New Jersey Newspapers - August 20, 1980
Camden Courier-Post
Phillies romp to 6th straight
By Ray W. Kelly of the Courier-Post
PHILADELPHIA – The Phillies haven't had a lot to smile about this season, but that seems to be changing.
They hammered out 15 hits and grinned their way to a 7-4 victory over the San Diego Padres last night at Veterans Stadium, thus hiking their winning streak to six in a row to tie a season high set in June.
"It's a lot of fun when this club is scoring runs, because guys like myself get a chance to play," said outfielder George Vukovich. whose two-run pinchhit double helped send the visitors to their seventh consecutive defeat.
ALL YEAR, the players have wondered what would happen if they all got hot at the plate at the same time. Now, as they improved their record to 10 games over the .500 mark for the first time in 1980, they know. Brother, do they know!
Even the silent Larry Bowa broke his vow of mute hostility long enough to explain, "I'm not worrying about anything anymore." Not a bad attitude when you realize that he'd just driven in two crucial runs with a performance that included a pair of singles, a double and a stolen base.
Righthander Dick Ruthven apparently didn't worry about his lack of everything early in the game. He finessed the Padres before settling down to the job of pushing his record to 11-8. Reliever Tug McGraw made sure the door remained closed during the final two innings.
MANNY TRILLO contributed a game-tying homer in the fifth inning. It was his third in the past five games. After that, the Phils, who have homered in 10 consecutive games, never looked back.
"I was concerned in the first inning," admitted Manager Dallas Green. "I didn't know whether Rufus was going to get his act together. He had all kinds of trouble. But, he kept us tight when it counted."
Seeking comfort away from San Diego after dropping every bit of a seven-game homestand, the Padres made Ruthven pay for his early struggle to find himself by jumping out to a 3-0 lead.
GENE RICHARDS opened with a single to left field for the visitors, whose reputation as the second best base-stealing club in the league was not lost on Phillies' catcher Bob Boone.
Boone, who would later delight the crowd of 30,588 with a pair of clutch doubles, was hoping to keep the speedy Richards (46 stolen bases) honest when he threw a pick-off attempt past Pete Rose at first - base and into right field for a two-base error. Richards then scored easily on an infield out.
The dangerous Dave Winfield walked, moved to second on an infield out and scored as Jerry Mumphrey singled to left field. Mumphrey 's ensuing theft of second (162 for the Padres this year) enabled him to make it 3-0 when Luis Salazar singled to right.
BUT, THE Phils have regained their confidence since the disaster in Pittsburgh. A double by the sizzling Bake McBride ignited a second-inning threat. He scored handily when Bowa blooped a single into short right-center field.
Bowa would have also scored moments later, if Boone's blast into the right field corner hadn't bounced over the fence for the first of three Philly ground-rule doubles on the night.
As it turned out, both Boone and Bowa were stranded as Ruthven popped out to end the inning.
Unlike the Padres, however, the Phils have both the speed and bats to make their offense potent. Lefthander Bob Shirley discovered that in the third inning.
THAT'S WHEN Lonnie Smith beat out an infield single and then turned what looked like a perfect pickoff play into a steal of second, Smith outrunning a high, wide throw to second base by first-sacker Willie Montanez.
Smith, who extended his hitting streak to nine games, scored on Mike Schmidt's screaming liner into center field to make it 3-2. Trillo followed with a sizzling hit over the bag at third, an obvious double that might have scored Schmitty with the tying run.
A slick-fielding youngster along the left field foul line made a dandy if not misguided stop of the ball, however, and the runners were not allowed to advance. Shirley promptly walked Garry Maddox to fill the bases and got Bowa to ground out to end the rally.
WHEN McBRIDE tried for a shoetop catch in the fourth inning and failed, Salazar gained a triple on the play and scored on Craig Stimac's sacrifice fly.
Looking to continue his hot streak at the plate, Boone cracked a second double during the Phils' half of the fourth frame. Bob moved to third on Ruthven's sacrifice bunt and scored on Smith's fly ball to right.
Still down by a run, the Phils looked to perhaps their most consistent performer this season to ride to the rescue. Trillo, who owns the second best batting average in the league, responded with a game-tying homer into the left field bullpen in the fifth.
THE FIREWORKS continued as Maddox cuffed a ground-rule double down the first base line and scored on Bowa's ringing two-bagger into the left field corner to put the Phils on top 5-4.
Now, it was Manager Green's turn to have some fun. In the seventh inning, with two away, Bowa singled and stole second off reliever Mike Armstrong.
San Diego, playing the percentages, walked Boone intentionally to bring Ruthven to the plate. Green was ready, At least, he thought he was.
"If figured that if I sent George Vukovich out to the on-deck circle, the Padres might bring in a left-handed pitcher. Then, I'd counter with Keith Moreland," explained the manager with a grin. "I guess they figured that out, too."
THE PADRES decision to pitch to Vukovich added fuel to the fire. "It got me all keyed up," said the pinchhitter, who ripped a two-run double into the gap in left-center field.
McGraw, who has posted a dazzling 0.95 earned run average since coming off the disabled list in mid-July, nailed down the victory with two fine innings of relief.
The Phils try to make it seven in a row tonight as rookie Bob Walk goes up against former Philly righthander Rick Wise.
Dog days of summer fail to show up for Trillo
By Ray W. Kelly of the Courier-Post
PHILADELPHIA – All week long, Manny Trillo kept telling people that the last thing he wanted to think about was winning the batting title.
"Forget it! Talk to me about it in another month," he said with a smile at one point, dismissing the inquiries of yet another group of writers.
Then, the Phillies' second baseman took a peek at the updated statistics for the night and turned in surprise to his friend and teammate, Nino Espinosa, saying, "Two hits tonight and I only gained two points on my average!"
Both men looked at each other and broke into laughter. For Trillo, 1980 is the summer of contentment, a delightful phenomenon that can neither be ignored nor postponed.
For the truth is that, since 1975, when be began playing for the Chicago Cubs, Manny has traditionally roared through the early months of the baseball season like a guy jogging downhill.
Unfortunately, there was always that lefthand turn somewhere around, August that led him through Death Valley, over the Sahara Desert and into an area where the buzzards nested on his bat and waited for him to faint.
The Wrigley Field Swoon of the Cubs is an annual affair, something on the order of the swallows, flying back to Capistrano. Only, in this case, everyone including Manny dragged himself home each night knowing that the pennant race was just a mirage.
"You know me... the early bird," Trillo said with a laugh. "No problem early, then ... I don't know daytime baseball takes too much out of you. Because there were no lights at Wrigley Field, the players always had the feeling that sooner or later the sun would get to them. And, it did."
Anyone suspecting that such talk has the ring of an excuse better think again. For, in his first healthy season at the oasis called Veterans Stadium, Manny has posted a .325 batting average that is second only to Garry Templeton's .333 out in St. Louis.
"Both offensively and defensively, Trillo has done everything we've asked of him," said Manager Dallas Green last evening after watching Manny double and homer in the Phils' 7-4 victory over the San Diego Padres.
"He has been consistent, spectacular and steady," Green added. "He's as good a hitter now as he was in April." Trillo admits that a number of factors have contributed to his success this season, including the fact that he didn't run himself ragged playing three months of winter ball in his native Venezuela.
"I only played a month and a half this past winter. And, I feel stronger because of it," he said.
He feels stronger because he is stronger. A weight program last year helped. So have hamburgers, hot dogs and other assorted foodstuffs that the slick-fielding infielder now forces himself to eat after each game.
"I used to wait until I got home after a game to eat," he said, waving a thick burger in the air. "Now, I make sure I have something at the ballpark before I go home to eat."
When you're 164 pounds and shrinking, every calorie counts. And, nothing helps a guy's appetite more than actually being in a pennant race.
"I almost forgot what it was like in Chicago until I talked to Ivan DeJesus the other day," said Manny with a grin. "He told me he wants to get out like I did."
Manny's August batting stroke may instigate a riot in the Cub lockerroom if he keeps it up until September. Already people are talking to him about the hitting streak of Kansas City's George Brett.
Last night, someone recalled Brett saying that he was ia such a great hitting groove that be was actually able to see the stitches on the baseball as it was coming toward the plate. Was this also the case with Manny?
"If I was hitting .400. 1 might also see the spin of the ball." Trillo answered with a grin. "But, the only time I see stitches on a baseball is when I field it before throwing it to first base.
"Right now, I don't care who is pitching. I know I'm going to get at least one hit on the night. It's a different feeling. All I want to do is hit the ball hard. If I do that three or four times in a game and all of them are caught, that's fine with me. Just as long as I keep swinging good."
The other day. Trillo walked off the field after playing a doubleheader and glanced at a calendar that told him the dog days of summer were upon him. Funny, all he felt was great.
The Press of Atlantic City
Phillies Win 6th Straight
By Harry Hoffman, Press Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA – When the bats are humming a robust tune, then the Philadelphia Phillies can even afford a less than effective job from their starting pitcher.
Tuesday night at the Vet the Phils pushed their winning streak to six by ripping seven doubles while Manny Trillo homered and the Phils came from 3-0 down to beat the San Diego Padres 7-4.
Since both first-place Pittsburgh and second-place Montreal lost the Phils moved within 2½ games of the Pirates and a half game back of the Expos.
“I was certainly concerned about Rufus (starting pitcher Dick Ruthven) in the first inning. He was having trouble with all his pitches," Manager Dallas Green said.
"But then he settled down and kept us close and gave our bats time. That's what winning is all about."
Once again the bottom of the Phils' batting order made merry against the first two of three Padre pitchers. Larry Bowa contributed a double and two singles. The shortstop drove home two runs including the decisive tally that put the home team ahead to stay 5-4 in the fifth inning against southpaw Shirley, 9-9.
"I have nothing to say," summed up the quotable material from Bowa who went silent to the media about three weeks ago.
However rookie George Vukovich, who pinch hit a double to drive home a pair of insurance runs in the seventh* was ecstatic.
"I don't get too many chances to help out. So when I make one pay off it feels real good," the young outfielder said.
Ruthven struggled through seven innings while picking up his 11th victory to go with eight defeats. He gave up three hits and three runs in the first inning and another run in the fourth on a triple by Luis Salazar and a sacrifice fly.
But the Phils, who returned home last night after sweeping a five-game series against the Mets in New York, ground out the runs to keep their streak alive.
In the second Bake McBride, who has hit in 19 of the last 23 games and now has a .312 average, stroked a double and scored on a single by Bowa.
In the fourth Mr. Excitement, Lonnie Smith, singled, stole his 28th base, and scored on a single by Mike Schmidt.
After the visitors made it 4-2 in the top of the fourth, Bob Boone started the bottom of the inning with his second double of the night. He scored on a sacrifice fly by Smith.
Then after the first two Phils went out in the fifth inning, Trillo produced his third homer in the last five games to give him five for the season. It also was the 10th straight game in which the Phillies have bashed at least one homer. This one tied the score 4-4.
Garry Maddox followed Manny's blast to left with a ground rule double that bounced over the rightfield barrier. Then Bowa lashed a double to left and the Phils were in front to stay.
The six-game winning streak matches their longest f the season and puts them 10 games over .500 for the first time.
Tug McGraw pitched his way out of trouble in the eighth inning then retired the Padres in order in the ninth to earn his 13th save.
A single by Dave Cash and double by rookie Craig Stimac put Padres on second and third with one man out in the eighth. But then McGraw forced pinch-hitter Gene Tenace to hit back to the box for an easy out. He struck out Gene Richards looking.
Mets Try, But Can’t Make Green Eat His Words
Tales of Hoffman by Harry Hoffman
PHILADELPHIA – This past weekend in New York, the Philadelphia Phillies blasted to smithereens that old baseball bromide about not saying anything controversial about a team which can be posted on the bulletin board and used against you in the future.
The last time the New York Mets were at the Vet they whipped the Phils in three of four games. After the one game the Phils did manage to win, Manager Dallas Green was quoted as saying:
"In this game, the Mets played like the Mets and we played like the Phillies. When that happens, we should win."
The Mets almost choked on their cereal the next morning when those words jumped out at them from several local newspapers. That very moment they vowed to jam that quote down Green's throat when he next led the Phils into Shea Stadium.
The jamming process didn't work out too well. What actually happened was, for five straight games, the Mets played like the Mets and the Phils played better than they have all year.
Philly not only won all five games they annihilated the home team and probably placed Manager Joe Torre's job in jeopardy.
Thus, as the Phils prepared to open a nine-game homestand Tuesday night against San Diego they were a born again pennant contender continuing to befuddle the local media, and their fans with a bizarre Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde routine.
Despite being 3½ games behind first place Pittsburgh the Phils are only two games back in the all-important loss column and are even with the Expos in defeats.
In may sound ludicrous when looking back to all the pitching problems the Phils have struggled through this to this year appears pitching is Manager Green's strong suit as August prepares to fade into the growing pressures of September.
There was a time when Green was forced into all kinds of emergency moves to keep his club upright when injuries felled starting pitchers Larry Christenson, Nino Espinosa and Dick Ruthven along with relievers Warren Brusstar and Tug McGraw.
Green had to force-feed rookie righthander Bob Walk into a starting role before the youngster was properly prepared for the assignment. He had to jerk troubled Randy Lerch back and forth into the starting rotation because he needed bodies to handle the mound chores. He was forced to use Dickie Noles as a short man, long man and occasional starter. A couple of times he pulled his ace Steve Carlton late in games in which he had big leads just to save some strength.
No matter what his critics have to say about managerial prowess, the truth is during that couple of troubled months Green did a remarkable juggling job with his pitchers while keeping the Phils withing striking distance of the leaders.
Now the hard times seemed to have passed.
Christenson bounced back sooner than expected from arm surgery and rewarded his manager with six shutout innings in his first appearance against the Mets. Despite lacking an overpowering fast ball Espinosa has been proving he can get National League hitters out consistently with an assortment of junk and pinpoint control. Ruthven has come back strong to reassert himself as number two man behind Carton. And Lefty will be going for victory number 20 here Friday night against San Francisco.
The bullpen has been solidified by the return of both Brusstar and McGraw. After missing more than a year with arm troubles Bru has regained the sinker that had made him one of the toughest short inning relievers in the league. Meanwhile McGraw returned from a short stint on the disabled list and has been displaying better form than he possessed early in the season.
The Phils must still prove they can survive head to head competition with both Pittsburgh and Montreal in September. But at least their pitching is better prepared to face that task then it was in July or early August.
This team of mystery may yet write an unbelievable finish to this crazy quilt campaign.