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Ruben Amaro Jr. will replace Pat Gillick as the general manager of the World Series champion Philadelphia Phillies on Monday.
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After a bungled playoff season, the Mets’ David Wright has one goal for 2009: finding a way to knock off the defending World Series champions.
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On Friday so many Phillies fans showed up for the team’s championship parade that they overwhelmed the public transit system and slowed the parade of the city’s baseball heroes.
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Charlie Manuel, the manager of the Phillies, has been belittled for his ill-fitting uniform, his avuncular nature and his unusual syntax. But he outfoxed everybody this season.
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Defeat has been regular and excruciating in Philadelphia, a city which has long viewed success, not as a sign of victory, but as an ominous warning that disaster was just around the corner.
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The Phillies captured their first World Series title since 1980 largely because Phillies Manager Charlie Manuel was a step ahead of Tampa Bay Manager Joe Maddon.
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Many fans who attended Game 5 Monday night could not make it back, giving away their tickets or offering them to the highest bidder.
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The skies over Philadelphia cleared Wednesday morning and all meteorological signs suggest that baseball weather — October’s version — will return in time for Game 5 of the World Series to resume.
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The Phillies' title hopes are on hold until Wednesday night as fans rue another sporting letdown, this time at the hands of Mother Nature.
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When asked, members of the team could not remember the last time the Phillies lost at Citizens Bank Park.
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For all of his achievements, Harry Kalas, the 72-year-old Hall of Fame voice of the Phillies, had not yet called the final out of a Phillies championship.
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The Phillies’ Ryan Howard homered twice and drove in five runs, and Joe Blanton pitched into the seventh inning, allowing two runs with seven strikeouts.
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The Phillies have won only one Series in more than a century of baseball, and had not been in the Series since 1993. That qualifies as excruciating pain.
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The Phillies consider Carlos Ruiz’s hitting a bonus as long as he continues guiding their staff, which had the National League’s fourth-best earned run average, toward a World Series title.
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As far as obscure numbers go, the Rays are now 1-2 in 2008 when they use the five-man infield. Surely that statistic will be useful some day.
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