PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Cole Hamels and Scott Kazmir are ready for a rematch.
After pitching against each other in the World Series opener, the 24-year-old lefties are set to square off again Monday night in Game 5.
Hamels is 4-0 with a 1.55 ERA in four starts this postseason for Philadelphia, with 27 strikeouts and eight walks in 29 innings. He beat Kazmir and the Tampa Bay Rays 3-2 last week in Game 1.
“He really has everything going right now. So it feels like you have to be on your `A’ game to beat that guy,” Kazmir said. “So it feels like every pitch you throw is going to be a crucial pitch. You feel like you want to throw up zeros. And if you don’t, it’s going to be tough to get a win.”
Only two pitchers have earned five wins in one postseason, according to the Elias Sports Bureau: Francisco Rodriguez of the 2002 Anaheim Angels and Randy Johnson of the 2001 Arizona Diamondbacks.
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Hamels allowed five hits in seven innings last Wednesday night at Tampa Bay. Kazmir lasted six innings, giving up three runs and six hits.
“Baseball is not going to allow you to be perfect. This is just a game of skill and luck, all mixed in one,” Hamels said. “You just have to work with what you’ve got and go after it.”
Kazmir was drafted two spots ahead of Hamels in 2002, both out of high school.
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YA GOTTA BELIEVE, ACT II: The late Tug McGraw threw the final pitch the last time the Phillies won a World Series in 1980. Thanks to his son, country music singer Tim McGraw, he was remembered before Game 3 this time around.
Girls Club, Tim McGraw threw out the ceremonial first pitch Saturday night. He brought some of his father’s ashes along and at one point, reached into his pocket, took them out and sprinkled them on the mound. Tim also re-enacted his father’s trademark slap of his baseball glove across his thigh when he got a batter out.
Tug McGraw gained stardom as a reliever for the New York Mets, both during their 1969 World Series victory and again in 1973, when he was credited with coining the phrase, “Ya Gotta Believe!” as the long shot Mets made it back to the Series before losing to Oakland.
He became the Phillies’ closer and struck out Kansas City’s Willie Wilson for the final out in 1980.
Roberts threw out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 4, and fellow Hall of Famer and ex-Phillies pitching great Jim Bunning will do it before Game 5.
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NEW HAMMERS: Kevin Youkilis of the Boston Red Sox and Aramis Ramirez of the Chicago Cubs won the Hank Aaron Award in fan voting for the best offensive players in their leagues.
Ramirez hit .289 with 44 doubles, 27 home runs and 111 RBIs for the NL Central champions. Youkilis hit .312 with 43 doubles, 29 home runs and 115 RBIs for the AL wild-card winners.
Youkilis admitted it was tough being at the World Series but not playing in it. Champs last year, the Red Sox lost to Tampa Bay in Game 7 of the AL championship series.
“I heard I’d won the award and I was, ‘Oh, that’s great.’ Then they said you have to go the World Series and I was, ‘Oh, that’s not great.”’
Like Youkilis, Ramirez hoped to go farther in the postseason. The Cubs were chased in the division series by the Los Angeles Dodgers, leaving their fans in a funk.
“We won 97 games. Best record in the National League and we couldn’t pass the first round for the second year in a row,” he said. “What can I say? They’ve got a reason to be disappointed.”
mirez kidded, “I’m only 21 behind.”
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LONG LINEUPS: Every player on the Phillies and the Rays was introduced along the baselines before Game 4.
While everyone on the rosters got to line up for the first two games at Tropicana Field, only the starters were announced over the public-address system. There was no time to do it before Saturday night’s Game 3 because of the long rain delay at the start.
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RIGHT-FIELD SHUFFLE: Rays manager Joe Maddon went back to switch-hitter Ben Zobrist in right field Sunday night against Philadelphia righty Joe Blanton.
Zobrist was a surprise starter in the World Series opener against lefty ace Cole Hamels and went 1-for-3 with a single. Rocco Baldelli started Game 2 in right field for Tampa Bay and Gabe Gross got the call in Game 3.
“Just trying to look at everything, the matchups, etc.,” Maddon said. “I know the Blanton splits, but the lefties might hit for more power against him. Been wanting to get Ben out there a little bit more often, if possible. The fact that he’s our only extra really middle infielder weighs into the decision a bit. But I want to get him out there to get his bat in the lineup.”
In an unusual split, Blanton had better success versus left-handed batters this season than right-handers. Lefties had a .304 on-base percentage and .414 slugging percentage against him, while right-handers were at .353 and .444.
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INKY’S WATCHING: Count former Philadelphia outfielder Pete Incaviglia as a fan of this year’s NL champions.
Incaviglia hit 206 home runs during his 12-year major league career, but the free-swinging slugger might be best remembered for his role on the 1993 Phillies. He had 24 home runs and 89 RBIs in only 116 games, and was a perfect match in one of baseball’s most colorful clubhouses.
Now a manger in the independent Can-Am League, the player they called “Inky” hopes this year’s Phillies can win the World Series championship the ’93 team fell short of against Toronto.
“I’m rooting for the Fightin’s, absolutely,” Incaviglia said. “I spent the best year of my career here probably in ’93. The chemistry with the players, the city, the association with the city, the fans were great. When you win, you remember just about everything about that entire year. You remember where you were when you went to Atlanta. You remember all the goofy, crazy things you did.”
Incaviglia, who lives in Argyle, Texas, said he was confident the 1993 Phillies could win the World Series. Instead, they lost in six games to the Blue Jays on Joe Carter’s ninth-inning homer off closer Mitch Williams.
“I thought we were going to beat Toronto, I really did,” Incaviglia said. “I thought we were going to win the whole thing. We didn’t lose, they beat us.”
is involvement with a business group that allows a small stake of ownership in low-level pro sports teams.
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AP Sports Columnist Jim Litke, AP Baseball Writer Ben Walker and AP Sports Writer Dan Gelston contributed to this report.
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