Lights-out October illuminates Lidge's potential
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By Jayson Stark, ESPN.com
KISSIMMEE, Fla. -- If there was no such month as October, Reggie Jackson would
have no nickname.
If there was no such month as October, it's possible that no one would even
know that Bill Mazeroski ever owned a bat.
And if there was no such month as October, Brad Lidge might still be as top
secret as a CIA operative in Ghana.
But fortunately for all those men -- not to mention all of us -- October
exists. And guys like this are living proof that the coolest thing about
October is that it changes lives.
Sometimes forever.
Now it wouldn't be quite accurate to say the whole world was watching last
October when Lidge was stalking out of the Houston Astros' bullpen to fire off
12 1/3 of the most unhittable postseason innings ever pitched (20 strikeouts,
only five hits, and an insane 0.73 ERA).
But that, of course, was simply because he wasn't permitted to fire any of
them for the Yankees or Red Sox.
And you won't have to think too hard to recall that those devious Yankees and
Red Sox spent the first couple of weeks of October trying to prevent most of
America from verifying that there was even any such thing as the National
League playoffs.
But word apparently leaked out, because over the winter Lidge actually got
recognized in a mall in Colorado. Which might not have happened to any
athlete in history who didn't once wear shoulder pads.
Then this spring, there has been even more dramatic proof that something has
changed in Lidge's life:
It used to be that when people asked him to sign autographs, they handed him
a ball with about 20 other names on it. Now, though, he's noticed, they're
"wanting me to sweet spot those balls." Which means, among other things, that
you can probably find them on eBay right now. (Just do us a favor and don't
check till you finish reading this.)
So apparently, Brad Lidge is now officially on baseball's map. Which is the
kind of thing that can happen to a guy who:
● Struck out more hitters last season (157)in relief than 22 starting pitchers
who pitched more than 200 innings.
● Struck out more hitters, in fact, than all but 14 starting pitchers in the
entire National League -- even though every one of the starters who beat
him pitched at least 70 more innings than he did (94 2/3).
● Struck out 14.93 hitters per nine innings -- the highest whiffing ratio in
history by anyone who pitched as many innings as Lidge.
● Became the fourth pitcher in history (with at least 50 IP) to punch out more
than 40 percent of the batters he faced (42.6) -- joining Eric Gagne in 2003
(44.8), Billy Wagner in 1999 (43.4) and Armando Benitez in 1999 (41.0).
● Entered games with 30 runners on base -- and allowed exactly two to score
(best percentage in baseball).
● And, in a related development, allowed those poor hitters who came up with
men in scoring position to hit an absurd .101.
That, ladies and gentlemen, is what you call a dominating season.
Which is cool and all that. But it has just about nothing to do with why Lidge
is now considered one of the elite closers in baseball.
No, for him to take the elevator to the Gagne-Wagner-Mariano Rivera floor of
his profession, it took something else entirely -- October.
We know there are many Americans who sincerely believe that the Astro who did
the most to elevate his profile last October was a guy named Carlos Beltran.
That, however, would be incorrect.
Because the actual answer would be Brad Lidge. Seriously.
True, Beltran did use October to earn himself enough money to buy the
Netherlands. But if we're talking sheer profile-raising, "Beltran was already
known as a good player," Astros manager Phil Garner said. "But I don't think
too many people knew about Brad Lidge until he got in the playoffs. Then, they
began to know."
What Lidge did in those playoffs had to be witnessed to be fully comprehended.
So if you were busy immersing yourself in some sort of Yankees-Red Sox fog
bank back then, here's some of what you missed:
● After allowing a run in his first appearance of the postseason (when Garner
brought him in to save Game 2 of the NLDS, with one out in the seventh
inning), Lidge pitched six more times, faced 32 more hitters and gave up
precisely one hit, while striking out 17.
● He got eight outs in his first outing of the playoffs, got nine outs in his
last outing and wound up averaging more than five outs per postseason
appearance -- something even the great Mariano has done just once in eight
years as a closer.
● In the NLCS, against a Cardinals lineup that led the National League in runs
scored, Lidge pitched eight shutout innings (more than any reliever had ever
pitched in any LCS without giving up a run). The Cardinals' not-so-grand
offensive totals: 14 strikeouts, one hit (a single).
● And, in a 24-hour span that summed up his 166-pitch October, Lidge threw a
stunning 67 pitches in Games 3 and 4 of that NLCS -- and became only the
third pitcher in postseason history to rack up saves of six outs or more on
back-to-back days. (The others: Goose Gossage and Byung-Hyun Kim.)
Had he done that stuff in that Yankees-Red Sox series, there probably would be
about seven books on the stands about him as we speak. But the people who saw
that performance with their own eyes don't need to read a book to know it was
as spectacular a stretch of October dominance as you'll ever behold.
"You'll sometimes see pitchers who don't want to be out there, but it's not
often you'll see a hitter who wants no part of it," Astros GM Tim Purpura said.
"But when Brad was out there, we saw that a lot from our playoff opponents.
Guys walked up and didn't want to be there."
"It was unbelievable to watch," said one of Lidge's bullpen mates, Brandon
Duckworth. "We just sat and laughed. You feel sorry for whoever is coming up
now."
"I don't think you should ever take away from what anybody has done in any
other era," said Garner, who played in postseason games closed by
Rollie Fingers and Goose Gossage. "But what Brad did stands up there with any
modern closer in a postseason setting."
When Lidge looks back on these games now, he can still feel the energy rush of
the most important games he'd ever pitched: "I've never felt anything like the
adrenaline surge in those games," he said.
He can still see Scott Rolen walking up there with the tying run on base in
Game 3 of that NLCS -- and striking out. He can still see that parade of Braves
he faced in an 11-hitter marathon in Game 2 of the Division Series.
He still agonizes over the only extra-base hit he gave up in the entire
postseason -- an Adam LaRoche double in that game. He still second-guesses
himself for getting too slider-happy that day.
"I can remember those two games against the Braves and those four games
against the Cardinals like they were yesterday," Lidge said. "I can still
remember, pitch by pitch, what we did with every one of those hitters."
But what people remember about him from those games was that suddenly, here
was a guy just 27 years old, in only his fourth month as a closer -- and
already, he had that Smoltz-Gagne-Rivera kind of aura. Already, his manager
seemed to be maneuvering through every game to try to get Brad Lidge to the
mound.
"To me, he always had that," said the previous legendary closer in Astros
history, Billy Wagner (now a Phillie). "He just was never in that [closer's]
role before. But we always knew he had the personality and the ability that it
took to do what he did. Everyone knew that if he was in the game, the hitter
had no chance."
Well, everyone in Houston knew it, obviously. You wouldn't have seen the
Astros trade away two closers in eight months -- Wagner and Octavio Dotel --
if they didn't know Lidge had the look of a guy who could be as big a monster
as either of them.
But it takes the bright lights of October for local heroes to turn into
national luminaries. And once those lights shine, it's often impossible to
find an "off" switch.
As the buzz around Lidge grew in that postseason, though, Lidge wasn't aware
of anything but the intensity of the games his team was mixed up in night
after night.
"My feeling is, you don't want to step outside the moment and think about
things as they're going on," he said. "You stay in the moment."
But not everybody gets to live out that moment. And now that Brad Lidge has
lived his, the bigger question is: Where will that moment propel him next?
All around baseball, scouts and GMs gush about his stuff and presence --
particularly for a guy who was drafted as a starter and had never made even a
minor-league relief appearance until 2002. However, it's amazing how many of
them then raise a "but" that has nothing to do with that stuff or presence:
"But," said one AL GM, "it will be interesting to see what the effect is of
all those pitches and all those innings."
In an age of micromanaged three-out specialists, Lidge seemed to tumble right
out of an '80s time warp. He had 21 regular-season appearances last year of
more than three outs. Then came October, when he got six outs in two of his
seven outings, eight outs in another and nine in another.
"The only thing that's scary to me about him," Wagner said, "is that he's
young and he won't say no. If they ask him to throw three, four innings, he'll
try to do that. You can't do that and have any longevity as a closer."
Ominously, the Astros' setup crew looks from afar to be even thinner this
spring than it did last fall. Lidge's primary setup man, Dan Miceli, took the
free-agent yen and headed for Japan. So the Astros will audition pitchers such
as Chad Qualls, and even veteran nomads Russ Springer and Dave Burba, for that
role.
But in the meantime, other clubs report Houston is actively shopping for
eighth-inning types. And that search has as much to do with the man who will
pitch the ninth inning as it does with whoever winds up pitching the eighth.
"I know two things about Brad," Garner said, as he ruminates on his closer's
future. "I honestly don't know how he can pitch any better than he did last
year. And I know we can't use him the same way."
Garner took a lot of October heat for "over-using" Lidge. But the manager
said: "I don't think, for that short a period, it was a problem. But to put
that much stress on a guy for two or three years -- that could be a problem.
That's why I say we have to do something different. I don't think any pitcher
could hold up if he were used like that."
So if they do in fact know that, and they do in fact deal for bullpen help,
and they do in fact limit Lidge's workload, then that should leave only one
question: How good can Brad Lidge be?
In many cases, when you're talking about people this talented, the answer has
a lot to do with how good they want to be. So it should tell us something that
Lidge knows exactly which rungs on the ladder he's trying to climb toward.
"There are three guys I want to be like," he said. "Wagner, Smoltz and Rivera.
Those three guys are incredible. They're business-like on the mound. They're
not flashy, but they're as dominant as any closer can be. And they expect to
have success, but they don't jump around and do back flips every time they save
a game."
Lidge also understands something just as important about what it will take to
be thought of the way Wagner, Smoltz and Rivera are thought of: He can
emulate their demeanor. He can aspire to their kinds of numbers. But, he says,
"you can't compare yourself to guys who have had careers like that until you've
had a career."
So now, Lidge knows, it's time to walk their walk -- for a lot of years.
He had himself an amazing season. Then he had himself a neon-light postseason.
But now comes the hard part: Doing it again -- only better. As if that's even
possible.
It would be hard to be better than 157 strikeouts in 94 2/3 innings. But Lidge
says it isn't about strikeouts or stats, anyway.
"Your teammates don't care about that," he said. "What they care about is if
you're not getting the job done."
Well, by that standard, it would be just as tough to be better than 28 saves
in 30 tries -- which is what he gave his teammates after the Astros traded
Dotel. But Lidge says, bluntly: "I want to improve on that."
Hold on. Improve on two blown saves in 30 chances?
"Well," he chuckles, "that's two. Look at what Eric Gagne did. He blew none.
He's achieved perfection. So that's what you should aspire to -- perfection."
But what Lidge really aspires to is another chance to live in that October
moment -- except he'd like the next one to turn out just a little different.
"I know that when you win, as the closer, you're the last guy standing out
there," he said. "So sometimes people ask, 'Would you ever want to be a starter
again?' And what I say is, 'After last year? After last October? No way.' "
Which, by coincidence, is exactly what all those hitters said about facing him.
Jayson Stark is a senior writer for ESPN.com.
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