PHILADELPHIA -- If the Phillies were trying to get into Alex Rodriguez's head by hitting him with pitches, they're going to need to find another tactic, and fast. Something very strange has happened here in late 2009, and the inside of that particular head is no longer the mushy, insecure, vulnerable place it once was. Matter of fact, when Cole Hamels hit Rodriguez with a pitch in the second inning on Halloween night, the Yankees' All-Star third baseman and would-be centaur says, it had the opposite effect."Kind of woke me up a little bit," Rodriguez said early Monday morning, after his ninth-inning double had broken a Game 4 tie and moved the Yankees within one game of a championship. "Just reminded me, 'Hey, this is the World Series. Let's get it going a little bit.' "
FanHouse World Series Coverage: Price | Fletcher
Game 4: Yankees 7, Phillies 4 | Box Score | Series Home
Game 4: Yankees 7, Phillies 4 | Box Score | Series Home
Woe, ever since, to the City of Brotherly Love and its red-pinstriped defending champions. Rodriguez hit a two-run home run in his very next Game 3 at-bat. The Phillies hit him twice more in the four plate appearances that followed, including one of the most obviously intentional HBPs in World Series history by Joe Blanton in Sunday night's first inning, and Rodriguez punished them by knocking in the go-ahead run in Game 4.
"[A-Rod]'s the reason why we're sitting here. ... Without him, who knows where our road may have stopped?
-- Johnny Damon He now has 15 RBI in this postseason -- tying a Yankees team record set by Bernie Williams in 1996 and matched by Scott Brosius in 1998 -- and will look Monday night to collect however many more he needs to make the Yankees World Series champs. At this point, nothing he does will surprise his appreciative teammates.
"I wasn't here before this season, so I couldn't tell you how he was," Yankees Game 5 starter A.J. Burnett said. "But I know he's about as relaxed as I could have imagined him ever being. It doesn't matter what the situation is when he comes up. He's confident. He's loose. He's hitting the ball and he's having a blast. When he's doing that, it's kind of hard to beat him."
"Relaxed" is not a word we have come to associate with Alex Rodriguez, especially not in the postseason. There are few prominent athletes who have ever been so clearly and uncomfortably unable to get themselves out of their own heads in big spots. It has, until this past month, been a defining aspect of Rodriguez that he comes up small when it matters most.
But that was then, and this is a loony new now. This is a transformed baseball world in which Rodriguez has just spent seven months calling attention to himself for on-field reasons only. A world in which he could take Kate Hudson to the team picnic and somehow not have it be a fiasco. A world in which Alex Rodriguez, known choke artist, has a chance to define himself as a Yankee World Series hero.
"He's the reason why we're sitting here and we're in Philadelphia right now," said Johnny Damon, whose tough nine-pitch at-bat and base-stealing magic act put him on third base ahead of Rodriguez's double in the ninth. "Without him, who knows where our road may have stopped? He's the guy who's been driving us through the playoffs."
Rodriguez is in such a good spot now, he's actually able to think his way out of a funk. After a rough first two games of the World Series, he took a deep breath and reminded himself what he needed to do to succeed. Sounds simple, but so few things have ever been simple with this guy that you have to treat it as a major psychological breakthrough.
"I made an adjustment after the first two games," Rodriguez said. "I was expanding the strike zone, and that's something I didn't do against Minnesota or Anaheim [in the first two rounds]."And so here we are. A season that began with a spring-training revelation that the man regarded as the game's greatest player was, in fact, a steroid cheat may well end with that same man redeemed in ways no one ever imagined. As a hero. And a champion. And it may all be because he got things straight between the ears.
"Yes, I feel more relaxed," he said. "This year has been a unique year for me. Obviously, after spring training and all the stuff that I've been through, you have nothing to lose. For the first time in my career, I've felt like an underdog."
If that's the mental trick a man who makes $30 million a year needs to play on himself to get things clicking, then the team that signs those paychecks will gladly take it. But for Rodriguez, it was likely far more simple.
"When I get a good pitch to hit and I put a good swing on it," Rodriguez said, "good things usually happen."
Amazing, what a guy can accomplish when he gives himself over to the obvious.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 6)
11-02-2009 @ 2:07AM
chuckie said...
I love it. Your guy gets drilled for the third time and your bench gets the same warning as the ones who threw at him. Like I always told my kids when I was coaching, "Get back at them by making them lose.....that hurts worse."
Way to go, Alex and the Yankees...hope the Phils win Sunday so the thing can be won in Yankee Stadium!
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11-02-2009 @ 2:28AM
Michael said...
yawn.. Its amazing they don't win every year since they can but the best players the game has to offer!
11-02-2009 @ 10:33AM
James said...
chuckie, did you also tell your kids that if they want to hit like A-Roid that now would be a good time to start using steriods?
11-02-2009 @ 11:51AM
lacoqui77 said...
I think it better if the beat them in their own home!!! Way to go A_ROD!
11-02-2009 @ 1:28PM
partsman358 said...
so sick of hearing how the yankees buy a ws. they play within the rules of the game & can't help it if other teams are too Cheap to spend money to make their clubs better. plus dont here all you complaining when the yankees write there luxury tax check to baseball and all the other clubs benefit from it so stop your whining losers and complain to your owners who chose to put the money into there pockets instead of putting a quality team on the field. oh and 1 other thing jimmy rollins must be a profit cause he said they would split in yankee stadium and sweep in philly. only thing he got wrong was who was gonna get swept. next time shut your big mouth JROLL
11-02-2009 @ 2:29AM
Michael said...
BUY*
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11-02-2009 @ 2:38AM
Dennis said...
======================================================= Oh Yankee haters... you are so sad. Your jealousy is obvious. It would be a lie to say that the Yankees don't pay for their players, but most teams would do the same if they had owners who were as financially and businees savvy as the Steinbrenners. Just because you have franchises who don't put enough money into their teams don't take it out on the team who does. NUFF SAID.... ======================
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11-02-2009 @ 7:26AM
khopes123 said...
thank you....you said it...
11-02-2009 @ 11:48AM
Chris said...
Exactly. If you have an issue with your team not being able to pay for enough quality players, take it up with them, or try to get the rules changed. Don't blame the Yankees for playing by the rules.
11-02-2009 @ 12:08PM
Dale said...
Don't complain when you can't afford to go to the stadium when they continue to raise the price of tickets.....must be real proud buying all those championships and your playing using steriods to win!!!
11-02-2009 @ 3:09AM
Randy Stemm said...
The Yankees are proving right now why they are baseballs best team!! I appreciate Minnesota Twins manager, Ron Gartenhire's thoughtful comments that the Yankees play the game the way it was meant to be played. They play the fundamentals of the game WELL!! This team has played unselfishly, and has treated their opponents with respect and class!! Clearly if any team is going to beat them, they will have to outplay them in the fundamentals. If opposing teams commit mental gaffes, the Yankess make them pay for it!! Opposing teams do not get away with any lacklustre play against this Yankee team!! Keep up the great play!! This ole' Yankee fan from the great Land of Lincoln couldn't be any prouder. Thanks specifically to Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera!! Your Christian character and demeanor are not only a great witness to your faith, but the inner peace you guys both possess is evidence of the peace of mind God has given you on the inside. Thank you for the humility you demonstrate!!
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11-02-2009 @ 12:11PM
Dale said...
Randy...
You do mean the best bought team right?????
11-02-2009 @ 3:43AM
hrayray21 said...
OH great, the Yankees bought another chapionship! Or soon will. Boycott baseball til there is a salary cap. It is the only major sport without one. I stopped watching the game years ago and won't watch it until there is a cap.
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11-02-2009 @ 9:19AM
Anna said...
who cares if u watch or not you ....go yankees
11-02-2009 @ 9:34AM
Smoothoperator said...
salary caps are socialism @ its best. It provides for mediocrity. As a business owner, I hire only the best workers that money can buy.. This allows my business to be the best in its field, it provides handsomely for all involved. socialism or communism (they are the same thing) only provides for shared failure and misery. Socialism historically has ALWAY FAILED. It always will. Mr. Steinbrenner is a savvy successful business man the Yankees are the best team in baseball, this is a perfect example of HOW to be a success.... The rest of baseball are N.Y. Yankee wannabees.
11-02-2009 @ 10:36AM
tyrekyoung said...
If you haven't watched baseball in five years why on earth are you sitting at your computer blogging and reading articels on the game
11-02-2009 @ 10:41AM
James said...
smoothoperator......salary caps are 'socialism' ??, LOL. Baseball is the only sport in North America WITHOUT a salary cap.
Do you realize that the yankees infield A-Roid, Jeter, Cano and Tex make more a year that most ball clubs entire payroll!
11-02-2009 @ 11:16AM
Miriam said...
fans provide the income for a budget....so if you team has not budget...stands to reason they don't have a fan base....food for thought...the yankees have the biggest budget and yr after yr they sell the most seats...rain or shine, slump or slug, the fans are there
11-02-2009 @ 11:28AM
trashcityman said...
Short memory, Miriam: before they won the World Series in 1996, the Yankees were regularly pulling less than 30,000 per game. Their typical fan is a complete front-runner. The Dodgers got bigger crowds this year.
11-02-2009 @ 4:35AM
Rick said...
I love the game and I was one of the Phillies fans that wanted to see the Yankees in the WS. I have the utmost respect for the Yankees as a franchise and know that to be the best you should beat the best. The Phillies have been a class act as MLB Champions. If I didn't hate the Yankess going in I hate them now. I don't hate them because they're up 3-1 on my team. I hate them because Joe Buck and Tim the A-hole Mc Carver make me hate them. These guys broadcast the game like their on the Yankees payroll. Tim Mc Carver is a disgrace to broadcasting with his biased tirades and bumbling comments about how wonderful the Yankees are and how the Phillies do everything wrong. The other night he was babbling about the Phillies baserunners running on the pitch and Charlie Manual made it clear the next day he don't know what the hell he's talking about. If he did he'd be coaching or a manager somewhere. The fact is he don't. He thinks he's some kind of pretty boy baseball guru but we all know better don't we. It was unbearable to enjoy the game the last two nights because of the favoritism. A journalist he's not and I thought at one point Joe Buck and him were gonna kiss. It doesn't matter if the Phillies win it or not. They represent MLB baseball as it's premier embassador and have since winning the Series last year. I'm still hoping the Phillies can find a way to pull it out. Just so those two pretty boy fairies have to eat their words. Front runners in the highest degree. Buck both of you!
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