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The Running of the Bulls (NLCS)
Throneberry Fields Forever ^ | 16 October 2011 | Yours Truly

Posted on 10/17/2011 3:31:04 PM PDT by BluesDuke

The Milwaukee Brewers, with apologies to Dave Anderson, died with their boots. They were buried at the mercy of the St. Louis Cardinals’ seemingly bottomless bullpen. The officiating minister was a fellow who once seemed so burned out by baseball that he thought a ring on his cell phone while sitting in a Burger King, buried in the San Diego organization, informing him he’d been traded to the Cardinals, was a practical joke, at first.

Nobody’s laughing at the Rev. David Freese now. But everyone except citizens of Milwaukee might be laughing with the National League Championship Series’s most valuable player.

In St. Louis, of course, they may be ready to name a candy bar after him. Freese’s Pieces, anyone? It isn’t everyone who comes up from oblivion to out-slug Albert Pujols when Pujols is having the best postseason set of his career, or drives home a ferocious exclamation point on it Sunday night with a first-inning blast that merely starts the Cardinals en route a secured trip to the World Series.

Those who watched the wild ride of the Texas Rangers Saturday night, when they polished off the game but gimpy Detroit Tigers with an 11-5 blowout that may have had even the eyes of Texas gazing sympathetically upon Tiger fans and their heroes, may have watched Sunday night with a distinct feeling, as Yogi Berra might say, of déjà vu all over again.

Oh, some of the details were a little different. The Cardinals didn’t get anywhere near to hanging a single-inning nine-spot on the Brewers. They had to settle for spreading the first nine over the first three innings, sandwiching a single run in the second between two slices of four in the first and the third. And it only began with Freese’s first-inning launch.

Milwaukee starting pitcher Shaun Marcum, who’d been one of the Brewers leading blights approaching Game Six, had only one goal entering the game—with his Brewers down 3-2 in the NLCS, he wanted to see a seventh game, aces up. “I think I’m on the bandwagon with everybody in here,” he told reporters, “probably everybody in the country that wants to see Yo(vanni Gallardo) versus (Chris) Carp(enter) in Game Seven. I’m going to try to get the ball to Yo.”

The Cardinals, who’d already fractured the Brewers’ well-earned aura of home field invincibility when they won Game Two, probably wanted to see it over and done with as fast as possible back in Miller Park, without having even to think about a seventh game. And when the bottom of the ninth was over Sunday night, after Jon Jay went airborne to the center field wall to haul down pinch-hitter George Katteras’s drive and St. Louis closer Jason Motte swished Mark Kotsay on three straight pitches for game, set, and National League pennant, the Cardinals had buried the Brewers 12-6 and made an absolute shambles out of the Brewers’ vaunted home-field advantage.

As things turned out, Marcum could barely get the ball to Chris Narveson, never mind to Yo, after the Cardinals battered him for a four-run first. Freese had a lot to say about that. With two aboard after Lance Berkman singled home Jon Jay and Marcum himself gunned Pujols down at the plate on a hopper back to the box, Freese hit Marcum’s first service to him over the left field fence.

Narveson, in turn, could barely get the ball to LaTroy Hawkins after the Cardinals battered him for five runs in an inning and two thirds. Pujols merely opened those proceedings with a leadoff solo bomb. Freese merely continued them when, with Matt Holliday aboard with a one-out single, he sent a double to the rear end of right field to set up second and third. After a pass to Yadier Molina to load the pads, Nick Punto lofted a sacrifice fly to score Holliday. And Allen Craig, pinch-hitting for St. Louis starter Edwin Jackson, drove home Freese and Molina with a single up the pipe.

Did Jackson have it anywhere near as tough? Not exactly. But here was one of the hallmarks of the set—Tony La Russa hasn’t been afraid to reach into his bullpen for one of his so-far formidable bulls all postseason long, and he didn’t wait for the Brewers to wreak any more havoc than four runs out of Jackson before he reached for Fernando Salas.

La Russa has learned some of his lessons the hard way. He may have cost himself a World Series in 1990, when he refused to disobey his established book and bring in his Hall of Fame closer in waiting, Dennis Eckersley, earlier than the ninth inning, never mind that he had leads still to protect, and the Cincinnati Reds made him pay for those decisions with their unlikely Series sweep.

That was then, this is now. This time, La Russa didn’t wait for his orders from The Book. This time, he reached into a bullpen that seemed to contain a limitless supply of bulls only too ready, willing, and able to charge, and performed a double-duty dynamic, throttling the Brewers’ vaunted offence and exposing the Brewers’ wounding flaw, their porous defence.

This is why the Cardinals get to dance with the Rangers come Wednesday, why Pujols gets at least one more chance to win a World Series ring in Redbirds silks, and why the Brewers go home for the winter after their most formidable weapons, and this season’s most formidable home cooking, got neutered at the worst possible time. Their quest to become baseball’s first team to win pennants in each league will have to wait a little longer.

What Marcum, Narveson, and Jackson had in common was letting Game Six turn into the next best thing to sending slow-pitch softball pitchers up against both sides’ Paul Bunyans in the early innings. Hawkins turned in the first harmless inning of the Brewer staff’s night, thanks in big part to a sleek inning-ending double play that was probably the best piece of defence the Brewers played all LCS.

Corey Hart answered Freese and company to lead off the Milwaukee first with a 2-2 launch over the center field fence. Rafael Furcal answered Narveson’s top-of-the-second-opening back-to-back swishouts with a 1-0 deposit over the left field fence. Rickie Weeks opened the bottom of the second with an 0-1 take-that! blast off Jackson, and Jonathan Lucroy hollered and-that-too! with a one-out, 3-1 two-run launch pulling the Brewers to within a mere run.

After Pujols and company had their top-of-the-fourth fun, the Brewers answered with back-to-back one-out doubles by Jerry Hairston, Jr. and Yuniesky Betancourt off St. Louis reliever Fernando Salas in the bottom. But then came the top of the fifth, and the Cardinals went off to the races, in large part thanks to those gimpy Milwaukee gloves. Poor Hairston’s in particular.

Scion of a well-liked baseball family, Hairston’s Game Five boot–in which he saw Cardinal pitcher Jaime Garcia’s grounder take a hop and skip through his legs, allowing two Redbirds to score, right after his magnificent dive and run-saving grab of Punto’s slasher, back to back in the second inning–may yet go down in Beersville infamy. (Those wails of sympathy you heard wafting in from the outside were Red Sox fans remembering Bill Buckner and Cub fans remembering Leon Durham.) Now, desperately trying a fast shove to second baseman Weeks on Molina’s first-and-third, nobody-out hopper up the pipe, Hairston could only watch in horror as the ball sailed past Weeks, allowing Holliday home and Freese and Molina to third and second, respectively. One out later, pinch-hitting for Salas, Adron Chambers—--is it safe to call the Cardinals’ the no-name offence?--—sent Freese home with a sacrifice fly.

11-5, Cardinals. And the Brewers could only watch, wonder, and pray as La Russa yet again went to his pen so often you could hear Abbott & Costello calling the play-by-play, sort of:

ABBOTT: You really have to know something about big-league baseball, Lou.
COSTELLO: I know all about baseball.
ABBOTT: All right. Suppose there’s a left-handed pitcher pitcher pitching. Whaddya do?
COSTELLO: I put in a right-handed batter.
ABBOTT: Now, suppose there’s a right-handed pitcher pitching?
COSTELLO: I put in a left-handed batter.
ABBOTT: But now I trick you—I take out the right-handed pitcher and put in the left-handed pitcher.
COSTELLO: And I double-cross you. I take out my left-handed batter and put in a right-handed batter.
ABBOTT: Now, wait a minute. Where are you getting all those right-handed batters? COSTELLO: The same place where you’re gettin’ all those left-handed pitchers!
Milwaukee manager Ron Roenicke only wished he could have had Costello next to him on the bench. Not to mention the kind of bench depth that might have neutralized La Russa’s running of the bulls. Of the 162 outs the Cardinals had to record to nail down the NLCS, 86 were rung up by the bullpen. That’s more than half the Brewer outs in the set.

The Brewers, on the other hand, aided and abetted the bull run with seven errors in the final two games of the set.

And it may have been their final set with Prince Fielder leading the big boppers. He tried to be circumspect after it was all over, but he left hints enough that his next home silks would be emblazoned with something other than “Brewers” on the breast. They said it all season long and they said it again while the Cardinals celebrated their pennant, that the Brewers’ signing of Ryan Braun to a long-term deal may have made it difficult to impossible to keep Fielder on board.

“Playing here was awesome, I’m just glad I was able to have the amount of fun I had,” Fielder said, laconically enough for a man who knew the Brewers had been built to win it all this year while he was still part of it. “We gave it what we got and that’s all you can do. As long as I can play as hard as I can, I can sleep at night . . . I love these guys. I’ve been playing with most of ‘em since I was eighteen and this organization has been good to me.”

Pujols, too, can hit free agency after the Cardinals’ season ends, perhaps with a second World Series ring for their larger-than-life first baseman. He doesn’t have to think about it just yet. And it’s very likely that, should the Cardinals leave the Rangers behind this year, as the unlikely San Francisco Giants did last year, the Cardinals may have an easier time keeping their chief bombardier than the Brewers will theirs.

First, though, they’ve got a job to do, and it may not be as hard a job as anyone thinks. The Cardinals have been through worse times this season. Trading talented but troubled and troublesome outfielder Colby Rasmus to Toronto on 27 July got them roasted and basted.

Especially when the Cardinals looked as lame as they did for the month following the deal. But then they noticed the Atlanta Braves beginning to lose a grip on what was once a ten and a half game lead in the wild card race and figured they had something to play for, after all.

Make note of those whom the Redbirds obtained in the Rasmus deal. Jackson, relievers Octavio Dotel and Mark Rzepczynski, and outfield reserve Mark Patterson. Make note, too, of whom they obtained shortly thereafter. Arthur Rhodes, a two-decade relief specialist, signed as a free agent after the Rangers released him. Rafael Furcal, veteran shortstop, in a trade. And make note that every last one of them had more than a little something to do with the Cardinals being where they are now.

“That’s a crazy trade to make. But it paid off huge,” Punto says of the Rasmus deal. “There’s no way we’re here today without Dotel. Dotel was amazing. Rzepcynski.

Getting Furcal. Jackson. Arthur. We went after it. For the first month it didn’t look too good, because we just weren’t playing good baseball. I remember Tony saying, ‘Hey, this team is better.’ It was very true.”

The Brewers, like the Phillies in the division series before them, just learned that the hard way. It’s not unreasonable to think the Rangers, whose manager can be just as cunning as La Russa when he needs to be, may yet stand to learn a similar lesson later this week.


TOPICS: Sports
KEYWORDS: baseball; brewers; cardinals; nlcs
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And on to the Serious, as Ring Lardner might have said . . .
1 posted on 10/17/2011 3:31:06 PM PDT by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke

I’m still in mourning over the Tiger collapse.

Guess I’m rooting for the Rangers now.


2 posted on 10/17/2011 3:36:00 PM PDT by cripplecreek (A vote for Amnesty is a vote for a permanent Democrat majority. ..Choose well.)
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To: BluesDuke
I agree. The BrewCrew's pen was just too thin. Braun sure had a heck of a postseason, though.

But the Rangers will give the Cards all they can handle and then some.

3 posted on 10/17/2011 3:36:33 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: BluesDuke
Suppose there’s a left-handed pitcher pitcher pitching

An abundance of pitchers!!

4 posted on 10/17/2011 3:42:55 PM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi
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To: colorado tanker
. . .the Rangers will give the Cards all they can handle and then some.
They'll give each other all they can handle, unless somebody makes a very egregious mistake. You're talking about two teams with balance among the bats, very flexible and solid bullpens, who know what they're doing out there, and managed by men who actually can think on their feet and see the game about four or five batters and maybe two innings ahead. I say again---I don't expect this World Series to be a short Series by any means. Not with these two teams.
5 posted on 10/17/2011 3:46:55 PM PDT by BluesDuke (Another brief interlude from the small apartment halfway up in the middle of nowhere in particular)
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To: BluesDuke

Yep, great job Cards, screw Bud Selig. I still haven’t forgotten or forgiven the crap he had announced on 04/01/1970....


6 posted on 10/17/2011 3:51:07 PM PDT by bobby.223
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To: BluesDuke
The Rangers beat my team (The Angels) to get to the play-offs, so I'm cheering for them now - although I like The Cardinals.

Should be a great series.

7 posted on 10/17/2011 3:53:13 PM PDT by Churchillspirit (9/11/01...NEVER FORGET.)
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To: BluesDuke
The Cards are ascendant. They were 10 games or so behind the Phillies only a month ago, and beat my Braves in the last game of the season. They don't know that as a wildcard team they have no chance to win it all.

If nothing else, I have enjoyed a postseason without the insufferable Cranks.

8 posted on 10/17/2011 3:53:51 PM PDT by Jacquerie
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To: Zuben Elgenubi
Thanks for the editing catch---but all things considered, it kind of fits the Cardinals' bullpen depth, no?

If I'm the Texas Rangers' manager, I'm thinking---we'll have a handful against Chris Carpenter, sure, but we may get a bigger handful against the bullpen bulls. (Both teams have solid bullpens but my nickel has to go to the Cardinals' pen right now.) And I'll be telling my men, even against Carpenter if they should spot a flaw or a problem early, "Get your runs now---the bull market is about to open!" Get the Cardinal starters early and often, and as heavy as you can get away with before La Russa opens his bullpen, and the Rangers---who have the bats to do it---have a chance.

If I'm the Cardinals, I'm thinking the same way with a catch: the Texas starters haven't gotten deep into games this postseason either. And the catch in their bullpen this postseason is that they have a couple of guys who've been starters and were moved to the pen for the postseason, and if one of them is in shutdown mode the Ranger pen may be a tough nut to crack, too. If I'm Tony La Russa, I'm thinking---chase their starters, then jump the bullpen as soon as you can, neutralise those long men and make them waste their short men, since I've got the depth of short men to run them in and out and maybe neutralise the Rangers' bat versatility.

As I said, this one's going to be anything but a short Serious unless somebody makes a big mistake.

9 posted on 10/17/2011 3:55:18 PM PDT by BluesDuke (Another brief interlude from the small apartment halfway up in the middle of nowhere in particular)
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To: BluesDuke
I'm hoping for a long series, myself.

And you're right, it's no coincidence that those teams are managed by two of the best in the business, in La Russa and Washington.

10 posted on 10/17/2011 3:55:30 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: Jacquerie
They don't know that as a wildcard team they have no chance to win it all.
God help the Rangers if they make the same mistake the Phillies and the Brewers made and underestimate the Cardinals. I don't think the Rangers are that dumb, and I'll stand by my thought that this Series won't be a short one, but underestimating these Cardinals is probably just what Tony La Russa is hoping Ron Washington (usually one of the smarter managers on the block) and company will do.
11 posted on 10/17/2011 3:58:25 PM PDT by BluesDuke (Another brief interlude from the small apartment halfway up in the middle of nowhere in particular)
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To: BluesDuke

I thought the Rangers post-game celebration after beating Detroit was much tamer than last year’s, simply because they know the disappointment of not winning the Series last year...I don’t think they will take the Cardinals lightly at all.


12 posted on 10/17/2011 4:00:10 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: BluesDuke

I’m sticking my neck out here but I’ll say Cardinals in 5. The Rangers got hot at all the right times and it’s hard to keep that production up in critical situations. A lot of Texicans here at FR.


13 posted on 10/17/2011 4:02:48 PM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi
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To: BluesDuke

Found out an interesting statistic....the Cardinals only were .500 against left-handed pitchers, whereas the Rays and Tigers feasted against left-handers during the season, which probably went a long way towards why the Rangers’ starting pitchers haven’t been effective in the post-season, and may indicate they will be better against the Cardinals. Of course, you can throw all of that out the window during the post-season, but something just to keep in the back of your mind.


14 posted on 10/17/2011 4:04:31 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Zuben Elgenubi
The Rangers got hot at all the right times and it’s hard to keep that production up in critical situations.

You could say the same about the Cardinals.

The Rangers have a solid rotation, they play excellent defense, they have good long relievers, an excellent closer, they are solid all the way down the order, if one player slumps, the others will pick up the slack.....and they have speed.

Carpenter is the only one who I think can shut them down, so if the Rangers win Game One, that might just be it.

15 posted on 10/17/2011 4:07:46 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Jacquerie
I'm happy that we will have an all Republican electoral vote state series. How long has it been since that happened? Well, maybe the eight years Reagan was in office since it was particularly tough to find any Democrat electoral voting states.

Texas deserves this win, but they are going to have to earn it. Is there a better hitter in October than Albert Pujols? (Alright, Freese is better so far this year, but it is one season and it ain't over yet!)

16 posted on 10/17/2011 4:11:55 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: dfwgator
You are correct but it's just a feeling I have.

I'm not fleeing the thread, I must meet some friends for dinner. I'll check in later.

17 posted on 10/17/2011 4:18:27 PM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi
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To: Zuben Elgenubi

Then again, who would have thought the Giants would have become an offensive machine in last years’ series?


18 posted on 10/17/2011 4:25:51 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: BluesDuke
I think the 2011 World Series could become a Home Run Derby of sorts because while early this season it looked like the pitchers were WAY ahead of the hitting, right now both the Rangers and Cardinals will need a LOT of hitting to win.

Someone mentioned the Giants last year. What happened last year was the Phillies' streaky hitting going cold at the wrong time, and the Rangers had no really effective pitching outside of Cliff Lee. This year, at least the Rangers have good relief pitching, and they're going to need them to keep the Cardinals' sometimes frightening hitters at bay.

19 posted on 10/18/2011 7:15:50 PM PDT by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's economic cure)
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To: RayChuang88

What are the Cardinals pitchers going to do with the Rangers hitters? Remember, Cruz hits SEVENTH in the lineup. If they’re on, they are a veritable Murderer’s Row.

Tampa and Detroit had much better pitchers than the Cardinals’ staff.


20 posted on 10/18/2011 7:19:03 PM PDT by dfwgator
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