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Phillies make history by suffering 10,000th
setback
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — It was the kind of
game Phillies fans had seen thousands of times before.
Now, make it 10,000 times.
Bad starting pitching, brutal relief and
hardly any hitting. Oh, and lots of booing.
Loss No. 10,000 came Sunday night when
Albert Pujols hit two of the St.
Louis Cardinals' six homers in a 10-2 rout of Philadelphia.
By the ninth inning, with the outcome
inevitable, the boos turned to cheers. Fans in the sellout crowd of
44,872 thumbed their noses at the dubious mark, standing and
applauding. One held up a sign that read: "10,000 N Proud" as NL
MVP Ryan Howard struck out to end the
game.
"I don't know too much about 10,000 losses,"
Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said. "I try and concentrate on the
wins."
From Connie Mack Stadium to the Vet and
Citizens Bank Park, and at ballparks all over, the Phillies have
cemented their place as the losingest team in professional sports.
The franchise, born in 1883 as the Philadelphia Quakers and later
called the Blue Jays in the mid-1940s, fell to 8,810-10,000.
Next on the losing list: the Braves, with
9,681 defeats. It took them stints in three cities (Boston,
Milwaukee and Atlanta) to reach that total. Not even those lovable
losers, the Chicago Cubs, come close at 9,425.
And for those counting, it was the 58th time
the Phillies have lost by that exact 10-2 score, the Elias Sports
Bureau said.
The Phillies avoided the milestone for three
games, but the Cardinals — the team that caught them 43 years ago
for the NL pennant in one of the biggest collapses in baseball
history — beat Philadelphia one more time.
Earlier, a banner hung from the upper deck
that read "10,000 is not in the Cards." Turns out, it was on this
night.
So the franchise that won only one World
Series championship (1980) in 125 years, has 14 seasons of 100-plus
losses, and once lost 23 straight games, now has the ugliest number
of them all in a city way too familiar with losing.
After combining for 23 runs and 37 hits in
the first two games of the series, the Phillies were held in check
by Adam Wainwright (8-7). He threw
seven shutout innings against the highest-scoring team in the
National League.
Philadelphia, with a 46-45 record this year,
fell five games behind the NL East-leading New York Mets. But these
Phillies have long grown tired of answering questions about
10,000.
"It doesn't matter one way or the other to
all the guys in here," All-Star center fielder Aaron Rowand said. "The guys in here
weren't responsible for 10,000 losses, so what does it really
matter to us?"
Most fans seemed rather detached from the
number. After all, what's one more loss from a team responsible for
countless more than 10,000 broken hearts?
"It's just another one as far as I'm
concerned," said 81-year-old fan Ty Ayars, of Swedesboro, N.J.
"They need pitching and until they get good pitching, they're not
going to win a World Series any time soon."
Fans don't have to be old enough to remember
the 1950 "Whiz Kids" to have suffered. Take fan Andrew Haines, 25,
of Pitman, N.J., who still can't shake the image of Phillies closer
Mitch Williams allowing the game-ending homer to Joe Carter that
won the 1993 World Series for the Toronto Blue Jays.
"It's hard to be a Phillies fan," said
Haines, wearing a Phillies cap. "They're the butt of a lot of
baseball jokes, and having 10,000 losses isn't helping any."
The Phillies blew their chance to push back
No. 10,000 until their seven-game West Coast road trip when even
the die-hards would have trouble staying awake to watch it.
The Cardinals scored twice in the first
inning against Adam Eaton (8-6). Scott Rolen, the former fan favorite
turned No. 1 target of the vicious boo birds, had an RBI in the
third for St. Louis.
Pujols hit a two-run shot in the fifth that
was followed by Chris Duncan's 17th of the year for
a 6-0 lead. Pujols, Juan Encarnacion and Adam Kennedy each homered in the
seventh to make it 9-0.
Ryan Ludwick hit a solo shot in the
eighth for a 10-0 lead.
Philadelphia broke up the shutout in the
ninth when Michael Bourn hit his first major
league homer and Chase Utley added an RBI double.
Every true fan knows of the infamous 1964
collapse when the Phillies held a 6 1-2-game lead with 12 to play,
only to blow the NL title by losing 10 straight. The Cardinals won
the pennant by one game.
St. Louis manager Tony La Russa said he had
the ball from the final out and would auction if off, with the
money going toward his animal rescue foundation.
"That ball is history," he said.
Never known as lovable losers, cursed, or
even affectionately as bums, the Phillies had a big head start in
earning this pitiable total: They played their first game on May 1,
1883, against the Providence Grays. Of course, the Quakers lost 4-3
to Old Hoss Radbourn and started 0-8. They went on to lose 81 of 98
games in their inaugural season.
It hasn't been all bad for the Phillies.
They haven't lost 100 games since 1961, and they won the NL East
three straight years from 1976-78. Philadelphia lost the World
Series in 1983 and 1993, though it hasn't returned to the playoffs
since Carter's homer.
"I've been involved in over 2,900 of them,
but I've also seen a lot of wins during that time," longtime
Phillies broadcaster Harry Kalas said.
Notes: Philadelphia activated
RHP Tom Gordon from the 60-day disabled
list and optioned RHP Brian Sanches to Triple-A Ottawa.
... All four of Pujols' two-homer games this year have come on a
Sunday.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed.
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