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Posted: Wednesday November 4, 2009 10:19AM; Updated: Wednesday November 4, 2009 11:07AM
Tom Verducci Tom Verducci >
INSIDE BASEBALL

Five Cuts: Pedro, Pettitte headline intriguing Game 6

Story Highlights

This is the second Series matchup between two pitchers past their 37th birthday

Pedro Martinez will be pitching against the Yankees for the 40th time

Charlie Manuel has few pitching options that can hold back the Yankee offense

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Pedro Martinez will start in Game 6 for the Phillies after five days of rest.
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1. So the World Series comes down to this: the old and familiar. Stop me if you have heard this before: a Yankees team with Andy Pettitte, Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada and Mariano Rivera trying to get through Pedro Martinez to a world championship. Game 5 barely was over in Philadelphia when even Jeter, rarely reflective, immediately understood that the World Series is reduced to a most familiar confrontation, an old narrative well told.

"Me and Derek were talking about it in the clubhouse [Monday] night," Pettitte said. "Just, 'How strange is this?' After all the battles, with him being in Boston."

This is how Martinez defined the matchup: "Two old goats out there doing the best they can, and having fun with it."

Isn't this grand: Upon Game 6, Martinez, 38, and Pettitte, 37, will have pitched in exactly 1,000 career games between the two of them.

Martinez, pitching on his sixth day, has a slight advantage because Pettitte is throwing on his fourth day after a laborious 104 pitches in Game 3. Pettitte may have an impressive postseason record on three days of rest (3-1, 2.80), but the bulk of it was built when he was a much younger man. He hasn't pitched on short rest in 104 consecutive starts, and hasn't done it coming off a 100-pitch outing since he was 29 years old.

Only once before has there been a World Series matchup between two pitchers past their 37th birthday, and that was a low-wattage Game 1 matchup in 2004 between Tim Wakefield of Boston and Woody Williams of St. Louis that devolved into an 11-9 game. This one means either the 27th world championship for the Yankees or the best day in all of sports, Game 7 of the World Series.

Baseball has been a game in transition as young pitchers assert themselves on the other side of The Steroid Era and the careers of former "old goats" such as Roger Clemens, Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, Curt Schilling and Mike Mussina. This wave of young pitching is unmistakable. There have been only four seasons in history in which as many as 23 pitchers age 25-and-under made 30 starts. Two of them occurred in the pitching-friendly years of 1968 and 1969. The other two years with so many young starters were 2008 and 2009.

And yet even in this cresting wave, the postseason has proved to be no place for youngsters. Starting pitchers in their 20s are 5-10 this postseason, including 2-9 for those not named CC Sabathia. Starters in their 30s are 11-8.

In the elders they trust, and lucky for us. In Game 6 we get the next best thing to a Game 7, in every way. Pedro pitching against the Yankees for the 40th time. Pettitte pitching in a postseason game for the 40th time. The World Series decided, be it Wednesday or Thursday, at Yankee Stadium (old and new) for the 17th time. It's like a great bedtime story to a child. Tell me again, because it never gets old.

2. When you watch the Phillies play in this series you should have great empathy for what manager Charlie Manuel must go through late in games. He has so few pitching options that are obvious in trying to hold back the powerful Yankee lineup.

Philadelphia is fine as long as Cliff Lee is on the mound. The Phillies are 2-0 when he starts, 0-3 when he doesn't. The Yankees hit .217 with no home runs when Lee pitches, .262 with five homers when he doesn't. Guess what: Lee has perhaps only two or three innings left in what's been a 272-inning season, and Manuel only gets those innings if the Phillies get to a seventh game.

Game 5 was excruciating for Manuel. Basically, he was trying to find any way to get six outs before the Yankees scored six times. It was an ordeal -- down six, New York eventually twice brought the tying run to the plate -- but yet Manuel did not call on his closer, Brad Lidge, at any point.

After that game, in which Manuel said he was giving Lidge a "break," where can he use him in Game 6? Ryan Madson has thrown in each of the past four games. Scott Eyre hasn't pitched since Game 2. The Yankees have a .380 OBP against the Philadelphia bullpen.

Maybe you'll see Game 4 starter Joe Blanton in a big spot in the middle innings if Martinez does not give the Phillies much length. Maybe Chad Durbin is the guy Manuel wants to match up against Alex Rodriguez. Maybe Manuel has to use Madson in the eighth and ninth innings (he did get six outs three times this year), or maybe he regains trust in Lidge.

Whatever the case, Martinez looks like a five- or six-inning guy. "I would think what we want to do is drive up his pitch count, make him work," said Yankees outfielder Eric Hinske, which is exactly the battle plan the Yankees deployed against Pedro in his prime. Joe West is the home plate umpire tonight, so a small strike zone with these two teams hitting will mean tougher duty for the pitchers. (Strikeout, walk and slugging rates with West behind the plate all favor the hitter, compared to average rates.)

So if Manuel has to cover 12 to 15 outs with multiple pitchers out of his bullpen, the game is bound to get very interesting. He is a manager working without a script.

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