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by civ ollilavad
Mitch Talbot said it all comes down to the little things. On Wednesday, it came down to a wild pitch.
Talbot was dominant, allowing one run in a complete-game gem as the Triple-A Clippers rallied for four runs in a go-ahead eighth inning to even the best-of-5 Governors' Cup Finals with a 4-1 win over Lehigh Valley in Game 2 on Wednesday.
· Gameday box score
· Mitch Talbot's bio, stats
· Complete playoff coverage
"It was good to see the bats come alive," said Talbot, a veteran right-hander who has won both his postseason starts this year. "It couldn't have come it at a better time, so I was really happy to see that. It gave me the opportunity for the win."
Talbot went the distance on 101 pitches, striking out seven and holding the IronPigs to one run, a homer by Tagg Bozied in the fifth inning. He didn't walk a batter and breezed through the ninth, striking out one of the Phillies' top prospects, Domonic Brown, to end the game.
The win was the final one for Columbus at home this season as the series shifts to Allentown, Pa., where the IronPigs will host at least two more games at Coca-Cola Park.
"It was nice and quick tonight," said Talbot, who dueled much of the evening with 'Pigs starter Nate Bump. "Both teams were swinging and put the ball in play."
Bozied smacked the first pitch he saw from Talbot in the fifth to left to give Lehigh Valley a 1-0 lead, and the game remained that way until the reigning Governors' Cup champs put together a four-run rally in the eighth.
Bump took a two-hit shutout into that frame before the leadoff batter, Juan Diaz, singled to center. Luke Carlin struck out, but Argenis Reyes followed with a long double down the line and into the right-field corner, putting runners at second and third.
Lehigh Valley manager Ryne Sandberg had seen enough from Bump, who was at 95 pitches, and called on reliever Mike Zagurski, who intentionally walked Jerad Head to load the bases for lefty Travis Buck.
Buck had never faced Zagurski and was 0-for-3, but he got the job done, taking an outside 2-2 fastball to left field to tie the game on a sacrifice fly.
IronPigs shortstop Freddy Galvis saved a run with a diving stop on Jared Goedert's infield single, but Columbus took the lead moments later anyway when Zagurski threw a wild pitch to Beau Mills, allowing Reyes to race home and give the Clippers their first lead of the series.
Mills then hammered a line drive off the tall right-field wall, knocking home Head and Goedert for a three-run cushion. Lehigh Valley had been 6-2 when leading after seven during the regular season.
Talbot was hitting 92 mph in the ninth when he came Kevin Frandsen and Brandon Moss before whiffing Brown on his 101st pitch.
"It was good," Talbot said of the final inning. "I was on a little bit of an adrenaline rush after the big eighth inning. We scored a few runs, so it was good to get back out there again."
The Major League veteran is 2-0 with a 1.69 ERA in the playoffs this year after finishing the regular season 4-2 with a 4.26 ERA in 13 outings at Triple-A. (He also made 11 starts for Cleveland, going 2-6 with a 6.33 ERA.)
He said he worked in a few change-ups, but primarily pumped in his fastball.
"Mostly fastball, curve and slider," he said. "A few change-ups here and there."
Talbot said he knew the ninth was his to finish off.
"I knew I had it. After the quick eighth inning, there was no one warming up in the bullpen," he said. "I knew it was mine."
Bump (0-1) was the story much of the night, shutting down the Clippers for seven innings. He struck out one and was charged with two runs on four hits and a walk in 7 1/3 innings.
"He was pitching well, cruising through the innings," said Talbot. "It kept the pace up and those are fun ones to pitch in, especially when you end up on top."
Zagurski -- an IL All-Star who dominated out of the bullpen this year with 63 strikeouts and a 2.65 ERA in 54 1/3 innings over 46 appearances -- surrendered two runs on two hits, a walk and a wild pitch, throwing 27 pitches while recording only two outs.
For Talbot, the clutch performances are coming at the right time. The former second-round pick, who was MiLB.com's Best Double-A Playoff Performer in 2006, said he's worked with Clippers pitching coach Ruben Niebla to straighten out some issues with his mechanics. After allowing 41 runs in 58 innings in the Majors, he ended the year on a solid run, holding opponents to three runs or fewer in four of his final five regular-season starts.
"Much better than where I was a month ago," he said. "Ruben Niebla, he sees a lot of things I do wrong and he lets me know how to make those adjustments."
Columbus' Joe Martinez will take the mound in Game 3, opposing fellow veteran Dave Bush and the 'Pigs at 7:05 p.m. ET on Thursday.
"We just gotta play ball, play good baseball and we'll come out on top," Talbot said. "I think that's what you think going into any series, you look to do the little things right, and you'll win."