Philadelphia (AP) — Sooner or later, some of these big bats are bound to break loose.
Alex
Rodriguez is 0 for 8 with six strikeouts in his first World Series.
Mark Teixeira's only hit in seven at-bats is a solo homer. Ryan Howard
is hitting .222, also with six strikeouts.
Maybe a change in venue will get them all going.
"I
feel pretty good. I mean, it's only been eight at-bats, but I felt like
I've had a lot of good swings," Rodriguez said Friday. "I fouled a
couple of pitches off that I should have put in play."
Without
any offense from A-Rod, the New York Yankees totaled four runs in the
first two games and still eked out a split at home. Now, the Series
shifts to Philadelphia for Game 3 on Saturday night, with Cole Hamels
set to start for the Phillies against fellow lefty Andy Pettitte.
"We're back in our own ballpark. It's going to be hostile. It's going to be loud," Shane Victorino said.
Nothing new, according to the Yankees.
"Because of the team we are, we get booed and yelled at everywhere we go," Johnny Damon explained. "Even coming off the train."
Citizens
Bank Park is approximately 108 miles from Yankee Stadium, with a string
of New Jersey Turnpike tolls in between. Both teams zipped down on the
train in a little more than an hour — the Phillies after their 3-1 loss
Thursday night, the Yankees on Friday afternoon.
Three wins from
a second consecutive championship, Howard and the Phillies could wrap
it up at home. Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins and crew can't wait to play
before their fervent fans in the second-ever World Series game on
Halloween.
"It's going to be a great environment," Raul Ibanez said. "It's nice to have 47,000 screaming people cheering for you."
During
batting practice Friday, with line drives and long balls ricocheting
around Philadelphia's cozy park, it was hard to fathom how Cliff Lee
and A.J. Burnett dominated on the mound the previous two nights.
"I can't say enough about our advanced scouting and our reports. They're right on," Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said.
Especially when it comes to Rodriguez, apparently.
The
three-time MVP was an October bust for years before a monster
performance during the AL playoffs. He looked way off balance in the
Bronx this week, but teammate Derek Jeter insisted he's not worried.
"No,
the guy's been killing the ball for three weeks," Jeter said. "It's
kind of hard to sit here and overanalyze things. If pitchers make their
pitches, they're going to get you out."
Damon said the rest of
the Yankees need to pick up the slack for Rodriguez. But with offense
at a premium, they'll be missing a dangerous bat during the next three
games.
Because World Series rules do not allow a designated
hitter in the National League park, New York must decide whether to put
Hideki Matsui in the outfield or on the bench.
"As productive as he's been for us this year, you don't want to lose his bat," manager Joe Girardi said.
Matsui
hit a go-ahead homer off Pedro Martinez in Game 2 and it might seem
tempting to start him in right field over slumping Nick Swisher. Slowed
by knee surgeries, however, Matsui hasn't played the outfield since
June 15, 2008, at Houston. He appeared in right field only three times
that year, all in April.
Matsui was stationed in right during batting practice and jogged after a few fungos, but it was hardly an intense workout.
"I
don't see any major issues," he said through a translator. "At this
point, the way I feel, I think it should be fine. I mean, again, you
really have to try and then see how it feels."
Speaking before his team took the field, Girardi didn't disclose his plans.
"I'm
going to look at some things today, watch a little bit, see how he
moves around and see if we think that it's physically possible for him
to do it," he said. "If we can't do it, we'll use him in a role to
pinch hit when we feel that he can be most valuable to us."
Manuel,
who acknowledged that several Phillies are fighting flu symptoms, did
announce a decision. He picked Joe Blanton to start Game 4 rather than
Lee on short rest or rookie J.A. Happ, who will stay in the bullpen.
First, the Phillies turn to Hamels, last year's World Series MVP against Tampa Bay.
A sure thing last October, the 25-year-old has struggled this season. He went 1-1 with a 6.75 ERA in three NL playoff starts.
"It's been a growing process," Hamels said. "I still have an opportunity to help this team out and win some big games."
Saturday
will be a big one, indeed. Nine of the last 10 teams to win Game 3 when
the World Series was tied 1-all went on to take the title.
Hamels
said that when he was growing up he emulated Pettitte, who set a major
league record with his 16th postseason win by beating the Los Angeles
Angels to clinch the AL championship series.
The 37-year-old Pettitte is 2-0 with a 2.37 ERA this postseason and 3-4 with a 3.82 ERA in 11 World Series starts.
"He doesn't seem fazed by anything," Jeter said. "He's pitched in every kind of big game you can think of."
Eight
years ago, the Yankees had some World Series luck on Halloween when
Jeter's 10th-inning homer capped a Game 4 comeback against Arizona.
That seesaw classic went back and forth for seven games. Does this Series feel destined to go the distance?
"It wouldn't surprise me," Jeter said.