Philadelphia vs. Milwaukee
Game 1 {{Linescore||Date= October 1, 2008 |Time= 3:07 pm (
EDT) |Location=
Citizens Bank Park in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Phillies ace Cole Hamels pitched eight shutout innings of two-hit ball while striking out nine to give the Phillies their first playoff victory since
Game 5 of the 1993 World Series. Yovani Gallardo gave up three runs, none earned, while walking five. All three runs came in the third on
Chase Utley's two-run double after a single and error by
Rickie Weeks, then three consecutive walks forced in another run. Brad Lidge got his first save of the postseason, allowing one run (on
Ryan Braun's double after a
Ray Durham single) and runners to advance to second and third with one out, before striking out
Prince Fielder and
Corey Hart to end the game.
Game 2 {{Linescore||Date= October 2, 2008 |Time= 6:08 pm (
EDT) |Location=
Citizens Bank Park in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania A crowd of 46,208, the largest in the five-year history of
Citizens Bank Park, came out to watch
Brett Myers pitch seven innings giving up two hits and two runs while striking out four and walking three to lead the Phillies to victory, giving them their first 2–0 playoff series lead since the
1980 World Series against the
Kansas City Royals. The Brewers in the first loaded the bases with one out on a double and two walks. A walk to
J.J. Hardy forced in a run, but
Corey Hart hit into an inning-ending double play.
CC Sabathia pitched innings on three days' rest giving up all five runs in the second inning. Back-to-back one-out doubles by
Jayson Werth and
Pedro Feliz tied the game. Myers had the key AB for the Phillies as he stretched the AB from a 1–2 count into a walk. It unnerved Sabathia and, after another walk loaded the bases,
Shane Victorino's
grand slam gave the Phillies the lead. It was the first postseason grand slam in Phillies history. The Brewers scored one more run in the seventh when Hardy hit a leadoff double, moved to third on a fly out and scored on
Craig Counsell's groundout.
Ryan Braun's eighth inning single off
Ryan Madson was the Brewers' only other hit of the game. Brad Lidge retired the side in order in the ninth inning for his second save in as many games in the playoffs.
Game 3 {{Linescore||Date= October 4, 2008 |Time= 5:38 pm (
CDT) |Location=
Miller Park in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin With their backs against the proverbial wall, the Brewers sent out
Dave Bush to quiet the Phillies in the first ever postseason game at Miller Park. His offense picked him up early, however, taking some pressure off with two runs in the bottom of the first when two walks and a wild pitch by
Jamie Moyer put runners on second and third with one out, then a sacrifice fly by
Prince Fielder, scoring
Mike Cameron, and
J.J. Hardy's RBI single gave the Brewers a 2–0 lead. Their struggling bullpen held the door closed after Bush's departure, giving up no runs in innings. The Brewers added to their lead in the fifth when Cameron was hit by a pitch by
Clay Condrey, moved to third on a single and scored on
Ryan Braun's sacrifice fly. The Phillies scored their only run of the game when
Jayson Werth hit a leadoff triple off Bush and scored on
Ryan Howard's groundout off
Mitch Stetter. After failing to score with the bases loaded and one out in the sixth, the Brewers increased their lead to 4–1 on
Jason Kendall's RBI single in the seventh off
Scott Eyre with two on. In the ninth,
Salomón Torres gave up three consecutive singles to load the bases with nobody out, but induced a double play ball from
Pedro Feliz that should have scored a run, but did not because
Shane Victorino did not slide into second base, and interference was called. Torres then retired
Carlos Ruiz to end the game, which made the Phillies the first team in MLB playoff history to load the bases with no outs in the ninth and not score, and the Brew Crew won their first postseason game since
Game 5 of the 1982 World Series.
Game 4 {{Linescore||Date= October 5, 2008 |Time= 12:07 pm (
CDT) |Location=
Miller Park in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin Brewers fans got
thundersticks as they entered Miller Park for Game 4, but the real thunder was supplied by the Phillies' bats, winning their first postseason series since the
1993 NLCS with
Jimmy Rollins leading off the game on the sixth pitch off
Jeff Suppan with a solo home run, then in the third inning with
Pat Burrell (three-run) and
Jayson Werth (solo) hitting back-to-back home runs.
Joe Blanton struck out seven batters in six innings while giving up five hits but only one run, which was
Prince Fielder's solo home run in the seventh. Burrell hit his second home run of the game in the eighth off
Guillermo Mota. The Brewers got a run in the bottom half when
Mike Cameron singled with one out off
Ryan Madson, moved to second on defensive indifference, and scored on
Ryan Braun's single, but
Brad Lidge again pitched the final inning to close the game, although it was not a save situation as the Phillies advanced to the NLCS with a 6–2 win. Burrell became only the second Phillies hitter in their history to hit two home runs in a playoff game, the other being
Lenny Dykstra. He is also only the fifth National League player to hit two home runs in a series clinching game, joining
Steve Garvey (
1974 NLCS),
Johnny Bench (
1976 World Series),
Fred McGriff (
1995 NLDS), and
Carlos Beltrán (
2004 NLDS).
Composite box 2008 NLDS
(3–1): Philadelphia Phillies over
Milwaukee Brewers ==References==