
The tall, lanky, mega-talented
Phillies left
hander, one of the best pitchers in all of baseball, took the mound for his first-ever appearance in the World Series. He seemed in complete command as his team staked him to a 2-0 lead. Cole
Hamels in last night's opener of the 2008 World Series between the
Phils and the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field? Well, yes actually. But the same exact scenario could have been written about Steve Carlton in Game #2 of the 1980 World Series against the Kansas City Royals at Veteran's Stadium, spotlighted in a story at this blog just two days ago. Though there are differences, there are also many
similarities shared by the two most talented left-handed starting pitchers to ever don
Phillies pinstripes. Carlton mixed in a moving fastball and a solid
curveball with his devastating signature slider.
Hamels mixes in that same fastball-
curveball combo with his own devastating
changeup. Both have led the
Phillies as the staff pitching ace into the World Series. And now both can say that the team won their start, albeit after overcoming a few bumps in the road during the game. 'Super Steve' mowed down those Royals through 5 shutout innings, but KC got to him for 3 runs in the 7
th. He ultimately went 8 innings, allowing 10 hits and 6 walks, but the
Phils won the game 6-4 thanks to their own 4-run 8
th inning rally.
Hamels had to endure his own rough stretch, but was ultimately in far greater control than Carlton had been. The young lefty mowed through the first two innings without a scratch, usually a sign that the other team is in for a long night. But the Rays loaded the bases in the 3rd before
Hamels induced young Rays' star outfielder B.J. Upton to hit into a
doubleplay to end the inning. In the
Phils 4
th, Carlos Ruiz knocked in Shane
Victorino with a
groundout and
Hamels had a 3-0 lead. Carl Crawford then reached him for a two-out solo
homerun in the bottom of the inning and cut that lead to 3-1. The Rays then rallied again in the 5
th, but
Hamels induced another
doubleplay to get out of the jam, this time thanks to a nice play by 3rd base glove whiz Pedro
Feliz.
Hamels then settled down and went through the 7
th inning without being challenged further. He turned the ball over to the bullpen combo of setup man Ryan
Madson and closer Brad
Lidge, and what that has meant for the
Phillies has been an automatic victory.
Madson and
Lidge would close it out without incident, and the
Phillies had a key victory in this pivotal opening
matchup.
Hamels had yet another strong outing to pad his already bulging playoff resume. He won the
NLCS MVP award as a pair of his strong starts led the
Phils into the Series. He had previously been strong in last season's
NLDS loss to Colorado, and in this year's
NLDS victory over Milwaukee. Cole
Hamels is proving that he may be Carlton's talent equal, though he still has many years to go before he can think of joining 'Lefty' in the Hall of Fame. But his performance last night has the
Phils up in this Series. Now it is Brett Myers turn. Myers, who plays the 'emotions on his sleeves'
ying to
Hamels' 'calm and cool' yang, needs to harness his talent and control those emotions. If he does, he can take the Rays bats that Cole made go cold and put them on some seriously thin ice in this World Series.