ATLANTA - After blowing a six-run lead Wednesday night, Roy Halladay left the Phillies to tend to a personal family matter. The absence was planned before his outing. He is expected to rejoin the team Friday in Washington.
Phillies assistant general manager Scott Proefrock said Halladay told both manager Charlie Manuel and pitching coach Rich Dubee on Tuesday he would need to leave.
Dubee admitted he does not believe Halladay's pitches are always "accelerating through the hitting zone." Since that is physically impossible, Dubee was more than likely referring to a decrease in Halladay's velocity. At times, Dubee sees the usual life and movement.
Most telling will be whether it can be reversed during his next start, Monday against the Mets. If not, it could create a disturbing trend. Halladay's velocity has dropped in 2012, but the results had not - until Wednesday.
Halladay required only 46 pitches to complete the game's first four innings. It turned sour in the fifth. What happened?
"I don't know, man," catcher Carlos Ruiz said. "Everything happened real quick. He made good pitches, but I give credit to their hitters. They were looking for the pitches he threw. They didn't miss them. Everything happened real quick."
"But we're also talking about a different animal," Dubee said. "He has that innate ability to bounce back from a tough inning and regroup and get going again."
Had Brian Sanches not allowed a game-winning home run to Chipper Jones and held the Braves scoreless in the 11th inning Wednesday, he probably would have reached his limit.
Sanches said he was fatigued when the inning (his third) began. "He had to go," Manuel said. "He was there."
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