Rockies Beat Shaky Cole Hamels, Tie Series With Phillies

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Oct 8, 2009

Rockies Beat Shaky Cole Hamels, Tie Series With Phillies PHILADELPHIA — Cole Hamels isn't going to breeze through this postseason.

Yorvit Torrealba hit a two-run homer,
Aaron Cook pitched effectively into the sixth inning and the Colorado
Rockies beat Hamels and the Philadelphia Phillies 5-4 Thursday to even
their NL playoff series at a game apiece.

Huston Street pitched out of trouble
in the ninth to secure the win for Colorado. He retired Shane Victorino
on a soft liner to second to leave the potential tying run — Game 1
winner Cliff Lee — at second base.

Hamels, the World Series and NLCS MVP
last year, looked nothing like the guy who was so dominant during
Philadelphia's championship run last October. The left-hander allowed
four runs and seven hits in five innings. He didn't stick around after
departing, rushing off to be with his wife, Heidi, who was in labor
with the couple's first child.

The best-of-five series shifts to
Denver for Game 3 on Saturday. Jason Hammel (10-8) will start for the
wild-card Rockies against a yet-to-be-announced pitcher. The Phillies
could use Joe Blanton, J.A. Happ or Pedro Martinez.

Blanton pitched one inning in relief,
allowing a run. Happ faced one batter and got knocked out of the game
when Seth Smith hit a hard liner off the lower part of his left leg.
X-rays on Happ's leg were negative.

Making his third start since a
shoulder strain sidelined him for most of September, Cook allowed three
runs and seven hits in five-plus innings. The right-handed sinkerballer
got 12 of his 15 outs on grounders or strikeouts.

After Lee turned in a masterful
performance in his playoff debut Wednesday, the Phillies were counting
on Hamels to give them a commanding 2-0 series lead. But Hamels hasn't
been the same pitcher since going 4-0 with a 1.80 ERA in five
postseason starts last year. He was 10-11 with a 4.32 ERA this year,
and is now 0-7 in day games.

The Phillies are trying to become the
first repeat champions since the New York Yankees won three World
Series in a row from 1998-2000. No NL team has done it since the
Cincinnati Reds in 1975-76.

For the second straight day, the
Phillies had the largest crowd in the six-year history of Citizens Bank
Park. There were 46,528 fans packed in the ballpark, waving their
white-and-red "Fightin' Phils" towels. Now, there's no guarantee
they'll see another game this year.

Jayson Werth's solo homer off Rafael Betancourt in the eighth got the Phillies within a run and whipped the fans into a frenzy.

But Franklin Morales came in and
retired Raul Ibanez on a sharp grounder. Street, who was 35 for 37 in
save chances in the regular season, started the ninth.

He walked pinch-hitter Matt Stairs
with one out. Lee, who became the first Phillies pitcher to steal a
base in the postseason in Game 1, ran for the slow-footed Stairs. After
Miguel Cairo flied to right, Jimmy Rollins singled to right. But Street
got Victorino to end it.

Trailing 4-0, the Phillies finally
got going in the sixth. Victorino led off with an infield single and
advanced to second on second baseman Clint Barmes' throwing error.
Chase Utley followed with a single and Ryan Howard lined an RBI double
into the right-field corner, chasing Cook.

Jose Contreras came in and struck out Werth. But Ibanez followed with a two-run single to cut it to 4-3.

After Happ was forced out in the
seventh, Scott Eyre came in with the bases loaded and nobody out. He
struck out Carlos Gonzalez before Dexter Fowler's sacrifice fly made it
5-3. Eyre retired Todd Helton to end the inning.

The Rockies took a 3-0 lead in the
fourth when Torrealba connected off Hamels. Torrealba had just two
homers in 213 regular-season at-bats, but he ripped a hanging curve
into the seats in left.

Rockies manager Jim Tracy
flip-flopped his top two hitters and it paid off right away. Gonzalez
led off with a single. He stole second on an attempted pickoff, easily
beating first baseman Howard's double-clutch throw.

Gonzalez advanced to third on
Fowler's sacrifice and scored on Helton's 20-foot dribbler down the
first-base line, giving the Rockies their first lead of the series.

Gonzalez singled his next time up in
the third and was picked off again, but this time Howard quickly fired
to second to get him.

After Cook hit a one-out single in
the fifth, Gonzalez lined a double to right-center. Fowler followed
with a sacrifice fly to left to make it 4-0.

Notes
Blanton's relief appearance
was his first since the 2006 ALCS with Oakland. … Hamels is 10-13
with a 4.66 ERA lifetime in 37 day starts. … Fowler hit both
sacrifice flies on 1-2 pitches. … Cook was 1-5 with a 5.85 ERA
against the Phillies. … The Phillies had won eight straight home
games in the postseason. … Rookie LHP Antonio Bastardo struck out
Colorado pinch-hitter Jason Giambi to leave the bases loaded in the
eighth.

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