News Photos
Search Advanced Sign in / Register fans
 
WORLD NEWS    
 

Advertisement

Yankees beat Phillies and win 27th World Series
Yankees' eight seasons without championship finally came to an end
Associated Press
Page 15
2009-11-05 12:00 AM
+ Enlarge This image
New York Yankees's Andy Pettitte holds up the championship trophy after Game 6 of the Major League Baseball World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday, in New York, New York. The Yankees won 7-3.
Associated Press
+ Enlarge This image
The New York Yankees celebrate after the ninth inning of Game 6 of the Major League Baseball World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday, in New York, New York.
Provider
The New York Yankees have won the World Series, beating the defending champion Philadelphia Phillies 7-3 in Game 6 behind Hideki Matsui's record-tying six RBIs.

Andy Pettitte won the clincher on Wednesday, pitching the Yankees to their elusive 27th championship and first since 2000.

Matsui homered, doubled and singled, and tied Bobby Richardson's 49-year-old record for RBIs in a Series game. His two-run homer off Pedro Martinez in the second inning started the Yankees on their way.

Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez helped the Yankees wrap up a successful season in their first year at the new US$1.5 billion Yankee Stadium.

For Chase Utley and the Phillies, it was a frustrating end to another scintillating season. Philadelphia fell two wins short of becoming the first National League team to repeat as World Series champions since the 1975-76 Cincinnati Reds.

Ryan Howard's sixth-inning homer came too late to wipe away his World Series slump, and Phillies pitchers rarely managed to slow Matsui and the Yankees' machine.

In a fitting coincidence, this championship came eight years to the day after the Yankees lost Game 7 of the 2001 World Series in Arizona on Luis Gonzalez's broken-bat single off Rivera.

Jorge Posada, Jeter, Pettitte and Rivera - now with their fifth World Series rings - came up together through the minor leagues and were cornerstones for the four titles in five years starting in 1996.

Now, all over 35-years-of-age, they have another success to celebrate. And surely they remember the familiar parade route, up Broadway through the Canyon of Heroes.

For George Steinbrenner, it was the seventh championship since he bought the team in 1973. The Yankees had talked about winning another for their 79-year-old owner, who has been in declining health.

New York wasted its chance to wrap things up in Game 5 at Philadelphia, then set its sights on clinching the World Series at home for the first time since 1999.

New York's eight seasons without a championship was the third-longest stretch for the Yankees since their first one, following gaps of 17 (1979-95) and 14 (1963-76).

Reggie Jackson's three homers in Game 6 against the Los Angeles Dodgers made the Yankees champs in '77. On this November night, Matsui delivered a sublime performance at the plate.

Playing perhaps his final game with the Yankees, Matsui hit a two-run homer off Martinez in the second inning and a two-run single on an 0-2 pitch in the third.

A slumping Mark Teixeira added an RBI single in the fifth off reliever Chad Durbin, and Matsui cracked a two-run double off the right-center fence against lefty J.A. Happ.

A designated hitter with bad knees, Matsui came off the bench in all three games at Philadelphia. Still, he had a huge Series, going 8 for 13 (.615) with three homers and eight RBIs. His go-ahead shot off an effective Martinez in Game 2 helped the Yankees tie it 1-all.

Bobby Richardson was the only other player with six RBIs in a World Series game, doing it for the Yankees in Game 3 against Pittsburgh in 1960. Richardson had a first-inning grand slam and a two-run single in the fourth.

Matsui's big hits built a comfortable cushion for a feisty Pettitte, who shouted at plate umpire Joe West while coming off the field in the fourth. Still, Pettitte extended major league records with his 18th postseason win and sixth to end a series.

The 37-year-old left-hander, pitching on three days' rest, became the first pitcher to start and win the clincher in all three postseason rounds. He beat Minnesota and the Los Angeles Angels in the AL playoffs.

Pettitte lasted 5 2-3 innings, allowing three runs, four hits and five walks. Joba Chamberlain and Damaso Marte combined for 1 2-3 innings of scoreless relief before Rivera secured the final five outs.

 
Have Your Say :

We welcome your comments on this and other stories. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name and suburb/location. We also require a working e-mail address – not for publication, but for verification only.

 
Post your feedback
 
 
 
More WORLD News Stories
Dog sleds, raw seal meat and biting cold await G-7 finance ministers   2010-02-05
Toyota says Prius had brake design problems   2010-02-05
Haiti business community seeks to help rebuild economy   2010-02-05
As Toyota troubles mount, Congress wants answers   2010-02-05
Google, U.S. intel to team up to fight cyberattacks   2010-02-05
Deutsche Bank bounces back with strong 2009 profit   2010-02-05
U.S. stocks take breather after two-day rally   2010-02-05
U.S. dollar little changed in Asia   2010-02-05
Asian stocks drop after Wall Street resumes slide   2010-02-05
Oil prices down in Asian trade, stay above US$76   2010-02-05
Child slavery in Haiti is common and legal   2010-02-05
Sri Lanka leader says Tamils should work with gov't   2010-02-05
Pandas leave U.S. for new homes in China   2010-02-05
Talks unlikely   2010-02-05
Cambodia to draft new law against acid attacks   2010-02-05
Oil discovery   2010-02-05
Obama's aunt readies fresh fight   2010-02-05
Speedy vehicle plows into Nevada casino; 2 dead, 8 hurt   2010-02-05
Suns end Nuggets hot home form   2010-02-05
Milito gives Inter slight advantage   2010-02-05
 
01     02   03   04   05   06   07   08   09   Next   >
 
To search for articles form the past seven days, Click on ARCHIVES
  7day free
 
 
TOP

©2009 Taiwan News All Rights Reserved.