Latest Mlb Playoffs Stories
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 8:19PM ET by Ed Price (RSS feed)
Filed under: MLB Playoffs

NEW YORK -- The
Yankees had just begun celebrating their 27th World Series title, and first in nine years (that's 63 in Yankee-drought years), when general manager Brian Cashman was asked about people saying his team bought a title.
"You can call us anything you want," Cashman said. "You're also going to have to call us world champions."
But if the Yankees' latest championship teaches us anything, it's that a big payroll is just money unless it's combined with smarts.
Here's what we can conclude off the 2009 postseason:
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 3:15AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Phillies, MLB Playoffs, World Series

NEW YORK -- This was not the type of World Series that the
Phillies are going to spend much time replaying in their minds. Not long after they watched the
Yankees celebrate on the field, taking the title that they won last year, the Phillies were already in full shoulder-shrug mode.
Regrets? Not really.
"They got the hits and we didn't,"
Jimmy Rollins said. "Simple. There's no science other than that. Get a hit or you don't. And they did."
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 2:10AM ET by FanHouse Newswire (RSS feed)
Filed under: Yankees, MLB Playoffs, World Series

NEW YORK (AP) --
Alex Rodriguez grabbed the World Series trophy and wouldn't let go.
After the
New York Yankees regained the title for the first time in nine years, after the podium presentation before a delirious crowd of 50,315 christened the new ballpark with a title in its first year, A-Rod was the one to carry the trophy back to the clubhouse. He raised it high, showing it off to the fans, a triumph for the team and for himself.
"Look, a lot of people ran the other way. My teammates and coaches and organization stood right next to me. And now we stand together as world champs," he said a few minutes later in the clubhouse, under a shower of Moet & Chandon and Armand de Brignac. "It's been a special year. I know it started rocky for us."
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 1:25AM ET by FanHouse Newswire (RSS feed)
Filed under: Yankees, MLB Playoffs, World Series

NEW YORK (AP) -- Hundreds of
Yankees fans poured into the streets of New York early Thursday to celebrate the team's 27th World Series championship, a party that extended uptown and began building hours earlier when the crowd at Yankee Stadium danced and sang to the music even before the first pitch.
Fans in Yankees jerseys and hats who watched the 7-3 victory over Philadelphia at sports bar Stout spilled out onto 33rd Street between Sixth and Seventh avenues early Thursday in Manhattan. Greeted by an NYPD van, several patrol cars with lights flashing and officers standing on street corners, they remained well-behaved.
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 12:13AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Yankees, MLB Awards, MLB Playoffs, World Series

Hideki Matsui was named the Most Valuable Player in the 2009 World Series after a record-setting performance in the decisive Game 6.
Matsui drove in six of the
Yankees' seven runs in their World Series-clinching victory, staking New York to an early lead with a two-run homer off of
Pedro Martinez in the second inning and falling a triple short of the cycle. His six RBI were the most by any player in a World Series clincher. Five others -- including Reggie Jackson -- held the record of five RBI previously.
"It's awesome," Matsui said through a translator of his achievement. "Unbelievable. I'm surprised myself.
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 11:50PM ET by FanHouse Newswire (RSS feed)
Filed under: Phillies, Yankees, MLB Playoffs, World Series

NEW YORK (AP) -- Paint the town in pinstripes! Nearly a decade after their dynasty ended on a blooper in the desert, the New York Yankees are baseball's best again.
Hideki Matsui tied a World Series record with six RBIs, Andy Pettitte won on short rest and New York beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7-3 in Game 6 on Wednesday night, finally seizing that elusive 27th title - the most in all of sports.
It was the team's first since winning three straight from 1998-2000.
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 6:30PM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Phillies, Yankees, MLB Live Blogging, MLB Playoffs, World Series

As if the first Game 6 in the World Series in six years wasn't enough to whet your appetite, it's
Pedro Martinez in the Bronx, Round 2, on Thursday night. Oh, there's a championship on the line as well as the
Yankees try for the second time to win their 27th championship.
Yes, there will be no shortage of drama as the Fall Classic returns to Yankee Stadium, and the
MLB FanHouse crew will be here to take you from the first pitch to the final out and beyond.
Will the Yankees celebrate or will the
Phillies deliver the best thing all of sports -- a Game 7? Join us after the jump, starting at
7:45 PM ET for a LIVE chat as we find out.
Posted: Nov 3rd 2009 6:00AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Phillies, Yankees, MLB Playoffs, World Series, Playoff Pulse
Playoff Pulse is our morning rundown of the night that was and the night that will be during the MLB postseason.
Looking Forward ...
Much will be made in the lead-up to Game 6 of another
Yankees starter --
Andy Pettitte -- going on three days' rest, assuming of course that that is officially announced Tuesday. Of course, there wasn't much of a choice for Joe Girardi.
The
Phillies do have some interesting options as they head back to New York. Game 6 starter
Pedro Martinez was the easy part, but you can't expect him to go all nine innings, so, especially if the Phillies have a lead, what happens then?
Posted: Nov 3rd 2009 2:23AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Phillies, MLB Playoffs, World Series

PHILADELPHIA --
Phillies hitting coach Milt Thompson didn't need any detailed analysis to get his players to understand what they needed to do differently against
A.J. Burnett.
The game plan might as well have consisted of one word: "Swing."
"Be ready to hit the fastball," Thompson told FanHouse after the Phillies walloped Burnett for six quick runs en route to a season-saving 8-6 victory in Game 5 of the World Series. "We let him get first-pitch strikes on us last time and he got his confidence and started getting his curveball over. Tag the fastball. That's all."