lieberthal has always been a favorite of his teammates as well as a go-to guy for the writers, providing lots of straightforward answers and insight to the story behind the story. Plus, his teammates greatly admired the way Lieberthal took all of the slings and arrows -- fairly or unfairly -- sometimes secretly cast his way by former manager Larry Bowa and his pitching coach Joe Kerrigan in a not-so secret attempt to undermine and make a scapegoat out of the veteran.

    Still, Lieberthal's skills have waned even though not as dramatically as some have advertised. In a perfect world, Lieberthal would be a perfect part-time catcher who primarily faced lefties and a few tough righties... that is if the Phillies had options other than Fasano or Ruiz.

    Though popular with a little bit of power, Fasano's defensive skills aren't that great -- base runners have an easy time when he's behind the plate. Nor can he hit inside pitches. Ruiz, 27, was slow to develop but has been a decent hitter since his breakout season in 2004 for Double-A Reading. Plus, unlike Fasano, Ruiz is good defensively with a really strong arm. At the very least, Ruiz could be a capable backup Major League catcher for a few years.

    Now all the Phillies need for 2006 and beyond is a solid catcher who can play at least 120 games, hit a little bit, and not carry a $7.5 million per season price tag. Then again, doesn't every team?

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    Don't Ask Rowand 'For Who? For What?'

    ”For who? For what?”-- Ricky Watters, following a 21-6 loss to the Buccaneers on Sept. 3, 1995

    In the moment, it seemed like an eternity. A gung ho ballplayer smashes face-first into an outfield wall, crumbles to the ground like… well, a guy who just ran face first into a wall. There was the moment where the centerfielder, almost in slow-motion, gamely held the ball aloft to show that he had, indeed, caught the ball after running full speed into the inanimate, pitiless barrier.

    Within minutes, Aaron Rowand rolled over to all fours, bled all over the rubberized track lining the field, and was helped from the field by some paramedics to an ambulance waiting to rush him to Thomas Jefferson Hospital in Center City. In that short time, Rowand went from just the very capable centerfielder that arrived in town as part of the Jim Thome deal to a cult hero.

    And all it took was a face plant into an exposed metal bar, a broken nose that required surgery, stitches for his mouth and nose, a plastic splint to protect his still-tender nose, dark violet bruises ringing his eyes and cheeks, and two weeks on the disabled list.

    Certainly within the throes of the situation, Rowand thought his daredevil act was precisely what needed to be done. With two outs and the bases loaded in the first inning of last Thursday’s game against the first-place New York Mets, Rowand chased down a sure game-breaking blast from Xavier Nady. But at the last minute, Rowand reached out as far as he could with his gloved hand, pulled the ball in, took a half step and crashed – nose first – into the exposed bar beneath the green padding near the 398-foot sign.

    “I knew I was going to run into (the fence),” Rowand said during a meeting with the press on Monday afternoon in the basement conference room at Citizens Bank Park. “I saw it coming. It was a situation where the bases loaded with two outs and [pitcher] Gavin (Floyd) had been prone to giving up big innings so I knew I had to catch it.

    “It's one of those things that happens. I needed to catch that ball in that situation. I've run into a lot of walls in my day, never with this consequence. But I knew I was going to run into it. That's just how I play the game.”

    Obviously, the ever contrarian press wondered if such a valuable player like Rowand – who smacked three home runs, 10 RBIs and .333 batting average during a stretch in which the Phillies went 9-1 – should have thought twice before running into the wall. Wasn’t he more valuable to the team on the field than rolled up in a heap on the warning track with blood leaking from his face like water dripping from a faucet?

    Shouldn’t a guy who once knocked himself out running into a cinderblock wall in college and separated his shoulder colliding with a wall in Chicago consider some… ahem, restraint?

    Well, Aaron?

    “That’s why [the critics] are sitting behind a desk or a microphone,” he said tersely with his purple-ringed eyes narrowing. “I enjoy doing what I’m doing and my teammates enjoy it, too. I want to win. That’s how I play. People can call me stupid. I don’t care. I’m sure the fans got a kick out of it and I know my teammates did. Think what you want – I’m here to play and play hard.”

    That blood-and-guts style more than wins over the fans in town that often saves its affection for players that display grit than graceful skill. But Rowand is more than a battering ram. According to the number crunchers at Baseball Prospectus, Rowand’s catch certainly did save the game against the Mets. In fact, writes Clay Davenport, “The Catch,” as it’s now known, was equal to Rowand hitting two home runs.

    Had Nady gotten a double or triple on that play, the Phillies would have had just a 30.8 percent chance to win the game based on Davenport’s situational data. But making the catch gave the Phillies nearly a 60 percent chance to win, Davenport writes.

    In other words, for a team that missed the playoffs by one game a season ago and has not seen post-season baseball since 1993, The Catch could have some long-term effects.

    “I think it can be contagious,” Rowand said of his all-out style. “I said it before about last year (when he was with the World Champion White Sox): When you have everybody playing together and pulling on the same end of the rope, it’s easy to win. You create your own bad hops.”

    More importantly, Rowand answered a burning question that has plagued the sporting public in Philadelphia since it was first asked more than a decade ago.

    “For who? My teammates. For what? To win,” Rowand said without hesitation or wavering. “That’s what it’s all about.”

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    Two days in Cincinnati

    How about this: the Reds are 3-for-44 (.068) against the Phillies' starters in the first two games of the series. Better yet, in taking a perfect game through 6 2/3 innings and handling a pretty tough lineup like the Reds for nearly nine innings , it appears as if Jon Lieber has solved the problems that plagued him through the first month of the season. Then again, Lieber said he was throwing the ball well even though the Phillies lost his first five starts.

    Check out what he said after the loss in Denver on April 16: “You look at my stats and you'd think I'd been giving it up. I'm throwing the ball fine. There are no mechanical issues. I had a rough opening day, but I haven't been hit hard the last two starts.”

    Or this one following the loss to the Marlins at the Bank on April 21: “Right now, I suck. Bottom line. I'm not getting the job done and it’s no one else’s fault by mine. I'm going to leave it at that. I'm going to keep trying and I put all these losses on me.”

    And this after the April 27 loss to the Rockies in Philly: “I always felt like if you got to the seventh inning, you did your job. I just have to build off that.

    “I can only get better.”

    After posting this line (8 2/3 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 6 K, 110 pitches -- 83 strikes) vs. the Reds, there is nowhere to go but down. But that's OK.

    *** After walking just one hitter in 23 innings and three starts for Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, I thought this was an interesting quote from Cole Hamels following his debut in Cincinnati:

    "The main thing I realized is that the strike zone definitely shrinks in the big leagues. You have to make quality pitches. It was definitely frustrating, because I'm not used to walking guys. I knew that to compete I was going to have to bear down and throw strikes."

    This kid gets it. At 22, he's a real pro. He was that way last year at Reading -- he doesn't shrink from the attention.

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    Live blog of Hamels' debut

    First inningAfter stretching and seemingly trying to expel some of his nervous energy in the dugout while his team was batting, Cole Hamels finally made his Major League debut and quickly fell behind his first hitter, Ryan Freel, 2-0. But Hamels came back with a bunch of fastballs to make it 2-2 before throwing his trademarked changeup to get Freel to ground out to shortstop.

    He battled with Felipe Lopez for eight pitches after falling behind 1-0 to get his first Major League strikeout, and then whiffed Ken Griffey Jr. on three straight pitches, including a 0-2 changeup that froze Griffey.

    Griffey's expression when home-plate umpire Jim Reynolds rung him up looked as if he was saying, "What the hell was that?!"

    Strike three, Griff.

    0 hits, 16 pitches -- 12 strikes

    Second inning The first time I saw Hamels pitch? How about his debut in Reading on July 6, 2005.

    Austin Kearns hits the first pitch to Pat Burrell in left for the first out. It seems as if maybe the Reds are looking for the first fastball they can handle to avoid falling behind the Kid...

    So of course hard-hitting Adam Dunn walks on four pitches. Hamels walked just one hitter in 23 innings and three starts. Dunn took off on the first pitch when he was sure Hamels wasn't going to pay attention to him at first. Dunn swiped the bag, but catcher Carlos Ruiz showed off the canon he has for a right arm.

    Gets Edwin Encarnacion to ground a 2-2 changeup to short for the second out. Dunn moves up to third. Then he walks Brandon Phillips on four pitches -- that's twice as many walks in one inning than in three starts in Triple-A. Clearly the kid must be a bit nervous.

    Hamels walks Javier Valentin on a 3-2 changeup, which sends Rich Dubee charging out of the dugout. Ryan Howard joins the party at the mound and says something that maks Hamels smile. That moment of levity must have worked because Hamels whiffed Easy Ramirez on three straight pitches. Then again, Easy's front foot was halfway to the first-base dugout before the pitch was even delivered.

    0 hits, 3 walks, 40 pitches -- 22 strikes.

    Third inning Hamels looks like he can swing the bat. Has a very athletic swing despite the three-pitch whiff in his first at-bat. He kind of hits like Steve Carlton, though he appears to be more athletic. The same thing goes for his delivery, except for his kick and where he transfers the ball from his glove to his pitching hand.

    One pitch and one out in the second as Freel gounds to Utley at second. He then gets Lopez to pop to Bobby Abreu to right on the second pitch of the inning. Expect Griffey to look at a few in his AB...

    How about that? Griffey walks on four pitches. Finally, he gets Austin Kearns to pop to short on a 2-1 pitch.

    0 hits, 4 walks, 3 strikeouts, 51 pitches -- 26 strikes.

    Fourth inning I still remember the day when Easy Ramirez was called up from Single-A Clearwater to joing the Phillies during the 2004 season. That game was the first big-league game he had ever seen and he spent it in the bullpen. At the time I wrote that Ramirez would have been the team's top pitching prospect if not for all the hype surrounding Hamels and Gavin Floyd.

    Ramirez was and is a strike-throwing machine. He doesn't walk too many hitters and usually has a low pitch count. Easy is the perfect nickname for him, too, since he is very affable and laidback. He thought it was really funny when I tried to speak Spanish to him.

    Here's the story from that day.

    Nonetheless, Ryan Howard gives Hamels some runs with a long homer to left-center to make it 2-0.

    Dunn smacks a 3-1 pitch just short of the warning track in left field. Perhaps Hamels is settling in the second time through the order?

    So how about a five-pitch walk to Encarnacion? There you go. One thing is for sure -- Hamels works fast and when he misses it's usually high with the fastball. Next, he whiffs Phillips on a 2-2 breaking pitch.

    Finally, Hamels gets Valentin on a 2-2 change on the sixth pitch. He seems to have settled in.

    0 hits, 5 walks, 5 strikeouts, 74 pitches -- 38 strikes.

    Fifth inning I wonder what cards were drawn for the press-box no-hitter pool?

    Hamels whiffs Ramirez for his third strikeout in a row. He then gets ahead of Freel 0-2 before getting him to ground to Howard at first on a 2-2 pitch.

    He misses badly on a few pitches to Lopez before he loops a 3-1 shot into center that Shane Victorino dives for but nabs on a short hop. That's the first hit vs. Hamels.

    Griffey quickly falls behind 0-2 before Hamels gets him on a 1-2 change.

    1 hit, 5 walks, 7 strikeouts, 92 pitches -- 51 strikes.

    Sixth inning This very well could be Hamels' last inning since his pitch count is so high and the fact that he has only six starts above Single-A. He also has never pitched a complete season as a pro, so it might be difficult to depend much on him in late August and September -- I foresee the Phillies having to shut him down the way the Cubs did with Kerry Wood when they were making a run in 1998.

    He's not going to get the chance to work in the sixth because Charlie Manuel has decided to try and cash in for some runs with two out and the bases loaded in the top of the sixth. Abraham Nunez is called upon to pinch hit.

    But when Nunez whiffs to end the frame, Manuel and the Phillies turn to the bullpen for the rest of the way... and with that, Hamels' debut comes to an end.

    Hamels' final line: 5 IP, 1 H, 0, R, 5 BB, 7 K, 92 pitches -- 51 strikes

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    Rowand update

    Following his heroic catch in centerfield in which he smashed nose first into the outfield fence, Aaron Rowand was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a fractured nose and non-displaced fractures around his left eye. He had surgery this morning at Thomas Jefferson Hospital where his nose was reduced and readjusted, according to the Phillies assistant general manager Ruben Amaro in a press release. Rowand also received 15 stitches for lacerations to his face, but is expected to be released from the hospital this afternoon.

    To take Rowand's place on the roster the Phillies called up Chris Roberson from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. In the minors, Roberson was hitting .287 (39-136) with 19 runs, 10 doubles, one triple and eight RBI in 34 games.

    For those who missed it, here's what happened:

    Rowand, the Phillies’ blood-and-guts centerfielder who once described himself as more bulldozer than fence climber, took one for the team and then some in the rain-shortened, 2-0 victory over the New York Mets.

    After starting pitcher Gavin Floyd had walked the bases loaded with two outs in the first inning, his 3-2 offering to Xavier Nady – his 28th pitch of the opening inning – was launched deep toward the far center-field fence that surely was slated to be at least a bases-clearing triple. It's also very likely that Nady's blow would have spelled the end for the reeling and delicate Floyd.

    But at the last minute, Rowand reached out as far as he could with his gloved hand, pulled the ball in, took a half step and crashed – nose first – into the exposed bar beneath the green padding near the 398-foot sign. Somehow he had the wherewithal to show that he held onto the ball, then rolled over on all fours and bled all over the warning track.

    "I've seen some great plays, but that one definitely ranks up there with the best of them," manager Charlie Manuel said. "That might be the best effort and determination I've ever seen."

    Outfielder Pat Burrell frantically waved toward the dugout to summon help upon reaching his fallen teammate as manager Charlie Manuel and several other Phillies dashed out to the centerfield warning track to Rowand’s aid.

    Finally, Rowand walked off the field with the aid of trainer Mark Andersen and several paramedics where he was taken to Thomas Jefferson Hospital.

    On Tuesday Rowand had X-rays taken for his left hand after he was drilled by a pitch from the Mets' Pedro Martinez. He had spent the past few days with an ice pack tied to his hand to reduce the swelling, but did not miss any game action with that injury.

    Acquired in the trade that sent Jim Thome to the Chicago White Sox, Rowand is hitting .310 with six homers and a .516 slugging percentage in 33 games. In the Phillies' last 10 games, in which they are 9-1, Rowand has been a catalyst, going 11-for-34 at the plate with three homers and 10 RBIs. *** Here's the catch with Harry and L.A. from last night's broadcast on CSN:

    *** FYI: Here's an interesting story about everyone's new favorite player in the New York Times.

    Also: Here's an interesting note from Paul Hagen in today's Daily News:

    When the Padres saluted the Negro Leagues on May 6 by wearing throwback uniforms, San Diego starter Jake Peavy found his own way of paying tribute. On his first pitch to Cubs leadoff hitter Juan Pierre, he went into a double-pump windup reminiscent of Satchel Paige.

    "It just seemed like the right thing to do," Peavy explained. "I just wanted to say, 'I know what you guys did and who you are.' "

    His African-American teammates appreciated the gesture.

    "For a young guy, he's way ahead of his time," said first-base coach Tye Waller. "Jake's so aware of things. He knows history and the game. He loves the game and respects it. It was like he reached out and touched our heritage."

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    Recent debuts by Phillies draft picks

    Gavin Floyd vs. Mets on Sept. 3, 2004: 7 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 5 K for Win Brett Myers at Cubs on July 24, 2002: 8 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 5 K for Win

    Brandon Duckworth vs. Padres on Aug., 7, 2001: 6 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 4 K for Win

    David Coggin at Expos on June 23, 2000: 6 IP, 8 H, 6 R, 1 BB, 4 K for Win

    Randy Wolf vs. Blue Jays on June 11, 1999: 5.2 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 3 BB, 6 K for Win

    Carlton Loewer vs. Cubs on June 14, 1998: 9 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 8 K for Win

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    Fence 1, Rowand 0

    Let's start this by saying Aaron Rowand is great. Not only is he a fun ballplayer to watch, but also he's a treat to deal with on a daily basis and is always engaging when approached to talk about any subject. Better yet, the guy loves to talk about baseball and is a real professional -- one of many on this current Phils' club. That said, I hated watching his catch that potentially saved Thursday night's game against the Mets in the first inning. Worse, I hated watching Pat Burrell frantically wave to the dugout for help as Rowand lay on all fours in front of the center field fence as blood poured out from his broken nose like an overactive faucet. I also hated watching him walk off the field with the aid of trainer Mark Anderson and a couple of paramedics.

    It just wasn't any fun.

    But boy, what a catch.

    For those who missed it, here's what happened:

    With two outs and the bases loaded thanks to Gavin Floyd's walks in a 28-pitch first inning, right fielder Xavier Nady launched a 3-2 pitch deep toward the far center-field fence that surely was slated to be a bases-clearing triple. It's also very likely that Nady's blow would have spelled the end for the reeling and delicate Floyd.

    But at the last minute, Rowand reached out as far as he could with his gloved hand, pulled the ball in, took a half step and crashed -- nose first -- into the exposed bar beneath the green padding near the 398-foot sign. Somehow he had the wherewithal to show that he held onto the ball, then rolled over on all fours and bled all over the warning track.

    It was the greatest catch by a Phillies player in the six years I've been watching every day, and probably the best catch by a Phillie in a long, long time.

    Now here's why I didn't like it: Rowand broke his nose on the play and has cuts all over his face. No one is sure how long he will be out, but any game without Rowand in the lineup other than a routine night off is bad, because he is clearly the heart and soul of the team.

    That's why I never understood why fans are so hyped up on players running into the fence -- why? Who wants the best players to get hurt? Scott Rolen used to run into anything that got in his way and will end up having a shorter career because of it.

    When it comes to players running into fences and other inanimate objects, the fence will always win.

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    Pre-rainout notes for Thursday

    Here comes a big rambling preface, which may or may not have anything to do with the fact I'm going to write (eventually). I suppose we'll all be able to figure it out as soon as I get there, so let's get going... Anyway, based on some research I did during spring training in 2004, it was determined that the best indicator for the amount of games a team will win is not ERA, strikeouts per 9 innings, batting average or even slugging percentage. The magical statistic? on-base percentage.

    Based on that rudimentary research covering the 2001, 2002 and 2003 seasons, it was determined that the teams that ranked at the top of the standings often had the highest on-base percentage. In fact, it was quite uncanny how important doing something as basic as getting on base did for a team's chances. I was also quite surprised that a pitching statistic like WHIP or ERA was not as telling as the on-base percentage was. In reality, there are often teams with mediocre records that rate toward the top of the charts in team ERA.

    So why am I writing this? Because Bobby Abreu is riding a 4-for-27 skid during the Phillies' last 10 games, yet has reached base safely in 26 consecutive games and has a .444 on-base percentage this season. Despite the .269 batting average, Abreu leads the National League with 36 walks -- more than Barry Bonds and Albert Pujols -- rates fifth in on-base percentage, and eighth in runs.

    With Abreu bringing up the rear, the Phillies have four players (Burrell 8th, Utley 15th, Howard 17th) in the top 18 in OPS.

    In other words, Abreu is the quintessential Moneyball player.

    There's more, too. Close to one-third of all of Abreu's at-bats come against lefties, while nearly half of his late inning at-bats are against lefties who are specifically in the game to face him. That makes it even tougher for him to produce yet his numbers are always amongst the best in the game. In fact, throughout his career, Abreu's statistics are consistent throughout the game whether he is facing a lefty in a close game in the latter innings, or whether he's coming up with two outs in the first inning and no one on base.

    Earlier this week I had a chance to ask Abreu about his two divergent streaks to which he said it was just a matter of time before the hits started falling, but that he was going to "be here for the team and do what I can to help us win. That's it. Just win."

    Getting on base is a pretty good place to start if a player wants to help his team win. At least that's what the numbers indicate.

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    Hamels pre-game press conference

    I feel really good. I think I feel more confident mentally and physically.

    I don't think I'll stop my exercises for as long as I play baseball and continue living.

    On nine-inning game in SWB: That was a big deal. I didn't even know what my pitch count was.

    On Floyd: We've just been contacting each other with AIM text messaging on the phone. we haven't really had any detailed conversations. Now that I'm up here, we'll definitely be able to have some time to talk and get to know each other a lot better.

    Take it like I do every day. Going out there, try not to make it feel like there's a difference. I know there will be a lot more fans in the stands, a little bit better competition. But I prepare every day to go out compete at my level.

    I think it's all the hard work I've done just starting to pay off

    My realistic goal was eight weeks, so I accomplished something.

    I plan on staying. That's my main goal. I want to be here as long as I can.

    Reason for success: Just more focus. I know that there's a lot of fun in everything out there. You can get yourself in some trouble. But you have to really set aside the other aspects of life to accomplish your goals.

    I go out and try to treat every game the same.

    All that matters in winning. That's what the fans of Philadelphia like.

    The day I got drafted was the same type of experience.

    The majority of the people I ever got to watch were right-handed. I did get to watch Tom Glavine. The other people I got to watch were Trevor Hoffman, John Smoltz, Greg Maddux.

    On Phils taking a chance on him: It's one of the keys to motivate me, but deep down, it's what I've always wanted to do.

    It's always been a dream, and now it's becoming a realistic dream at that.

    On how he got notified of his call-up: Coach called me into the office, and I figured, 'OK, the only reason you get called into the office is if you're going to get yelled at or if you get good news and I didn't do anything wrong."

    I felt I was executing on everything I possibly could and I needed another challenge out there.

    It's a lot different up here with your competition, and things can change in a heartbeat.

    The first call was to my girlfriend and the second one was to my parents. I know my mom won't like that.

    On hype: I've become more aware of it going to Scranton. In Clearwater, you average about 100 fans, so you don't experience the Hoorah that you get at the elite levels.

    I'm definitely flattered by that. I'm the type of person that would definitely like to be under the radar. Being in the situation I am, I don't think that will happen, so I have to learn how to deal with it.

    I don't think I'd really like to look at the scouting reports. I'm more focused on just getting out there.

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    Hamels called up

    Uh... never mind. Just as Todd Zolecki reported in this morning's Inquirer, Cole Hamels will be activated for Friday's start against the Reds in Cincinnati. To make room for Hamels in the rotation, Ryan Madson has been bumped back to the bullpen . To make room for Hamels on the roster, the Phillies will have to make a move before Friday's game.

    Here's the official Phillies' release:

    PHILLIES TO CALL UP HAMELS

    Phillies left-handed pitching prospect Cole Hamels will have his contract purchased on Friday and will make his major league debut that night in Cincinnati, Vice President & General Manager Pat Gillick announced today.

    To make room for Hamels in the Phillies’ starting rotation, RHP Ryan Madson will return to the bullpen, where he went 15-8 with a 2.94 ERA in 130 appearances from 2003-05. The Phillies will make a roster move prior to Friday’s game to make room for Hamels on the 25-man roster.

    Hamels, 22, is 3-1 with a 1.04 ERA this season in seven combined starts between Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (AAA) and Clearwater (A). He has 65 strikeouts in 43.1 innings and has held opposing hitters to a .168 average (26-for-155).

    He began the season with Clearwater and went 1-1 with a 1.77 ERA in four starts before being promoted to Scranton. Hamels pitched 7.0 scoreless innings with 14 strikeouts in his triple-A debut and followed that up with his first professional 9.0-inning shutout, May 2 at Richmond. In his 23.0 triple-A innings, he struck out 36 batters, posting double-digit strikeouts in each of his three starts.

    Hamels was originally selected by the Phillies in the first round of the 2002 draft (17th overall). In 35 minor league starts, he was 14-4 with a 1.43 ERA (31 ER, 195.1 IP). In his 195.1 innings, he allowed only two home runs and amassed 273 strikeouts, an average of 12.6 strikeouts/9.0 innings. Hamels pitched shutout baseball in 16 of his 35 professional starts and held minor league hitters to a .174 average (114-for-654).

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    Even more following Game 1 of Mets series

    Our boy Todd Zolecki had a nice little scoop in the Inquirer this morning where he wrote that Cole Hamels could make his Major League debut on Friday night in Cincinnati. To clear space for him in the rotation, Todd wrote, either Ryan Madson or Gavin Floyd would be bumped. The likely scenario, it seems, would be for Madson to move to the 'pen where he pitched for the past two seasons. But id Floyd is moved it would likely be back to Triple-A. Could be interesting to see how this shapes out since Hamels really doesn't have much more to prove in facing minor leaguers.

    Plus, nice work out of Todd.

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    Late-night notes from the win over the Mets

    Years from now, when they are putting together the book on Carlos Ruiz, it will show that the catcher picked up his first big-league hit against Pedro Martinez. The Pedro Martinez, as in one of those guys who goes only by a first name like Dean, Sammy, Frank, and Liza. Just Pedro.

    Let the record show it was a hard hit ball to right field in the second inning.

    Meanwhile, Ruiz has a pretty strong reputation as a solid receiver behind the plate. After working with him in the past, Ryan Madson said Ruiz is easy to throw to and sets a nice target. Following Tuesday night's start where he allowed five hits and no walks in eight innings -- the longest outing by a Phillies' starter this season -- Brett Myers had nothing but praise for Ruiz.

    "We were on the same page and he never caught me before," Myers said. "He's not intimidated back there."

    *** Aaron Rowand is still hitting the ball well after his rough first week of the season -- does anyone remember that at this point? During this undefeated homestand, Rowand is 9-for-22 with four homers despite claiming that he's a notoriously slow starter. He also said he was pretty successful in losing a few bad habits he picked up late last year.

    Such as?

    "Leaning in over the plate."

    A World Champion with the White Sox last year, Rowand said the current winning streak is especially good since the Phillies are doing it so early in the season. After all, the season is a rollercoaster ride filled with peaks and valleys and all of those other fun cliches, right?

    "It's nice to get it early than later when it could be too late," he said.

    Meanwhile, as his hand (the same hand he broke by getting hit by a pitch in '03) swelled up like a balloon and turned a dark shade of purple in the minutes following his plunking by Pedro in the sixth inning of the win over the Mets, Rowand refused to come out of the game. Fortunately, X-rays came back negative, but for a little while it appeared as if Rowand might have had a significant injury.

    And if there is one guy the Phillies DO NOT want to lose, it's Aaron Rowand. The man is a baseball player.

    Still, Rowand said his lone at-bat following getting hit was not fun and he was not looking forward to gripping the bat for another. Luckily for Rowand and the Phillies, Bobby Abreu ended the game with his walk-off E-1.

    *** When a game is on, I do not root for one team or another. Instead, I hope for something that will be a good story. The story is what I root for. However, there are quite a few players I like to watch more than others, such as Scott Rolen, Albert Pujols, John Smoltz, Jim Thome to name a few. Of this current crop of Phillies, Aaron Rowand is a very entertaining player to watch... next time you come to the park, watch him position himself on every pitch in center field. He can really play that position well.

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    Here come the Mets

    This time it’s a Philadelphia story. No reality TV show production. No ESPN and the 900 cameras and boom operators that come with them. No throng of writers looking for any semblance of a story so they end up staring at a tired, old ballplayer as he listens to his iPod and marks his bats on his way out to batting practice hoping to find some nuance or something like that.

    This one is straight ahead from the jump. Phillies vs. Mets. Billy vs. Everybody.

    Better yet, the Red Sox-Yankees series at the Stadium likely diverted some of the New York media from making the trip down the Turnpike.

    It might be the second-best series in New York, but it’s a pretty big one in Philadelphia where the Phillies and Mets meet for the first of 19 times in what is already shaping up to be a dogfight in the NL East.

    This series definitely presents a great chance for the Phillies to show all of the doubters just how good they are… at least for now.

    After Tuesday’s game there are still 130 games to go.

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    Was this Bonds' farewell to Philly?

    Road weary and worn out as the clock closed in on midnight and the prospect of yet another all-night, cross-country flight loomed, the 41-year-old ballplayer sat in a room full of people he didn’t really want to talk to following another losing ballgame. He didn’t want to, but his life has become a bunch of have to things these days. Obligatory kinds of things that normal people have to deal with everyday, only his are a little more high profile, to say the least. Have to fly across the country after midnight; have to pander to the sycophants producing your “reality” show; have to put in the work just to make it through the grind of a season; have to listen to total strangers scream unpleasantries at you ever time you show your face in public; have to answer questions from a grand jury investigation; have to go to work and chase some guy named Babe.

    Have to.

    “It's draining,” he said. “It is. It's a little bit draining. But I have to stay focused for my teammates.”

    So there he was, fulfilling another have to. Tersely answering the inane questions from a few while almost lighting up and becoming engaging at a few queries that seemed interesting. Like the one about which ballplayer has the chance to be chasing the Babe or Hank some day?

    “Alex Rodriguez. I don’t know about Albert (Pujols),” he said. “Albert’s going to have to deal with a lot of walks. He’s going to get walked a lot, unfortunately. He’s that good. Unfortunately, he plays in the National League, and when you’ve got pitchers coming up, and in a different league, it’s a little bit different. If he was in the American League, we might be saying something different, but in the National League, if he keeps going the way he’s going, he’s going to be walked a ton.”

    That was his longest answer in the 19-minute-and-51-second give-and-take with the press that was beamed worldwide on live television from the tiny conference room in the basement of Philadelphia’s Citizens Bank Park. But there was more, too. Like the part about the chat he and his mother Pat had before Sunday night’s nationally televised game. For a little while, at least, the conversation rejuvenated him. Made him feel good and forget about have to, and the shouting, accusations, big signs with asterisks and others calling him a fraud and worse. The books and the grand juries and the investigations all went away for a little bit.

    “It helped me get my head twisted back on,” he said about talking to his mom, adding that he was missing his dad, Bobby, a lot these days.

    “I wish he was here,” he said.

    Hearing that and watching his world seem to implode all around him and bear down, like an anvil, onto his coat-rack shoulders and softening eyes and face makes it easy to feel sympathy for him. Human emotion is a difficult thing to ignore when it is truly genuine. It’s hard to judge someone so harshly when they glowingly talk about their mom and want to be able to talk to their dad, who is no longer on this earth.

    But then reality steps in and delivers a cold, hard haymaker to the solar plexus. You remember who it is – who it is that has seen his world turned into something he can no longer control the way he once did an at-bat in a baseball game or turned a crowd of people into slack-jawed wonderment.

    Sometimes people have to reap what they sow.

    Right?

    So after a weekend filled with yelling and screaming, where signs made of old bed sheets were waved for all to see and the anticipation for a milestone in which the regular folks hoped to one day say “I was there,” the old, tired ballplayer answered one more question, posed for one more picture, forced a smile, and walked as fast as his creaky knees would carry him to a bus that would take him to a chartered flight waiting at the airport.

    Barry Bonds was on the way out, and it doesn’t look like he’s ever coming back.

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    A final word on Bonds in Philly

    Road weary and worn out as the clock closed in on midnight and the prospect of yet another all-night, cross-country flight loomed, the 41-year-old ballplayer sat in a room full of people he didn’t really want to talk to following another losing ballgame.

    He didn’t want to, but his life has become a bunch of have to things these days. Obligatory kinds of things that normal people have to deal with everyday, only his are a little more high profile, to say the least. Have to fly across the country after midnight; have to pander to the sycophants producing your “reality” show; have to put in the work just to make it through the grind of a season; have to listen to total strangers scream unpleasantries at you ever time you show your face in public; have to answer questions from a grand jury investigation; have to go to work and chase some guy named Babe.

    Have to.

    "It's draining," he said. "It is. It's a little bit draining. But I have to stay focused for my teammates."

    So there he was, fulfilling another have to. Tersely answering the inane questions from a few while almost lighting up and becoming engaging at a few queries that seemed interesting. Like the one about which ballplayer has the chance to be chasing the Babe or Hank some day?

    "Alex Rodriguez. I don’t know about Albert (Pujols)," he said. "Albert’s going to have to deal with a lot of walks. He’s going to get walked a lot, unfortunately. He’s that good. Unfortunately, he plays in the National League, and when you’ve got pitchers coming up, and in a different league, it’s a little bit different. If he was in the American League, we might be saying something different, but in the National League, if he keeps going the way he’s going, he’s going to be walked a ton."

    That was his longest answer in the 19-minutes and 51-seconds give-and-take with the press that was beamed worldwide on live television from the tiny conference room in the basement of Philadelphia’s Citizens Bank Park. But there was more, too. Like the part about the chat he and his mother Pat had before Sunday night’s nationally televised game. For a little while, at least, the conversation rejuvenated him. Made him feel good and forget about have to, and the shouting, accusations, big signs with asterisks and others calling him a fraud and worse. The books and the grand juries and the investigations all went away for a little bit.

    "It helped me get my head twisted back on," he said about talking to his mom, adding that he was missing his dad, Bobby, a lot these days.

    "I wish he was here," he said.

    Hearing that and watching his world seem to implode all around him and bear down, like an anvil, onto his coat-rack shoulders and softening eyes and face, makes it easy to feel sympathy for him. Human emotion is a difficult thing to ignore when it is truly genuine. It’s hard to judge someone so harshly when they glowingly talk about their mom and want to be able to talk to their dad, who is no longer on this earth.

    But then reality steps in and delivers a cold, hard haymaker to the solar plexus. You remember who it is – who it is that has seen his world turned into something he can no longer control the way he once did an at-bat in a baseball game or turned a crowd of people into slack-jawed wonderment.

    Sometimes people have to reap what they sow.

    Right?

    So after a weekend filled with yelling and screaming, where signs made of old bedsheets were waved for all to see and the anticipation for a milestone in which the regular folks hoped to one day say "I was there," the old, tired ballplayer answered one more question, posed for one more picture, forced a smile, and walked as fast as his creaky knees would carry him to a bus that would take him to a chartered flight waiting at the airport.

    Barry Bonds was on the way out and it doesn’t look like he’s ever coming back.

    Quotable Bonds
    Bonds on Ryan Howard:
    "Strong as hell. That kid is going to be good. He’s strong as a tree. And he’s in a good hitters’ ballpark, a really good hitters’ ballpark. For some of us."

    Best hitter growing up?
    "I always thought of Hank Aaron. Always. Ever since Hank Aaron passed him. When you pass someone, it makes you better. Babe Ruth was I guess the Willie Mays of his era, you could sit there and say that he could do a lot of things. But so many people forget about Frank Robinson. I mean Frank Robinson was freakin’ great. We always talk about these other hitters and other players, and you’re talking about a triple-crown guy [who’s] done everything. I don’t know how he gets missed in all of this. I’d have to say him and Willie are the two best all-around players in the game period."

    Do you view yourself as a home run hitter... ?
    "Well it’s 713, I don’t have a freakin choice."

    Will you think of yourself as better than Babe?
    "I don’t know yet. But the numbers speak for themselves."

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    One circus leaves another one coming to town

    As Barry Bonds and his traveling sideshow get ready to move out of town, another one is moving in, and this one, well, let's just say it's kind of personal with this one. According to Jim Salisbury's story in the Inquirer this morning, Billy Wagner said he did not feel very well liked by his teammates, who were overly sensitive to criticism and afraid of media scrutiny.

    It all in the story, including the part where Pat Burrell apparently called Wagner a "rat." But better yet, the story simply shows how good a reporter Salisbury is. If there was ever anyone with tons of fascinating baseball stories it's Jim. He's definitely one of the best.

    He can write a baseball story the way regular people can rack up out-of-control, spiraling credit debt.

    On another note, I imagine there will be a few extra security folks stationed along the visiting bullpen for the Mets series, which starts on Tuesday.

    Fun. Fun. Fun.

    Hey look... writers! There's nothing like a slow zoom past the press box during a sporting event. Better yet, there's nothing like knowing someone who recorded the scanning shot, put it on YouTube and then sends you the screen shot. So thanks to Dan McQuade, here's a view of the press box from last night's game. It also looks as if I'm hard at work and very busy... now you just have to figure out which one is me.

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