Before dashing off, Moyer was asked about the 2-day delay and said, "it happened and we dealt with it. I am just happy I could be part of the team."
That could be a motto for this Phils team. They dealt with it. And they overcame it.
Phillies president Dave Montgomery was talking about how his role had changed in 1997, how the Phillies really started to emphasize player development and scouting, how Ed Wade had been such a big part of acquiring most of the big names and how Pat Gillick had gotten the smaller names that became "big statements."
Players like Geoff Jenkins who started it all last night and Pedro Feliz who ended it with the World Series-winning single in the seventh.
Montgomery was thinking back to 1950 when his parents bought the family's first television to watch the Phils play the Yankees in the World Series. Those Phillies did not win a game. These Phillies won four games in this World Series against Tampa Bay, the last one before a shrieking crowd at Citizens Bank Park, a culmination of the decade that Montgomery had been in charge and the Phillies began to change the way they did business.
"We were playing for tonight," Montgomery said. "Yesterday was a miserable day. We waited this long. What was another 48 hours?"
Every kid that plays baseball thinks of a night like last night. Still, "it just seems so far away," Ryan Madson said.
This time, it was there for all of them to touch. There is nothing quite like forever.
"A year ago, we were excited to be in the playoffs," Montgomery said. "This year, we were anxious to see what we could do. We never lost at home in the playoffs."