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30 October 2009 - 21H16
Phillies to rest ace Lee, tap Blanton for game four
Phillies manager Charlie Manuel announced Friday that he will use pitcher Joe Blanton, pictured on October 19, in game four of Major League Baseball's best-of-seven championship final rather than turn to Lee again on only three days of rest.
Cliff Lee of the Philadelphia Phillies throws a pitch against the New York Yankees in Game One of the 2009 MLB World Series at Yankee Stadium on October 28. Lee, who pitched the Phillies to victory in the World Series opener, will have to wait until game five to make his return against the New York Yankees.
AFP - Philadelphia southpaw Cliff Lee, who pitched the Phillies to victory in the World Series opener, will have to wait until game five to make his return against the New York Yankees.
Phillies manager Charlie Manuel announced Friday that he will use pitcher Joe Blanton in game four of Major League Baseball's best-of-seven championship final rather than turn to Lee again on only three days of rest.
"I don't think he's ready for it on three days' rest," Manuel said. "That's really pushing him because he has never did it before.
"I think you're taking a chance on really pushing him... and definitely we don't want to hurt him. We want him to stay strong when he does pitch."
Lee baffled a Yankee lineup that led Major League Baseball in scoring runs and hitting home runs in the opener, striking out 10 without surrendering a walk in a complete-game 6-1 rout.
"I like him in game five because we have an off day Tuesday and if it goes seven games, that would be on his bullpen day and he might be able to pitch," Manuel said.
The Yankees evened the Series against the defending champions at one victory each with a 3-1 home victory on Thursday but the scene shifts 150 kilometers southwest to Philadelphia for games three to five on Saturday through Monday.
Andy Pettitte, who helped the Yankees to four World Series titles, will take the mound in game three Saturday against Cole Hamels, last year's World Series Most Valuable Player who went 10-11 this season and is 1-1 in the playoffs.
Blanton, a 28-year-old American right-hander, went 12-8 with a 4.05 earned-run average this season. He has allowed six runs over nine 2/3 innings in this year's playoff run.
"Blanton fits for us," Manuel said. "Joe pitched last year in the World Series and he has got a little more experience."
Blanton was last year's fourth game starter in the World Series and helped the Phillies beat Tampa Bay 10-2 with his arm and his bat, becoming the first pitcher since 1974 to hit a home run in a World Series game.
The rules will change with the shift to the home of the National League champions as pitchers will be forced to bat, unlike the American League rules used at Yankee Stadium, where designated hitters replaced hurlers at the plate.





