Winston-Salem Journal
Subscribe!
|
 
SportsSports

Be Like Andy: Struggling Hamels will pitch against a boyhood hero

Be Like Andy: Struggling Hamels will pitch against a boyhood hero

Credit: AP File Photo

Cole Hamels (pictured left) of the Phillies will be pitching against Andy Pettitte (pictured right) of the Yankees tonight in Game 3 of the World Series.


»  Comments | Post a Comment

PHILADELPHIA

Cole Hamels grew up watching Andy Pettitte pitch important playoff games and still tries to imitate his icy glare on the mound.

When the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Yankees play Game 3 of the World Series tonight, Hamels will try to beat one of his boyhood heroes.

The young kid vs. the old October pro could be another classic pitching matchup.

"Andy Pettitte and Tom Glavine, those were the guys I emulated growing up when I was a little kid," Hamels said of two fellow left-handers yesterday. "They were always in the playoffs. I always got to watch them. They always pitched big games and they won.

"Andy Pettitte has been very effective for a long time, and he's always the kind of guy I've looked at and hoped to be one day in his shoes. Now I'm here and I'm going to be able to face him in the World Series and he's on the Yankees again. So it's just kind of a big game."

It's important for many reasons. The defending champion Phillies split the first two games with New York at Yankee Stadium. There's a chance they'll face Yankees ace CC Sabathia again in Game 4. That puts more pressure on Hamels to win Game 3. Pettitte is no slouch.

Pettitte has more postseason victories than any pitcher in major-league history. He has four championship rings. He got his 16th postseason win in the ALCS clincher against the Los Angeles Angels, breaking a tie with John Smoltz. It was his fifth victory to close out a postseason series -- another major league record.

Overall, Pettitte was 14-8 with a 4.16 ERA this year. He's 2-0 with a 2.37 ERA in three postseason starts.

Last October, Hamels looked like a young Pettitte. He went 4-0 with a 1.80 ERA in five postseason starts, helping the Phillies win the second World Series title in franchise history.

Hamels won MVP honors in the NLCS and the World Series. Those awards and his dominant performance raised expectations.

Hamels never was shy about discussing his lofty goals. His to-do list includes winning Cy Young Awards, starting All-Star games and pitching no-hitters. Hamels didn't check any of those off this season.

Instead he struggled from the start. A minor elbow injury slowed him down in spring training and he wasn't ready to go on Opening Day.

Hamels then ran into some bad luck in April when he was forced to leave early in two straight starts because of freak injuries.

Hamels finished 10-11 with a 4.32 ERA, numbers that resemble a journeyman pitcher; not someone who hopes to end up in Cooperstown. He hasn't come close to duplicating his postseason success this year, going 1-1 with a 6.75 ERA in three starts.

"I think that some of it was I wasn't able to locate as well earlier in the season," Hamels said. "Then it's the mental burden which can kind of wear you down week after week."

Recently, Hamels has looked visibly frustrated when things don't go right. In Game 1 of the NLCS at Los Angeles, Hamels showed up teammates Jimmy Rollins and Chase Utley when they failed to turn what should have been an inning-ending double play.

Perhaps Hamels could take a page from Pettitte, who doesn't let anything bother him. He pulls his cap low over his eyes, blocks everything out and has tunnel vision with the catcher.

"I just wanted to try to simplify it as much as I can and just see the mitt and try to see my ball going to where I want it," Pettitte said.

Terms and Conditions

Advertisement

 
 

Advertisement

Reader Comments

*Facebook Account Required to Comment. If you are not already logged into Facebook, please click the comment button to do so.

Deal of the Day

Advertisement

Ram Ramblings

Ram Ramblings

Check out John Dell's WSSU Ram Ramblings blog!

Dan Collins

My Take On Wake

Dan Collins gives you a more intimate look at Wake Forest sports.

App Trail

App Trail

Journey with Tommy Bowman and check the view from 3,333 feet.

Advertisement

Journalnow Sports Scoreboard

Advertisement

Media General
KewlBoxBoxerJam: Games & Puzzles
Games, Puzzles & Trivia
Blockdot: Advergaming and Branded Media
Advergaming and Branded Media

MyYahoo!