|  |  
| Mariners vs. Yankees | 
Mets vs. Cardinals |  |  | Saturday, October 14 Mets peeling away Cardinals game by game
 By Bob Klapisch
 Special to ESPN.com
 
 ST. LOUIS -- Bobby Valentine was inches from Armando Benitez's face, deep 
into his personal space, tapping his index fingers in the closer's chest. Voice raised, filling an already loud postgame clubhouse, Valentine shouted,  "That's why I need you -- every single day. Because you're the man. You're the best!"
    The two men laughed.  No other words were necessary. The Mets had just 
edged the Cardinals 6-5 in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, taking a 
2-0 series lead, and it was Benitez who smothered St. Louis in the bottom of 
the ninth.
    No wonder Valentine's enthusiasm literally bubbled over: He's two wins 
away from the World Series, and with it, a chance to personally end the 
Yankees' chokehold on the rest of the major-league community.
    It's official now. The Mets are October's hottest team, with more 
momentum and self-confidence than any of the four remaining playoff finalists. They have the luxury of three games at Shea Stadium this weekend, where the Cardinals will be treated to the constant drone of LaGuardia's departing jets, the army of tough, ravenous Mets fans and Rick Reed in Game 3.
    With no disrespect to the Central Division champs, the Mets are already 
fast-forwarding to the possibility of a Subway Series. Some Mets are openly 
rooting for the Yankees to prevail over the Mariners, although others, like 
John Franco, say, "They've had the spotlight for so long, it would be nice to 
have it all to ourselves in New York."
 
The reason for all this huffing and puffing? Because the Mets were able 
to win, despite the Cardinals' thorough preparation for Al Leiter, and their 
obvious determination to even the series.
    "They made me work deep into every count. They took pitches, were very 
disciplined, they knew what they were doing against me," said Leiter. 
That 
may explain why the left-hander was unable to dominate St. Louis the way 
he did San Francisco in Game 2 of the Division Series. Leiter managed seven innings, turning over a 5-3 lead to the bullpen in the eighth.
    That lead resulted when Edgardo Alfonzo and Todd Zeile had RBI singles in the 
top of the eighth, and with six outs to go, it appeared Leiter was headed for 
his first win in nine career postseason starts.
    But Franco wasn't kidding when he said "the Cardinals have a lot of 
weapons." They rallied for two runs in the bottom half of the eighth, the 
tying run coming when Turk Wendell was unable to convert on an 0-2 count 
against J.D. Drew.
    When ahead in the count like that, Wendell normally devours hitters with his mean, late-breaking slider. But, for reasons only he and Mike 
Piazza know, Drew saw five straight fastballs, the last of which he sent 
screaming up the gap in right-center, making it 5-5.    
    Wendell disgustedly said, "I should've thrown him something offspeed, 
just to alter his timing a little bit. Five straight fastballs ... that was 
dumb. Any major-league hitter is going to time you after a certain point if 
you keep throwing the same pitch over and over again."
    In another season, certainly against another team, like the Braves, the 
Mets might have melted right there. That's the kind of psychological advantage 
Atlanta held over the Mets. But just as the Mets predicted when the Cardinals 
stunned the Braves in the Division Series, the path to the World Series 
became much friendlier. 
    As Zeile said, "We really felt like we could come back in this game, 
and considering it was against a very good team like the Cardinals, it was 
the first time we started to believe, 'This is our year.' "
    Franco put it even more bluntly. "We were able to counter whatever the 
Cardinals did, just like the Braves used to be able to do it to us," he said.
Calmly, the Mets rallied in the ninth inning, scoring the go-ahead run on Jay 
Payton's RBI single off Mike Timlin. The rest was like flipping the switch on 
a machine, as Benitez effectively smothered the Cardinals for the last three 
outs.
    That's why the Mets are riding this tidal wave of we-own-the-world 
confidence, which Zeile is quick to say "isn't the same thing as arrogance. 
We know we're a good team, and we're playing very well."
    For the second straight night, the Mets avoided Mark McGwire's muscles. 
Their presence was too much for rookie Rick Ankiel, whose wildness and 
anxiety forced him out of the game in the very first inning. And the Mets 
even reduced Jim Edmonds into mortal-like status as twice -- on Alfonzo's RBI 
single in the eighth, and Payton's game-winner in the ninth -- he was unable 
to either make a effective throw to the plate or field the ball cleanly.
    Slowly but surely, the Mets are peeling away the Cardinals' layers of 
excellence, forcing them into a series of small but stinging mistakes.
    It's exactly how the Mets took apart the Giants. And look where they are 
now -- at home, watching the Mets inch closer to an all-New York World Series.
Bob Klapisch of the Bergen (N.J.) Record covers baseball for ESPN.com.
|  | Nine and counting |  
|  | In nine postseason starts, Al Leiter has yet to earn a victory (he did get a win while pitching in relief for Toronto during the 1993 World Series). Below is a rundown of his nine postseason starts: |  
|  | Date | Series | Opp. | Result |  
|  | 10/1/97* | Div. | S.F. | no-dec. |  
|  | 10/11/97* | NLCS | Atl. | loss |  
|  | 10/21/97* | W.S. | Clev. | no-dec. |  
|  | 10/26/97* | W.S. | Clev. | no-dec. |  
|  | 10/9/99 | Div. | Ari. | no-dec. |  
|  | 10/15/99 | NLCS | Atl. | loss |  
|  | 10/19/99 | NLCS | Atl. | no-dec. |  
|  | 10/5/00 | Div. | S.F. | no-dec. |  
|  | 10/12/00 | NLCS | St.L | no-dec. |  
|  | * While as a member of the Marlins |  
 
  
 
 
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