Fear the Beard: Hamels has been great of late. |
The Rockies matched the Phils in hits (10), but Papelbon, after faltering, regained composure to record his 10th save in 10 tries.
With the win, the Phillies, winners of a MLB-best 6-straight games, passed the Marlins, losers of 4-straight and climbed out of last-place in the NL East, where they trail the first-place Mets by 6 1/2 games.
It was supposed to be the Season of Regret. It was shaping up to be a Lost Season. When the Phils fell to 11-23 on May 12th, after just over a month of regulation baseball, it was beginning to look like the predicted train wreck had indeed arrived. "Avert the eyes!" appeared on the face of anyone who was invested in the team, as well as those tall, lean left-handed World Series ring wearing Californians hoping to get off it before it sunk entirely.
Then, something unexpected happened. The hapless, the downtrodden, the meek rebuilding work in progress team did something they hadn't done since September, 2012.
They won six-in-a-row. Granted, they did it against some of the league's worst teams: Arizona, Colorado, Pittsburgh-- all losing teams. However, they still did it. And it's not over yet.
Like Yogi Berra said, "It ain't over 'til it's over." The current win streak doesn't give the Phils bragging rights, it merely gives them hope. However, hope is the one thing they and their fans couldn't afford to have a week ago.
A week ago was before Maikel Franco joined the major league club, most likely for the long haul. A week ago was before the Phils rallied for 3 in the seventh to comeback beat Arizona. A week ago they weren't a winning team at home. Now, after concluding a successful home-stand yesterday, they are.
Herrera's double was the winning hit. |
With two outs and two on, rookie center fielder Odubel Herrera (9th in the NL with 6 SB) slammed a 2-run double to deep right in the 6th, which plated both Franco and Utley to put the Phils up 3-1, a lead they would keep.
Hamels (4-3, 3.24 ERA) became a winner with 7 stellar innings in hitter-haven Coors field. He S.O. 7, walked only 1 and allowed just 1 run. Hamels has been focused and great of late. His bid to be traded to a title contender is certainly fueling him, but it's more than that. This is clearly a pitcher in his prime. His 2.46 ERA in 2014 was a career-best, and after a characteristically uneven start to the season, the 31 year-old is picking up where he left off. In his last 3 games, Hamels has allowed 4 runs in 22 innings for a 1.64 ERA.
"Cole's been really aggressive on the inside part of the plate," said manager Ryan Sandberg before the game. "And I think with that his stuff has even gotten better. Even hitting 94, 95 with his fastball. It makes his change-up better. I think he has overall made the hitters uncomfortable his last two or three outings. I see him really settling into the type of groove that he was [in] last year, Just a little bit earlier [this year]."
Lead-off hitter Ben Revere had 3 hits for the second-straight night and is now hitting .303 in May.
Aaron Harang has been spectacular. |
Tuesday night in Colorado, Aaron Harang will take the mound for the Phils. Harang is 4-3 so far this year. He has been a wonderful surprise. After finishing 2014 12-12 with a 3.57 ERA for Atlanta, but a poor 1.40 WHIP, the 37 year-old Harang has begun his 2015 campaign with the Phils in outstanding fashion. His 0.98 WHIP and 2.08 ERA each rank 6th in the NL.
When Harang steps on the mound at 8:40 PM EST Tuesday, the Phils will have every reason to hope for their seventh-straight victory. Hope, for the first time this year, is something they can go to sleep tonight enjoying and maybe, just maybe, something they can survive tomorrow with still in their grasp.
Great post. Am I allowed to get excited about these Phils, or is this just fool's gold ?
ReplyDelete