PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Brad Lidge forgot about Albert Pujols’ mammoth playoff homer a long time ago. Maybe now that he’s had a perfect season, people will stop reminding him of it.
Lidge didn’t wake up in the middle of the night in cold sweats thinking about Pujols. Didn’t have constant flashbacks, either. No matter how often others mention Pujols’ go-ahead shot in the 2005 NL championship series, the Philadelphia Phillies’ All-Star closer is over it.
“I’ve been through such highs and lows that it’s helped give me good perspective and a good balance of where I’m at,” Lidge said recently in an interview with The Associated Press. “I actually look at it like it’s a positive thing. It happened and it’s made me mentally tougher and I think that’s helped me a lot this year.”
If it really made Lidge better, Philadelphia should send Pujols a thank you card because the Phillies wouldn’t be here without the hard-throwing righty.
ing with Game 1 on Thursday night in Philadelphia. That means Lidge gets another chance to pitch in the NLCS.
“I’d like to get back and win the World Series and have that be the last image in my mind for the postseason,” he said.
Lidge rejuvenated his career with his new team after Houston traded him last November. He was 41-for-41 in save chances during the regular season and converted two more in the first round against Milwaukee.
Dating to last season, Lidge has 46 straight saves, counting the last two against the Brewers. Only two relievers had a longer streak. Eric Gagne saved 84 straight for the Dodgers from 2002-04. Tom Gordon, currently on Philadelphia’s disabled list, saved 54 in a row for Boston from 1998-99.
Lidge already won the NL Comeback Player of the Year award last week and he’s a surprise candidate for MVP, though teammate Ryan Howard or Pujols might get that honor.
“He’s been our backbone,” second baseman Chase Utley said about Lidge. “We’ve relied on him a lot and you can’t ask for a better job.”
Lidge’s perfect season won’t matter much if he blows one now. Nobody knows that better than Mitch Williams. He was the closer the last time the Phillies reached the World Series in 1993. That series ended with Toronto’s Joe Carter hitting a homer off Williams in Game 6.
e able to have good stuff, a great mind, good defense and some luck. No one’s perfect, but he’s been as close to it as I’ve ever seen.”
Lidge established himself as an elite closer with the Astros in 2004, when he had 29 saves and a 1.90 ERA in his second full season in the majors. He was 42-for-46 with a 2.29 ERA in ’05. But after allowing that homer to Pujols, Lidge wasn’t the same. Houston still beat St. Louis to advance to the World Series, but Lidge lost two games to the Chicago White Sox during a four-game sweep.
He had a 5.28 ERA in 2006, when he saved 32 games in 38 chances. Last year, Lidge went 5-3 with 19 saves and a 3.36 ERA in 66 games.
Most people point to Pujols’ homer as the reason for Lidge’s struggles. But Lidge says it was merely a coincidence.
“Honestly, it was never related to that,” he said. “Mechanically, I was off. I was trying different things, throwing different pitches, adding different pitches. It was a compilation of things.”
Williams, now an analyst on local television, blames the media for blowing the homer out of proportion.
“I don’t think it had anything to do with what happened to him following that,” Williams said. “What happened to him following that is that everything he threw was down in the zone. When a hitter only has to look down, I don’t care what you’re throwing, you’re going to get hit.
rowing three different types of sliders and it’s making it tough on the hitters. Brad, in Houston, fell in love with his breaking ball and was throwing his fastball down.”
A knee injury in spring training forced Lidge to start his first season in Philadelphia on the disabled list. He used the time off to work on his control. The result was pinpoint accuracy.
Lidge was 2-0 with a 1.95 ERA, 92 strikeouts, 35 walks and only 50 hits allowed in 69 1-3 innings this season.
“I think last year I got in a groove,” Lidge said. “I didn’t throw well the first month and the last month, but the meat of the season, I felt back in place. I had a feeling this year no matter where I was going to be that I would do pretty well.
“Coming in here, the biggest thing was that I put in my head it’s do-or-die. Get these fans on your side, get your teammates on your side and let them know you’re going to work hard and do everything you can to play as good as you can.”
Philadelphia fans embraced Lidge from the first time he jogged out of the bullpen, and his incredible success has only increased his popularity. Lidge signed a $37.5 million, three-year extension in July, passing up a chance to test free agency.
“I think being accepted the way he was right away here helps,” Williams said. “He found out that if you give everything you got every time you walk out there, these people in Philadelphia will never have a problem with you.”
The “Wild Thing” would know.
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