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 Friday, October 15
Rogers stumbles again in postseason
 
Associated Press

  ATLANTA -- Everything was going so well for Kenny Rogers. The man who supposedly couldn't pitch in the big games did just that for five innings against the Atlanta Braves.

Kenny Rogers
Kenny Rogers is now 0-2 with a 10.26 ERA in five postseason starts.

Then it all went wrong in the sixth for Rogers and the New York Mets, who lost 4-3 Wednesday and trail the NL Championship Series 2-0 heading back to New York.

"I don't look at it as a terrible day, although I'm sure everyone else will," Rogers said. "We kind of fell apart there and we couldn't recover quickly enough."

Rogers had allowed six singles and two walks through five innings, using a tricky pickoff move that got baserunners and an effective sinker that led to two double plays to help New York hold a 2-0 lead.

Rogers even got in the Braves' heads after picking off Gerald Williams in the first inning and Andruw Jones in the second.

When Jones was on first base in the fourth, he didn't even take a lead. Instead, he lined up like a sprinter in the blocks, which was only appropriate in the stadium that held the track and field events during the 1996 Olympics.

But you can't pick off a player who homers. And it was the long ball that got to Rogers in the sixth.

CAN'T HIT AGAINST THE BRAVES
New York has scored three runs or less in 11 of 14 games this season against Atlanta (and lost of 11 of 14 as well):
Date Runs AB H Avg.
6/25 10 37 13 .351
6/26 2 34 7 .206
6/27 0 28 3 .107
7/2 0 30 3 .100
7/3 0 28 3 .107
7/4 7 31 11 .355
9/21 1 31 6 .194
9/22 2 32 8 .250
9/23 3 35 7 .200
9/28 3 36 9 .250
9/29 9 38 13 .342
9/30 3 38 6 .158
10/12 2 33 6 .182
10/13 3 32 5 .156
Total 45 436 100 .229

After Chipper Jones worked a nine-pitch walk with one out, Brian Jordan hit an opposite-field drive that bounced off the screen on the right-field foul poll, tying the game at 2.

"What are you going to do?" Rogers asked. "It was a changeup outside. He hit it out. I was surprised it went out, but he hit it solid."

Andruw Jones then lined a single into left field. Manager Bobby Valentine and pitching coach Dave Wallace conferred in the dugout and chose not to bring in Turk Wendell, who had been warming up most of the inning.

Rogers thought he was done. And he was, just as soon as Eddie Perez hit the next pitch into the left-field seats to give the Braves a lead they wouldn't give up.

"I had no reason to keep him in," Valentine said. "I left him in and it was absolutely the wrong move."

Valentine threw down his hat in the dugout and kicked it away in disgust. Rogers, who was forced out of New York two years ago because of his big-game failings, dejectedly walked off the mound.

"I felt like this was a must win for us," said Rogers, who might have known that only two teams have come back from a 2-0 deficit in the NLCS. "But this game is history. It is over and done with. You can't change that."

Rogers fell to 0-2 with a 10.26 ERA in five postseason starts. Unlike in 1996 with the Yankees, when Rogers was unable to go longer than three innings in any of his three starts -- games the Yankees eventually came back to win -- the Mets weren't able to take him off the hook with runs of their own.

They came close in the eighth when Edgardo Alfonzo's RBI double brought New York within 4-3. John Rocker struck out John Olerud and Robin Ventura with the tying run on second base to end the inning.

Olerud, Mike Piazza and Ventura -- the middle of the Mets' lineup -- went 0-for-10 and are 1-for-21 in the series.

"They pitched us well all year," Darryl Hamilton said. "They're not really doing anything different now. It's just magnified in the playoffs. We have to find a way to hit them."

And soon. The Mets need to win four of the next five games to advance to the World Series -- and a possible Subway Series matchup with the Yankees -- against a Braves team that has won 11 of 14 against New York this season.

"It's not over yet," said Alfonzo, the second baseman who made his first fielding error on a grounder all season in the sixth inning. "We have a lot of confidence in this team. It's just tough for us right now."

 


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Mets vs. Braves series page

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Stomach flu sidelines Rickey in mid-inning

Millwood is The Man in Atlanta