hit a two-run home run to open the scoring in the series.
Game 1 {{Linescore| The national anthem was performed by
Backstreet Boys. The Phillies scored the first runs of the Series when
Jayson Werth walked and
Chase Utley followed with a two-run home run in the top of the first inning. The Phillies loaded the bases off Tampa Bay starting pitcher
Scott Kazmir with one out in the second, but Kazmir induced a fly ball from
Jimmy Rollins, which was too shallow to score
Shane Victorino, who was thrown out at home plate by
B. J. Upton for a double play. The Rays loaded the bases off Phillies starter
Cole Hamels with one out in the bottom of the third, but he also escaped this jam by getting Upton to ground into an inning-ending double play, and the score remained 2–0 in favor of Philadelphia. The Phillies extended their lead to 3–0 on
Carlos Ruiz's RBI groundout in the fourth inning. In the bottom of the inning,
Carl Crawford's solo home run pulled the Rays to within two runs. Tampa Bay added their second run the following inning on
Akinori Iwamura's RBI double. Kazmir was removed after six innings; four Rays relievers combined to shut out the Phillies for the last three innings.
Ryan Madson relieved Hamels in the eighth, pitching a single perfect inning. In the top of the ninth, Philadelphia left two men on base, but
Brad Lidge remained perfect in saves as he delivered a one-two-three inning to seal the 3–2 win. pitched innings of shutout baseball to give the Rays their first-ever World Series win.
Game 2 {{Linescore| The national anthem was performed by
Los Lonely Boys. Tampa Bay took a quick 2–0 lead in the first inning when
Akinori Iwamura and
B. J. Upton reached base with nobody out and scored on back-to-back groundouts by
Carlos Peña and
Evan Longoria. The next inning, Upton's RBI single scored
Dioner Navarro.
Rocco Baldelli attempted to score from second base, but was thrown out at home by
Jayson Werth, keeping the Rays' lead at 3–0.
Cliff Floyd extended the lead to 4–0 after leading off the bottom of the fourth with a single, advancing to third base with assistance from Navarro and Baldelli, and scoring on a sacrifice bunt by
Jason Bartlett. Tampa Bay starter
James Shields shut out the Phillies through innings to earn the win, before being relieved by
Dan Wheeler who pitched an additional scoreless inning. Philadelphia starter
Brett Myers lasted seven innings, giving up four runs for the loss. The Phillies did not get on the board until the eighth when
Eric Bruntlett hit a solo home run (his first since May 6) off
David Price. The Phillies added another run off Price in the ninth when
Carlos Ruiz hit a leadoff double, then scored with one out on an error by Longoria. Despite this, Price retired the next two batters to end the game, and the Rays' 4–2 win tied the Series at one game apiece. For the rest of the Series, the Rays would not take the lead over the Phillies again. drove in the winning run in Game 3 on a walk-off infield single in the ninth inning.
Game 3 {{Linescore|
Steve Carlton threw out the Ceremonial First pitch while
Taylor Swift sang the national anthem. The third game of the Series was delayed for an hour and 31 minutes because of rain. Country music star
Tim McGraw, son of Phillies reliever
Tug McGraw, spread his father's ashes on the pitching mound of Citizens Bank Park, prior to the game's start. The Phillies scored in the bottom of the first inning after
Jimmy Rollins led off with a single and eventually scored on a
Chase Utley groundout. In the top of the second,
Carl Crawford doubled, stole third base and scored on a sacrifice fly by
Gabe Gross to tie the game at 1–1.
Carlos Ruiz gave the Phillies their second lead of the night when he hit a home run in the bottom half. Starting pitchers
Matt Garza and
Jamie Moyer pitched six and innings, respectively. The score remained 2–1 in favor of Philadelphia until the sixth when Utley and
Ryan Howard hit the 14th back-to-back home runs in World Series history, increasing their lead to 4–1. The Rays rallied to cut their deficit back to one run in the seventh. Moyer surrendered back-to-back hits to Crawford and
Dioner Navarro to start the inning, and Crawford scored on a groundout by Gross, prompting
Charlie Manuel to go to his bullpen.
Chad Durbin relieved Moyer and induced a groundout from
Jason Bartlett, scoring Navarro and trimming the Phillies' lead to 4–3. In the top of the eighth,
B.J. Upton led off with an infield single, stole second and third, and scored on a throwing error by Ruiz, tying the game at 4–4.
Eric Bruntlett was hit by a pitch by
J.P. Howell leading off the bottom of the ninth, moved to second on a wild pitch by
Grant Balfour and to third on a throwing error by Navarro, putting the potential winning run on third with nobody out. Balfour intentionally walked the next two batters,
Shane Victorino and pinch-hitter
Greg Dobbs, to load the bases, creating a force play at the plate. Tampa Bay then brought the infield in (including right fielder
Ben Zobrist who was brought in to be a fifth infielder), hoping to convert any ground ball into a forceout at home and prevent the winning run from scoring. However, Ruiz's 45-foot infield single brought in Bruntlett for the win. The hit was fielded by third baseman
Evan Longoria, who threw desperately to the plate in an attempt to keep the game going. However, any hope of an out vanished as Longoria's throw missed Navarro and Bruntlett scored (it would not be counted as an error). Ruiz's hit was the first
walk-off infield single in World Series history, giving the Phillies a 5–4 victory and a 2–1 lead in the series. Phillies reliever
J. C. Romero earned the win and Howell took the loss. hit two home runs for the Phillies in Game 4.
Game 4 {{Linescore|
Robin Roberts threw out the Ceremonial First pitch while
Patti LaBelle sang the national anthem. Philadelphia took a quick 1–0 lead in the bottom of the first inning, as
Jimmy Rollins led off with a double and scored when
Pat Burrell later walked with the bases loaded. The Phillies doubled their lead in the third when
Chase Utley reached base on an error by
Akinori Iwamura and scored on
Pedro Feliz's RBI single. The Rays cut their deficit in half when
Carl Crawford hit a solo home run in the top of the fourth inning, but
Ryan Howard's three-run home run in the bottom half brought the score to 5–1. In the next inning,
Eric Hinske hit a
pinch-hit home run to bring the Rays within three runs, but Phillies starting pitcher
Joe Blanton responded with a home run of his own to put his team back up by four. It was the first time a pitcher hit a home run in the World Series since
Ken Holtzman in Game 4 of the
1974 World Series. In addition to hitting his first career home run, Blanton pitched six innings, striking out seven batters while giving up two runs on four hits to acquire his first win of the Series. In the eighth,
Jayson Werth and Howard each hit a two-run home run to cap off the scoring at 10–2. Philadelphia's four
relief pitchers combined for three shutout innings. Due to the late completion of the previous game, Games 3 and 4 each ended on the same calendar day. saved his second game of the series to break a 28-year championship drought for the Phillies.
Game 5 {{Linescore| The national anthem was sung by
John Oates. Philadelphia scored in the first inning for the third consecutive game, taking a 2–0 lead when they loaded the bases with two outs off Rays starter
Scott Kazmir, who then gave up a two-run single to
Shane Victorino. Tampa Bay cut the lead in half in the fourth;
Carlos Peña doubled with one out and scored on
Evan Longoria's RBI single, both players' first hits of the Series. The Rays then tied the game in the sixth when
B. J. Upton singled, stole second, and scored on Peña's RBI single. The game was
suspended after the top of the sixth because of rain, making it the first game in World Series history not to be played through to completion or declared a tie. Phillies starter
Cole Hamels, making his fifth start, had pitched six innings when the umpires suspended play. The Phillies
pinch-hit for Hamels in the bottom of the sixth inning. By retaking the lead in that half-inning, the Phillies put Hamels in line for the victory, which would have been his fifth win in the postseason, tying an MLB record. However, when Tampa Bay again tied the game in the seventh, Hamels was left with a
no decision. After the game was suspended, umpiring crew chief
Tim Tschida told reporters that he and his crew ordered the players off the field because the wind and rain threatened to make the game "comical."
Chase Utley agreed, saying that by the middle of the sixth, "the infield was basically under water." Because Bartlett was on second instead of third before he got thrown out at home, Iwamura was credited with an infield single, instead of Utley being credited with a
fielder's choice out. In the bottom of the seventh,
Pat Burrell led off with a double off Howell for his only hit of the Series.
Eric Bruntlett, pinch-running for Burrell, scored on a single by
Pedro Feliz to put the Phillies up by a run again, 4–3. This gave Howell his second relief loss in the Series. In the top of the ninth,
Brad Lidge gave up a one-out single to
Dioner Navarro and a stolen base to pinch-runner
Fernando Perez, but was able to retire
Ben Zobrist and
Eric Hinske to complete his perfect season of save opportunities and secure the World Series for the Phillies. Because of the rainfall, Game 5 was suspended after the top of the sixth inning. Rain continued to fall in Philadelphia on Tuesday, October 28, and the game ultimately resumed on Wednesday, October 29, at Citizens Bank Park. Official MLB records and statistics for a suspended game reflect the start date of the contest; October 27 for this game. This was the first game in World Series history to be suspended. There had been three
tied games in the history of the World Series:
1907,
1912, and
1922, all of them called due to darkness. In general, no ties would be needed under modern rules, which provide for suspension of a tied game and resumption of it at the next possible date. Weather has caused numerous delays and postponements in Series history (notable postponements beforehand coming in 1911, 1962, 1975, 1986, 1996 and 2006), but never any suspended games before 2008. Although not officially a suspended game, the longest postponement for a World Series was during the
1989 edition in which the start of Game 3 was delayed 10 days, due to the
Loma Prieta earthquake striking the
San Francisco Bay Area. Several Nevada sports betting agencies treated the suspended game as a completed game and a win for the Phillies on Monday, October 27. Under Nevada house rules, the final score of a baseball game is determined by reverting to the last completed full inning, and the Phillies led 2–1 at the end of the fifth inning. Game 5 side bets on Philadelphia were paid off while bets on totals and
run-line bets were refunded. During the following offseason, Selig's interpretation of the rules became codified, as the 30 MLB club owners approved a rule change stipulating that all "postseason games and games added to the regular season to determine qualifiers for the postseason" become suspended games if they are called before nine innings are played, regardless of whether the game would otherwise qualify as an
official game, or the score at the time the game is called. The game is resumed when conditions permit at the same location from the point of suspension. The first usage of that policy occurred during
Game 1 of the 2011 ALDS, which was suspended after two innings because of rain and was resumed the following day.
Composite line score 2008 World Series
(4–1): Philadelphia Phillies (NL) beat
Tampa Bay Rays (AL). ==Weather conditions==