Alex Gallardo / Los Angeles Times
Dodgers starting pitcher Hiroki Kuroda will take the mound Sunday with the Dodgers trailing the Philadelphia Phillies, 2-0, in the best-of-seven NLCS.
Dodgers' pitchers have to answer Phillies' intimidation
Alex Gallardo / Los Angeles Times
Dodgers starting pitcher Hiroki Kuroda will take the mound Sunday with the Dodgers trailing the Philadelphia Phillies, 2-0, in the best-of-seven NLCS.
Pitching inside would be a good start.
The fifth pitch, Russell Martin was knocked down by a Brett Myers fastball.
The eighth pitch, Manny Ramirez was tilted backward by another Myers fastball.
The ninth pitch, Ramirez was greeted with a Myers fastball that sailed three feet behind his head, braids included.
Nine pitches, three messages, and the Philadelphia Phillies couldn't have been more clear if they had painted it across Joe Torre's brow.
We don't fear you. We won't bend for you. What are you going to do about it?
After nearly four hours Friday, with their hitters waiting and their coaches wondering, Dodgers pitchers meekly submitted an answer.
Nothing.
They would do nothing about the missiles that nearly decapitated their veteran leader and their young cornerstone.
They would do nothing about a night's worth of inside hardballs that made some unsettled Dodgers hitters look as if they were trying to stand in a canoe.
While the Dodgers rarely seemed comfortable in the batters box, the Phillies could have hauled a La-Z-Boy up there -- three hits by a pitcher, two runs scored by a weakling catcher, nine guys up in one inning, 10 guys the next, nobody moving, everybody swinging.
With an 8-5 victory, the Phillies not only owned Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, they also owned home plate, they owned the Dodgers' heads, and they soon could own their season.
Only one way to buy it back.
Beginning today in Game 3 at Dodger Stadium, somebody in that cheery, fraternity mixer of a home clubhouse needs to get mad.
Somebody needs to pitch inside. Somebody needs to get tight.It could be chilly, it could be windy, but somebody needs to make a Phillies hitter sweat.
This is not about headhunting, it's about win hunting.
This is not only about earning the respect of the Phillies hitters, it's about earning respect in your own room.
While Dodgers hitters won't talk openly about it, they were not pleased that Chad Billingsley did not throw inside Friday, and are quietly hoping that Hiroki Kuroda is listening to their vibe.
They've seen enough Phillies fastballs sailing under their noses. They want somebody else to squirm.
"They kept pitching us hard and inside all night," Matt Kemp said Friday night, shaking his head.
Asked whether Dodgers pitchers should retaliate, he sighed and said, "It is what it is. But if we played the game like they played the last two games, we'd be all right."
The eighth pitch, Manny Ramirez was tilted backward by another Myers fastball.
Nine pitches, three messages, and the Philadelphia Phillies couldn't have been more clear if they had painted it across Joe Torre's brow.
We don't fear you. We won't bend for you. What are you going to do about it?
After nearly four hours Friday, with their hitters waiting and their coaches wondering, Dodgers pitchers meekly submitted an answer.
Nothing.
They would do nothing about the missiles that nearly decapitated their veteran leader and their young cornerstone.
They would do nothing about a night's worth of inside hardballs that made some unsettled Dodgers hitters look as if they were trying to stand in a canoe.
While the Dodgers rarely seemed comfortable in the batters box, the Phillies could have hauled a La-Z-Boy up there -- three hits by a pitcher, two runs scored by a weakling catcher, nine guys up in one inning, 10 guys the next, nobody moving, everybody swinging.
With an 8-5 victory, the Phillies not only owned Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, they also owned home plate, they owned the Dodgers' heads, and they soon could own their season.
Only one way to buy it back.
Beginning today in Game 3 at Dodger Stadium, somebody in that cheery, fraternity mixer of a home clubhouse needs to get mad.
Somebody needs to pitch inside. Somebody needs to get tight.It could be chilly, it could be windy, but somebody needs to make a Phillies hitter sweat.
This is not about headhunting, it's about win hunting.
This is not only about earning the respect of the Phillies hitters, it's about earning respect in your own room.
While Dodgers hitters won't talk openly about it, they were not pleased that Chad Billingsley did not throw inside Friday, and are quietly hoping that Hiroki Kuroda is listening to their vibe.
They've seen enough Phillies fastballs sailing under their noses. They want somebody else to squirm.
"They kept pitching us hard and inside all night," Matt Kemp said Friday night, shaking his head.
Asked whether Dodgers pitchers should retaliate, he sighed and said, "It is what it is. But if we played the game like they played the last two games, we'd be all right."
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