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NEW YORK(AP) The ho-hum catch that tickled his teammates, the behind-the-back snag that looked so easy.
Cliff Lee
could have been clowning around with his kids. Hard to believe it was Game 1 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium, of all
places.
Lee outdueled CC Sabathia,
Chase Utley
homered twice and the
Philadelphia Phillies
kept rolling through October, beating New York 6-1 on a misty Wednesday night in the opener.
''To be honest I really never have been nervous in the big leagues. This is what I wanted to do my whole life,'' Lee said.
The defending champion Phillies shut down
Alex Rodriguez
& Co. in the first Series game at the new billion-dollar ballpark. Trying to become the first NL team to repeat since Cincinnati
in 1975-76, the Phils' 17-4 postseason run is the best in league history.
Big Red Machine, meet the New Red Machine.
''We have confidence. We know we have a good team,'' Utley said.
Game 2 is Thursday night, with wily
Pedro Martinez
pitching for the Phillies against jumpy A.J. Burnett.
Lee bamboozled the Yankees with a spiked curveball, deceptive changeup and his usual pinpoint fastball, pitching a six-hitter
while striking out 10 without a walk. He became the first since
Don Newcombe
in 1949 to fan double digits with no walks in a Series game.
The lefty blanked the Yankees until a run scored on shortstop
Jimmy Rollins
' throwing error in the ninth inning. Lee improved to 3-0 with an 0.54 ERA this postseason.
He really seemed to enjoy himself, too.
''Game time is the time go out there and have fun and let your skills take over. It's kind of weird. Boils down to confidence
and trusting your teammates,'' he said.
If Lee felt any anxiety in his Series debut, facing the team that led the majors in wins, homers and runs, it didn't show.
And if the Phillies were supposed to be intimidated by the pictures of
Babe Ruth
and all the Yankees greats on the giant videoboard, it didn't happen.
Pitching in short sleeves on a blustery evening, Lee worked a wad of gum while he worked his spell over the Yanks.
Lee did a lot of the work himself. When
Johnny Damon
hit a little popup to the mound, Lee merely stuck out his glove hand to the side and caught the ball as if it were an apple
falling from a tree.
''You know, it was pretty cool,'' Lee said. ''It was 15 feet in the air. Pretty simple catch. It came right to me.''
That play left the Phillies laughing. Later, he made a nifty, behind-the-back stop on
Robinson Cano
's one-hopper. He threw the ball to first and shrugged. Easy.
That play stumped
Ryan Howard
.
''I was like ... wow. Am I missing something? It was so nonchalant, so casual,'' the Phillies first baseman said.
Said Lee: ''I try not to go over the edge and be cocky.''
Howard reprised his NL championship series MVP performance, doubling twice and driving in the final run. Barely looking like
the 2-to-1 underdogs they are, the Phillies were in such control that many fans left before the final out.
Lee beat his good friend and former
Cy Young
teammate Carsten Charles Sabathia in the first game at this ballpark back in April, and got this chance after the Phillies
traded four minor leaguers to Cleveland in July to get him.
Rodriguez went hitless and struck out three times in his Series debut.
''I did keep it simple today. He kept it even more simple,'' Rodriguez said. ''He threw the ball well. When a guy comes out
like that, you tip your cap and move on. He made some pretty good pitches.''
Derek Jeter
did the most damage against Lee, doubling and singling twice.
''He was great. He's been pitching like that the whole year, the last two years, the postseason,'' Jeter said. ''I don't think
it's much of a surprise.''
So Game 1 went to the Phils. But as Yankees manager
Joe Girardi
observed, ''One thing, he can't pitch every day.''
Playing in their 40th World Series, and first in six years, the Yankees went quickly. ''As the game went on, it got quieter,''
Utley said.
Utley's solo home runs in the third and sixth innings gave Lee all the support he needed.
Raul Ibanez
hit a two-run single in the eighth and
Shane Victorino
added an RBI single in the ninth.
The Phillies' may have been a bit overdue - in their only other October meeting, the Whiz Kids from Philadelphia got swept
by the Yankees in the 1950 World Series and totaled just five runs.
Even though he's an All-Star, Utley was an unlikely candidate to rock Sabathia, the MVP of the ALCS. Utley was 0 for 7 with
five strikeouts against the big Yankees lefty going into the game.
Utley won a nine-pitch duel with Sabathia in the third, pulling a 95 mph fastball barely over the right-field wall. The shot
was the first by a left-hander allowed by Sabathia at home this year.
Utley struck again in the sixth, sending another 95 mph heater deep into the right-center field bleachers.
Phillies manager
Charlie Manuel
had little to do except watch from the top step of the dugout. Girardi was busier, bringing in five relievers after Sabathia
left following the seventh inning with Phillies ahead 2-0.
First lady Michelle Obama and Jill Biden were among the crowd of 50,207, as were a few specks of fans dressed in Phillies
red. Yankees owner George Steinbrenner watched from an upstairs box - he has yet to see his team win in the palace he built.
After a rocky postseason, umpires faced just one tricky call and got it right. They huddled after Rollins trapped a popup
and threw to first, and correctly ruled it a double play.
NOTES: Besides Lee and Newcombe, the only pitcher to strike out at least 10 without a walk was
Deacon Phillippe
in the first Series game in 1903, STATS said. ... Utley set a postseason record by safely reaching in his 26th straight game,
breaking a tie with Baltimore's
Boog Powell
. ''I didn't know that happened,'' he said. ... Before Utley, the only other left-handed hitter to homer twice off a lefty
pitcher in a Series game was
Babe Ruth
in 1928 off
Bill Sherdel
of the Cardinals. ... The last six teams to win the Series opener won the title. ... Rodriguez fanned three times in a game
for the first time since July 30. The last pitcher to strike him out three times in a game was
Cole Hamels
of the Phillies on May 24. ... The Yankees went 64-36 in Series games at their old park.
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