2009 MLB Playoffs: Phillies at Rockies Game 3 Preview, Matchup & Odds

Last Updated on October 11, 2009 10:00 am by shah

Playoff Conditions

DENVER, CO – The snow in Colorado scrapped plans for Pedro Martinez’s first postseason start in five years.

Game
3 of the Philadelphia-Colorado playoff series was postponed a day
because of weather Saturday better suited for cross-country skiing.
That prompted a pitching switch by the Phillies, with left-hander J.A.
Happ going to the mound Sunday instead of the 37-year-old Martinez. The
Rockies are sticking with Jason Hammel.

Bet on Major League Baseball

The Phillies holed up in
their hotel Saturday with no plans of working out at the ballpark. The
Rockies summoned their players for a 90-minute workout inside Coors
Field.

Oddsmakers from online sportsbook BetOnline have made the Philliess -115 moneyline favorites for Sunday’s game against the Rockies. Current MLB Public Betting Information shows that 54% of more than 4900 bets for this game have been placed on the Phillies -115.

“We just want to keep ourselves on somewhat of a schedule,” manager Jim Tracy said.

Tracy
suspected this might not be a night for baseball when even his dogs
wanted to skip their morning walk. Major League Baseball agreed with
Tracy’s beagles, pushing back Game 3 of this NL division series to
Sunday night and Game 4 to Monday.

The playoff is tied at one
game each. Game 5, if necessary, will be played as scheduled Tuesday in
Philadelphia, without a day off for travel.

“I think it’s a very
wise decision,” Tracy told The Associated Press by phone. “You could
have something happen in weather like this where you could lose a
player for half a year in 2010. I don’t think that would be good for
anybody.

“There’s no question about the type of play that you
would see in this kind of weather vs. if you have better conditions
that they’re calling for Sunday. To be cold and wet and rainy and
sleety or snowy is completely different than cold and dry and clear.”

Surely any dog would know that. Well, at least Tracy’s.

“We
got up to take the dogs for a walk and when two beagles don’t want to
go outside, I don’t see how baseball players would see this as a real
good day to be playing,” he said. “It was snowing and 18 degrees, not
very conducive for baseball.”

With the day off Saturday, both
teams could go back to Game 1 starters on Monday, Ubaldo Jimenez for
Colorado and Cliff Lee for Philadelphia.

Happ, a rookie, said
Friday that he felt better after being knocked out of Game 1. He had
entered in relief and took a hard liner off his left leg in the seventh
inning.

Before the weather changed things, Martinez was set to
make his first postseason start since he won Game 3 for Boston at St.
Louis in the 2004 World Series.

The postponement allowed manager
Charlie Manuel to put Happ back into his rotation, two-fifths of which
he had burned in Game 2 Thursday in Philadelphia. Joe Blanton pitched
an inning of relief, allowing a run in Colorado’s 5-4 win, and Happ had
to leave when Seth Smith hit a hard liner off the lower part of his
left leg. X-rays were negative.

With Martinez on the mound, the
Rockies would have used their most potent lineup with Ian Stewart at
third base and Smith in left.

A cold front moved into Denver
overnight, dropping temperatures into the teens with record lows for
the date. Coors Field was covered with a thin layer of snow and ice
Saturday morning and flurries were expected to continue through the
night.

The National Weather Service said the cold front packed
more punch than expected and easily broke the record low for the date
of 25 degrees set in 1905.

“It’s not going to get as warm as we
thought. It got much colder than we anticipated,” meteorologist Eric
Thaler said. “We crushed the record: 17 today, 7:22 this morning. Up
in the foothills it’s even colder.”

Thaler said the updated
forecast called for temperatures in the mid-20s at game time, which
would have been the coldest, by far, for any postseason game.

The
lowest game-time temperature in the postseason was 35 degrees for Game
4 of the 1997 World Series at Cleveland between the Indians and Florida
Marlins. The Rockies’ coldest game was 28 degrees on April 12, 1997,
when they beat Montreal 12-8.

With the front moving out Saturday night, temperatures are expected to approach 50 on Sunday.

“It’s
still not going to be a delightful time tomorrow night,” Thaler said.
“Baseball is 70s and 80s and 90s weather. It’s not going to be that.
By the end of the game, it might be sneaking into the mid-to-upper 30s.
You’re still going to want to bundle up, but it will be warmer than
today.”

Bet on Major League Baseball

Posted: 10/11/09 10:00AM ET