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Howard bails out Halladay in NLDS opener

Ryan Howard took a mighty cut, dropped his bat and admired the shot.
Ryan Howard
Philadelphia Phillie Ryan Howard hits his three-run homer during Game 1 of the NLDS against the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday in Philadelphia. Phillies won 11-6.

Phillies 11 Cardinals 6

PHILADELPHIA — Ryan Howard took a mighty cut, dropped his bat and admired the shot.

The big slugger didn’t go down looking in a clutch spot this time, Roy Halladay overcame a shaky start and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the St. Louis Cardinals 11-6 Saturday night in the opener of their NL division series.

Howard shook off his season-ending strikeout last October in the championship series to hit a go-ahead, three-run homer in a five-run sixth inning, sending Citizens Bank Park into a frenzy.

“I left last year in the past,” Howard said.

“You can’t let what happened last year affect this year. It’s a fresh start.”

Halladay retired his last 21 batters, and the NL East champions began their all-or-nothing post-season run with a comeback win.

Halladay allowed three runs and three hits, striking out eight in eight innings. He didn’t allow a runner after Skip Schumaker led off the second with a single.

“That’s why he’s the best in the game,” Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols said. “We wanted to keep adding on it, but we just never put that inning together again.”

Game 2 is Sunday night, with Cliff Lee pitching for Philadelphia against Chris Carpenter, who is starting on three days’ rest.

Raul Ibanez hit a two-run shot off Kyle Lohse to cap the Phillies’ burst in the sixth, and Shane Victorino had three hits and two RBIs.

Last year, in his first career playoff start, Halladay threw the second no-hitter in post-season history in Philadelphia’s 4-0 victory over Cincinnati.

His bid for an encore in the first round didn’t last one batter, and Lance Berkman hit the first three-run homer off Halladay in three years to put the wild-card Cardinals up 3-0 in the first.

But the offence bailed out Doc.

“I couldn’t think of a worse start and putting your team in a hole like that,” Halladay said. “But you get to this point, you’re not going to pack it in.”

Lohse retired the first 10 batters before Chase Utley hit a double off the right-field fence in the fourth. The righty, who was 14-8 this season, ran out of gas in the sixth.

Down 3-1, Jimmy Rollins singled to start the inning. After Utley struck out, Hunter Pence grounded a single up the middle. That brought up Howard, who heard a lot of criticism for taking that called third strike last year in the NLCS with the tying run on second base to end the Phillies’ season against San Francisco.

Howard worked a full count before launching a towering drive into the second deck in right-centre to give the Phillies a 4-3 lead.

The towel-waving crowd went wild, and Howard came out for a curtain call.

“In that situation, I knew he wasn’t really going to throw a fastball, so I just sat on the changeup,” Howard said. “Trying to get me to chase, but he just kind of left one up there hanging for me.”

Victorino followed with a single. Ibanez then lined a two-run homer to right to end Lohse’s night.

Lohse allowed six runs — five earned — and seven hits in 5 1-3 innings.

The Cardinals scored three times in the ninth off relievers Michael Stutes and Ryan Madson, highlighted by Schumaker’s two-run double.

The two teams took different roads to get here.

The Phillies cruised to their fifth straight division title, winning a franchise-record and major league-best 102 games. Anything less than a second World Series title in four years will be considered a failure by players, management and fans.

The Cardinals needed an incredible collapse by Atlanta and help from Philadelphia to earn the wild card. St. Louis trailed the Braves by 10 1/2 games on Aug. 25, but went 23-8 the rest of the way and got in after Game 162 when the Phillies completed a three-game sweep in Atlanta.

For a while, it seemed the Phillies might regret helping the Cardinals reach the playoffs.

A day after borrowing a line from William Shakespeare, saying he “came here to bury Caesar, not praise him,” Halladay didn’t back up his words right away.

Rafael Furcal led off the game with a single and stole second. One out later, Halladay walked Pujols on four pitches. Berkman drove the next pitch off the mini-scoreboard hanging on the facing off the second deck in right field.

“You have to beat those guys 3-to-whatever,” Berkman said.

“He’s not going to give up much more than that. He’s a great pitcher.”

The switch-hitting Berkman hit all 31 of his homers in the regular season from the left side. No. 32 was the first three-run homer Halladay allowed since Aug. 21, 2008, when Hideki Matsui connected for the Yankees in a 14-3 loss to Toronto.

“He was kind of like a ’Rocky’ movie,” manager Charlie Manuel said of Halladay. “He got mad after he gave up that homer. That ticked him off and he hung in there and he got going. But he’s special. He’s everything people talk about.”