Lodi News-Sentinel

RAYS TURN TO VETERAN FOR GAME 3

- By Marc Topkin

ARLINGTON, Texas — He’s one of the most successful postseason pitchers in the history of the game, and has the nickname to match — Charlie Freaking Morton (that’s the family friendly version).

He’s going to start Friday night’s pivotal World Series Game 3 with the chance to pitch his Rays to a two-one advantage amid overwhelmi­ng confidence from his teammates that he is absolutely the right man to be on the mound.

And he’s heading into the assignment feeling ... anxious, actually. Humbled. And a bit concerned.

In other words, just like he always does in these situations.

“I do not wake up in the morning and say, ‘It’s my time to shine,’” Morton explained. “I would say that I wake up in the morning and I question if I’ve done what I was supposed to do to get ready for what I’ve been asked to do.”

He has, of course. There really is no doubt.

But that’s how Morton, who turns 37 next month, looks at these postseason opportunit­ies, as much as a responsibi­lity as anything else, with the onus on him to be prepared and represent.

“You want to do well for yourself because you’re constantly judging yourself,” he said. “These are moments that you’re going to look back and you’re going to remember for the rest of your life.”

But beyond a personal stake, Morton feels a much broader obligation.

To his teammates. To the organizati­on and staff. And, certainly, to fans.

And, because he’s Morton, to many others.

He notes, for example, the massive effort it took for baseball to get through the season, and then stage a postseason, given the extensive coronaviru­s protocols.

He cites the sacrifice of people with no vested interest in the outcome, such as the security guards working the resort hotel where the teams are in a bubble-like quarantine. Or the clubhouse staff in San Diego and Texas that had to isolate from their families to keep the teams playing in those spaces comfortabl­e and safe.

“It’s things like that that you start to realize and you see what’s going on around you, it makes those moments all the more special,” Morton said. “So I would say I wake up with a humble recognitio­n that what I’m about to do is an opportunit­y that not many people get to experience and I try to prepare for it just like that.”

What Morton has done has worked, obviously.

His overall 7-2, 2.84 ERA record in 12 career postseason appearance­s is impressive, but he has been even better of late. Over his last nine, going back to the 2017 season with Houston, he is 7-0, with a 1.45 ERA.

Since joining the Rays last season, he is 5-0, 0.70 ERA, including his dazzling work in Saturday’s decisive seventh game of the American League Championsh­ip Series against the Astros, taking a two-hit shutout in the sixth.

That was the fourth time Morton was entrusted in a “winner take all” situation (three starts, and a planned long relief outing, against, of all teams, the Dodgers in Game 7 of the 2017 World Series). He won all four. No other pitcher in history has more than two W’s in those kinds of games.

What sets Morton apart, his Rays teammates say, is as much how he handles the big moments as what he throws from the mound.

“Just his overall demeanor,” manager Kevin Cash said during Thursday’s off-day. “He’s the same guy, whether it’s Game 7, or game 30 (of the regular season). And that’s pretty comforting.

“It’s not just what Charlie does for himself, it’s what he does for our club. It’s pretty settling. We’ve seen it every outing we’ve given him the ball in the postseason for the last two years, he’s been pretty outstandin­g. And when you build that type of a track record, (we) just continue to have so much confidence in the person.”

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 ?? SEAN M. HAFFEY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Charlie Morton throws against the Houston Astros during Game 7 of the ALCS in San Diego on Oct. 17.
SEAN M. HAFFEY/GETTY IMAGES Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Charlie Morton throws against the Houston Astros during Game 7 of the ALCS in San Diego on Oct. 17.

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