
But let's not give all the gusto to Lee. Other than the two solo homers from Utley, Sabathia kept the rest of the team 2 for 23. Any time a pitcher walks out of the ballgame ahead 4 for 25 (only 16% were hits), he's pitched a fantastic game. Good pitching beats good batting. Utley was the only player who really had Sabathia figured out, and he was the only runs they would actually need. The main problem for Sabathia was the 3-2 counts that he continuously had to face. The Phillies are fastball hitters and they were able to foul off tough pitches until a fastball came.
One particular play was a great lesson for any ball player who watched it: Rollins had caught a ball very low to the ground in a double play attempt. Instead of making the obvious move straight to first for the double play, Rollins acted as if the play was a short hop into his glove. He then stepped on second knowing that Matsui would think he was forced out, and insuring the double play as Matsui would then stop and dwi

To my surprise, this game was one-sided, as Cliff Lee dominated the opposition. As mentioned before, Sabathia was still well above satisfactory and made some key pitches. It's unfortunate when one pitcher does as well as Sabathia did, but it is just a vapor compared to the hype brought on by the opposing pitcher. I didn't expect much more than three or four total runs in the whole game with one team beating the other by one run. I surely didn't expect a 6-1 complete game.
So what does game two have in store for us? That will be in my next entry.
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