Fearless Phillies stage rally to remember
Defending champions can wrap up pennant Wednesday
PHILADELPHIA -- As they stand just one win away from returning to the World Series, the defending champion Phillies are starting to prove that they aren't bothered during those instances when they are one out away from a potential postseason pitfall.
Exactly one week after scoring three runs with two outs in the ninth inning of the one-run victory that clinched the National League Division Series against the Rockies, the Phillies rekindled their patented poise and created yet another ninth-inning comeback that will find a lasting place in Philadelphia lore if this club is able to become the first National League team since 1976 to repeat as World Series champs. "A lot of teams say they play 27 outs, but I don't know if there is anybody that does it as well as we do," rejuvenated Phillies closer Brad Lidge said. "There isn't a ninth-inning deficit that we don't think we can overcome." Lidge's assessment was provided approximately 20 minutes after Jimmy Rollins had delivered the two-out, ninth-inning double that gave the Phillies the two runs they needed to claim Monday night's 5-4 win over the Dodgers in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series. But those who have watched Charlie Manuel's never-say-die Phillies over the course of the past few years are well aware that Lidge could have confidently made this assessment before the ninth-inning rally against All-Star closer Jonathan Broxton and the Dodgers, who had gone 78-3 when entering the ninth inning with a lead during the regular season. "It's one of those situations where I wasn't afraid," said Rollins, who delivered Broxton's 99-mph fastball into the right-field gap for the two-run, walk-off double that forced him to avoid the celebratory onslaught of Ryan Howard and every other Phillies player rushed toward him. "I went out there trying to wrap Jimmy up," Howard said. "It didn't work out too well. I ended up on the bottom of the pile." Whatever bruises might have been incurred during the postgame celebration proved much less damaging than the stress the Phillies would have encountered had they not preserved their bullpen's stellar performance and produced the ninth-inning dramatics that provide them a 3-1 advantage in this best-of-seven series. The 1996 Braves and 2003 Marlins are the only teams to overcome a 3-1 deficit in the NLCS. Dodgers outfielder Manny Ramirez and his then-Red Sox teammates erased 3-1 deficits in the ALCS before advancing to the World Series in 2004 and 2007.Lightning strikes twice
| Date | Series | How it was won | Inn. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10/11/1986 | ALCS Gm. 4 | Grich (CAL) 1B off Shiraldi (BOS) | 11 |
| NLCS Gm. 3 | Dykstra (NYM) HR off Smith | 9 | |
| 10/1/1998 | NLDS Gm. 2 | C. Jones (ATL) 1B off Mulholland (CHC) | 10 |
| NLDS Gm. 2 | Spiers (HOU) 1B off Hoffman (SD) | 9 | |
| 10/18/2004 | ALCS Gm. 5 | Ortiz (BOS) 1B off Loiaza (NYY) | 14 |
| NLCS Gm. 5 | Kent (HOU) HR off Isringhausen (STL) | 9 | |
| 10/5/2007 | ALDS Gm. 2 | Ramirez (BOS) HR off Rodriguez (LAA) | 9 |
| ALDS Gm. 2 | Hafner (CLE) 1B off Vizcaino (NYY) | 11 | |
| 10/19/2009 | ALCS Gm. 3 | Mathis (LAA) 2B off Aceves (NYY) | 11 |
| NLCS Gm. 4 | Rollins (PHI) 2B off Broxton (LAD) | 9 |
Mark Bowman is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

