6.27.2008

Dice-K strikes back with solid effort in win over Houston

Sox 6, Astros 1
WP: Matsuzaka
(9-1)
LP: Hernandez (0-1)
SV: Papelbon (24)
HRs: BOS-Drew (15); HOU-Abercrombie (1)

SUMMARY:
The Red Sox began a(nother) 10-game road trip with an impressive victory over the unimpressive Astros. Daisuke Matsuzaka bounced back from a horrible start to earn the win and J.D. Drew provided all the offense the team would need with a three-run bomb off emergency starter Runelvys Hernandez in the third inning.

Boston outhit Houston 12-4, with 7 of the knocks coming from Pedroia and Youkilis.

#1 STUNNER: Drew 1-3, R, 2BB, HR, 3BI
Mired in a 2-19 skid and coming off sitting out the finale of the Arizona series due to Randy Johnson syndrome, errr a stiff neck, Drew picked back up where he began the month by hitting another huge home run.

Honorable mention: Matsuzaka 5IP, 2H, 0ER, 3BB, 4K, 87P
An excellent effort by the Sox top starter allows everyone to breath a sigh of relief that Boston's $101 million investment has not turned into a broken down bust.

THE BIGGEST LOSER: Hideki Okajima 2/3IP, 2H, 1R, 0BB, 0K, HR, 15P
While everyone has been worrying about Dice-K's health, it's Boston's other Japanese import who is now causing brows to furrow throughout the Nation. This month the unconventional lefty has allowed 9 earned runs in 8 2/3 innings of work, raising his ERA from 0.72 to 3.21.

I mean seriously, what's wrong with this guy?

Dishonorable mention: Manny Ramirez 0-4, K
Manny is now mired in a 2-15 slump and hasn't homered in 13 games or knocked in a run in his last 10 contests. Can you say power outage?

RECAP:
You can put away the rosaries and stop pounding sake. Everything appears to be okay with Dice-K.

After suffering his worst loss since he came to the Sox in his last outing, his first since spending nearly a month on the DL, Daisuke Matsuzaka made up for that horror show against the Cardinals with a strong showing tonight in Boston's first ever trip to Houston's Minute Maid Park.

Thanks to a potent offensive attack and a strong effort on the back end by Jonathan Papelbon, Matsuzaka finally earned his ninth victory of the season, 36 days after he logged his then league leading eighth win on May 22nd against the Royals.

In fact it's been so long since his last victory Hillary Clinton was still running for President, the Celtics hadn't won title #17, and people thought the Happening might actually be a good movie.

Yeah, that's how long ago.

Before we get too exited that the shoulder trouble that sidelined Daisuke for a month is all in the past let me state that he didn't have an absolute lights out performance tonight.

For example he barely made it through the requisite five innings to earn the win when he loaded the bases with two outs in the fifth before inducing David Newhan to pop out to shortstop to preserve the Sox shutout.

He also walked three batters, including Astros starter Runelvys Hernandez, who hadn't hit in a major league game since September of 2006, and struck out twice at the plate himself.

But the good far outweighed the bad for Matsuzaka this evening, and it was apparent from the start that this outing would be quite different from the last time he took the mound one week ago tonight.

In that game six St. Louis batters reached base in the first innings as the Cards jumped out to a four run lead, and the carnage continued in the second inning when Dice-K loaded the bases with no outs on a single and a pair of walks.

Tonight was the exact opposite of that as Matsuzaka not only didn't allow a run or base runner in the first inning, but he began the game by striking out the side with all three batters swinging at strike three.

Talk about night and day.

After putting three batters on in the first two innings Boston finally broke through in the third against Hernandez (5IP, 5H, 3ER, 3BB, 5K), who was called up to start in place of disgraced/released starter Shawn Chacon.

Matsuzaka led off with a strikeout before Coco Crisp drew a one out walk and Dustin Pedroia (3-4, 2R, 2B, BI, BB) followed with a ringing double to left field. Three pitches later J.D. Drew slammed a towering, titanic blast to right that banged off the facade of the upper deck for a key three run bomb, and just like that Dice-K had some breathing room to work with.

It was a good thing, too, because had the game been scoreless who knows how he would have handled the pressure packed situation he faced in the fifth.

Geoff Blum lined out to right to begin the frame, but then Hunter Pence walked and Humberto Quintero singled to right to set up runners at second and third with one out.

Darin Erstad (I know, he's still alive!) pinch hit for the pitcher and promptly struck out, and it looked like Matsuzaka would escape the jam easily. But he walked Michael Boure to load the bases, and suddenly it was finger nail biting time in the Boston dugout.

Before they could reach the cuticles Dice-K got David Newhan to pop out harmlessly to short on a wicked breaking ball, and with that Houdini act Matsuzaka's night was over.

The Sox scored another run when Julio Lugo led off the seventh with a bloop single to right and two outs later Pedroia drove him in with a sharp single to center, and although they missed out on a golden opportunity to blow the game open when Youk (4-5) and Tek both singled with one out in the eighth, with Boston sporting a four run lead and just six outs to go this one was all but over.

And then Hideki Okajima entered the game.

The embattled Boston reliever has been tattooed more than Eddie House the past month, and tonight would be no different.

After getting ex-Sox second sacker Mark Loretta to fly out to open the inning, Bourne took an Okajima offering all the way to the left field wall before Jacoby Ellsbury caught it on the track.

The next time he wouldn't be so lucky.

Pinch hitter Reggie Abercrombie, who has only appeared in 155 games in his career and has just seven homers to his credit, turned on a 2-2 pitch from Oki and deposited it on that silly train track the 'Stros have way up at the top of the stadium, and just like that the shutout was gone and the game was on.

When Miguel Tejada followed that blast with a ringing single off the left field scoreboard Tito had seen enough of Oki's antics and brought in Paps to nail it down.

A strikeout of Lance Berkman (1-4) ended the inning, and when Boston tacked on a couple more runs on a two run single by Mike Lowell in the ninth this one was in the bag.

Sure enough paps tossed a 1-2-3 ninth for his 24th save, and Boston had it second straight impressive win against a lesser National League opponent.

In those two wins the Sox have outscored the opposition 11-1, outhit them 24-7, and generally outplayed the mediocre competition of the senior circuit.

And with Dice-K looking healthier, Drew still mashing longballs and Pedroia and Youk hotter than asphalt in August, things are looking good for the team.

Although they still just have a slim 1/2 game lead over those pesky Rays.

They'll have to take care of that problem starting Monday.

RECORD: 50-32
AL EAST: Up 1/2 gm
STREAK: W3
LAST 10: 6-4
UP NEXT: Sat @ HOU
7:05 Lester vs. Backe

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

"I mean seriously, what's wrong with this guy"

His deceptive style is starting to deceive the wrong guy, namely himself. He's been figured out.

I'd say that either Hanson must come on or our beloved Sox will be paying top dollar for an 8th inning guy before the trade deadline ends. I have very little confidance in Oki and MCD. Not in a pressure-packed playoff series, anyway.

J Rose said...

You have a point, Dirty. But another factor is his confidence level. You can almost see the disappointment on his face every time he fucks up, which creates a cycle of failure.

Also you're not alone about the confidence thing. It looks like Tito's lost it too as he now won't bring Oki into save situations and yanks him at the first sign of trouble.

Middle reliever is definitley on the trade deadline menu

Dirty Water said...

Maybe you are right about this only being a confidence thing with Oki, hopefully a minor setback he can work himself out of. The reason I thought it was a matter of batters figuring him out is because I thought I read last year where he was nothing special in Japan. But that's not true, looking at his statbook. He was actually pretty damn good. Apparently, Oki is not just about ML batters being temporarily confused by his weird delivery.

I never bothered to Google him last year, but maybe I should have before jumping to any comclusion.

http://www.japaneseballplayers.com/en/player.php?id=hokajima

J Rose said...

I agree with you that hitters are on to him this year, because they're not confused by that awkward delivery any more.

But I think his lack of confidence is definitely an issue, too. He's going out there looking like he's gonna get hit, and when he does his spirits sink lower than the Titanic.

Unfortuantely, as we saw last night, most members of the pen have the same problem right now.

Anonymous said...

Good for people to know.