Sox 4, New York 3
WP: Beckett (1-1)
LP: Beckett (1-2)
SV: Papelbon (4)
HRs: BOS-Manny (2)
SUMMARY:
Manny Ramirez nearly single-handedly defeated his hometown team with a pair of extra base hits and 3 runs batted in, and Jonathan Papelbon weathered a 2+ hour rain delay to strike out Alex Rodriguez with the game on the line as Boston took Game 2 of the series.
Superstar: Manny 2-4, 2R, 3BI
His towering solo shot in the 4th, which hit 3/4 of the way up the Volvo sign atop the Monster, may have been the more memorable blast of the day, but it was his 2out, 2-run double that put the Sox ahead to stay in the 6th that was his more important hit of the afternoon.
The Biggest Loser: David Ortiz 0-4, K, GIDP
Papi's slump has now reached epic proportions (3-44, .070), and it was downright sad to see him ground into a double play on a check swing with two on and nobody out in the first inning.
RECAP:
The first Sox victory over New York in 2008 may have been a long time in the making, but it was well worth the wait.
Well, that's easy for me to say, I was only watching it on TV.
New York had two runners on base with two outs in the 8th, down 4-3, and Tito had just made the call to the pen to bring his closer in to relieve Hideki Okajima and face Alex Rodriguez with the game on the line.
Unfortunately that's right when Mother Nature decided to intervene in what had been a thrilling installment of the Rivalry, and just as Paps was about to take the mound the drizzling skies opened up, the umps called for the tarp, and the game would be halted for over two hours.
No problem for me, as I finished the yard work I had abandoned, cooked a few steaks on the grill, took a shower and watched the end of the third round of the Masters.
The downpour wasn't as enjoyable for the brave souls who chose to stick it out at Fenway to see the game to its conclusion, but at least when play finally resumed 2 hours and 11 minutes later, Paps made those who stuck it out got their money's worth.
When play resumed A-Rod was at the plate with a chance to at least tie the game or put New York in front with a base hit. But Paps would have none of that. He quickly made mincemeat of Rodriguez, needing just three pitches to strike the reigning MVP out, and Papelbon punctuated the moment with his signature primal scream/first pump/crazy glare/ hop-step as he bounced off the field.
It was the moment everyone who braved the delay had been waiting for, and as I said before it was worth the wait.
The game leading up to that point had been just as good, before Mother Nature cast her untimely spell on those of us who had been waiting for a BOS/NY game that didn't involve a New York pitcher completely shutting the Sox offense down.
Instead Josh Beckett (6.2IP, 5H, 3ER, 1BB, 5K) bounced back from a rough first outing with a solid second showing, limiting the Stanks to just four singles and a double over 6+ innings before giving way to Manny Delcarmen after allowing New York to close to 4-3 in the 7th.
Manny Ramirez got the scoring started with a mammoth solo shot in the 4th off Mike Mussina (5.2IP, 8H, 4ER, 0BB, 1K, HR), a ball that would have sailed over Lansdowne if not for the billboard blocking its trajectory.
But New York took the lead two innings later by stringing together a couple of hits mixed in with a sac bunt, a sac fly and a wild pitch, and it started to look like Boston was going to lose another tough one to the boys from the Bronx.
Except another boy from the Bronx would have none of that.
Ramirez, who always does his best hitting against his hometown club, came up with two outs and Jacoby Ellsbury at third and Dustin Pedroia at second and did what his partner in crime Ortiz couldn't do before him- drive in the big runs in a key situation.
Manny laced a double the opposite way to the triangle in right center, easily plating both runners and eliciting a huge ovation from the crowd as he stood on the second base bag and soaked it all in like a victorious politician.
That's the version of Manny being Manny we all love.
The rest, as they say, is history. Beckett came out after New York sliced the deficit to one, and Manny Delcarmen recorded his biggest out of 08 when he struck out Jose Molina with the tying run on second to end the 7th.
After the dramatic, rain-lengthened 8th, Papelbon returned for the 9th and quickly dispatched the three Stankee hitters, striking out Giambi and Posada before getting Robinson Cano to ground out to end it, and a mere five hours after the game started it was over, and the Sox had a big win heading into the series finale tomorrow night on ESPN.
Hopefully Mother Nature cooperates in that one or it could be another long night.
RECORD: 6-6
AL EAST: 1.5 GB
STREAK: W-1
UP NEXT: Sun vs NY 8PM, ESPN Hughes vs. Matsuzaka
4.12.2008
Mannny mauls Mussina as Sox defeat Stanks
Posted by J Rose at 9:39 PM 0 comments
Labels: GAME RESULT, MANNY, PAPS, SOX/STANKS, WIN
4.11.2008
Wang dominates Sox with 2-hit CG gem
New York 4, Sox 1
WP: Wang (3-0)
LP: Timlin (0-1)
SV: None
HRs: BOS-Drew (3); NYY-Giambi (1)
SUMMARY:
The first installment of Sox/Stanks 08 brought one of the best pitched games the series has seen in years. Chien Ming Wang and Clay Buchholz battled through rain drops to a 1-1 draw for 6 innings before Boston went to the beleaguered bullpen and saw the game slip away as a rusty Mike Timlin allowed a go-ahead homer by Jason Giambi, while Wang shut down the Sox with a complete game 2-hitter.
Superstar: Wang 9IP, 2H, 1ER, 0BB, 3K, HR
One of the best pitching performances the series has ever seen and eerily reminiscent of the 1-hitter Mike Mussina pitched on a Sunday night in Fenway in September 2001. Only a homer that should have been caught and a 9th inning bunt single by Coco Crisp kept Wang from achieving Buchholz-like immortality.
The Biggest Loser: Tito Francona
No, I'm not awarding this honor to Timlin - it's not his fault he just came off the DL and was as rusty as an old nail. It's his manager's fault for sticking a guy who is basically still in spring training mode into a tied, pressure-packed rivalry game, no matter how experienced and ready he was.
And don't even get me started on him using Okajima for just 2 batters before turning to Javier Lopez and David Aardsma.
RECAP:
What a difference a day makes.
Less than 24 hours after one of the sloppiest, ugliest, poorly pitched games in recent memory ended at Fenway when the Sox clubbed the Tigers 12-6 in a 386 pitch, 4-hour marathon, we witnessed a pitcher's duel that was shaping up to be an all-time classic.
Until Tito substituted a tiring Clay Buchholz for a soon-to-be-retiring Mike Timlin to start the 7th inning, turning what looked like a possible extra inning affair into a one man highlight reel.
New York starter Chien Ming Wang won the battle of talented young hurlers tonight by outlasting his greener counterpart and by refusing to allow the Sox hitters an inch of wiggle room when it came to maximizing his pitches.
Wang needed just 93 pitches, 61 of them strikes, to spin his 9-inning masterpiece; by contrast Tim Wakefield threw 108 in his 5 innings of work yesterday, while Tiger starter Nate Robertson tossed 107 in 5 1/3 innings.
That's what I call using your pitches effectively.
For a while it looked like neither pitcher was going to allow a run in this one as both teams put zeroes on the board for the first four innings. In fact there were only 2 baserunners through four - a 1-out single by Hideki Matsui in the second, and when Dustin Pedroia reached on a error by Alex Rodriguez in the bottom of the 4th, a play that could just as easily have been ruled a hit (ask Rem Dog.)
But in the 5th both teams broke the scoreless tie. Buchholz (6IP, 4H, 1ER, 3BB, 3K) showed signs of wearing down when he gave up back-to-back walks to Matsui and Georgie Posada to start the inning, then after getting Giambi to strike out, he surrendered an RBI double to Fill-in-the Molina for the first run of the game.
Another walk to Jeter replacement Alberto Gonzalez loaded the bases, and if it weren't for a great defensive play by mayor Casey, who snared a hot liner by Melky Cabrera and then doubled off a clueless Gonzalez to end the inning, the damage could've been a lot worse.
As it turned out the missed opportunity hurt New York when in the bottom of the inning red hot JD Drew (1-3, 8-gm hit streak) blasted a 1-0 offering from Wang over the outstretched glove of right fielder Bobby Abreu and into the Boston bullpen to tie the game at one.
If only Abreu, who had just made two nice grabs on deep drives by Papi and Youk, could have jumped more than 2 inches off the ground, Wang might have been taking a no-hitter into the 9th a-la teammate Mussina in that memorable pre-9/11 game.
Buchholz escaped another jam the next inning when ARod (single) and Matsui (double) put runners on 2nd & 3rd with two outs, but he got Posada to ground out to end the threat, which would also mark the end of his night.
Then Timlin entered to start the 7th, and that would mark the end of the Sox chances to win this game. The veteran reliever, who has been out since late March with a lacerated ring finger, was making his first appearance of the season, and I even remarked to my son "he just came off the DL-this is going to end badly."
Sure enough after working the count to 3-2, Giambi blasted a pitch high and deep over the top of the wall in left center to break the tie, along with the spirits of the rain-drenched Faithful.
Because we knew the way Wang was pitching that if he didn't come out of the game, the Sox weren't going to score again.
He didn't, and they didn't.
A couple of days ago there was a running thread on the excellent baseball blog Bugs & Cranks about whether Wang is a true ace or just an above-average starter on a loaded offensive team.
I think he put an end to that debate tonight.
NOTES:
-Lowell disabled: Boston placed Mike Lowell on the 15 day DL today, and they hope he won't need longer than that to recover from his sprained thumb. Infielder and 2007 Sox minor league player of the year Jed Lowrie was called up to replace Lowell on the roster.
-Corey out of the house: to make room for Timlin on the roster, reliever Bryan Corey (14.54ERA) was released. First Kyle Snyder and now Corey; is this what you call addition by subtraction?
-Ay Papi: Ortiz (0-3) saw his early season slump get even even deeper as his latest 0-fer dropped his average to .077. He has three hits and three RBIs this season, and those game in two games, April 2nd @ Oakland and April 6th in Toronto.
RECORD: 5-6
AL EAST: 1.5 GB
STREAK: L-1
UP NEXT: Sat vs NY, 3:55 FOX Mussina vs. Beckett
Posted by J Rose at 9:34 PM 0 comments
Labels: BUCHHOLZ, GAME RESULT, LOSS, SOX/STANKS, WANG
Series Preview: The Stankees are coming (again)
3 game series, Fenway Park
Game 1 Fri 705
Wang (2-0, 1.13) vs. Buchholz (0-1, 3.00)
Game 2 Sat 3:30 FOX
Mussina (1-1, 3.09) vs. Beckett (0-1, 9.64)
Game 3 Sun 8:00 ESPN
Hughes (0-1, 5.00) vs. Matsuzaka (2-0, 1.47)
What to watch for: Joe Hardass Giaradi's managerial debut in the series
It's gonna be strange looking over to the visitor's dugout and not seeing the familiar schnoz and droopy gaze of Joe Torre peering out from the brim of his NY cap. Instead we get to find out how the hyped-up, modern manager Girardi, who has seen plenty of these games from a player's perspective, handles the series.
He's already made a buffoon of himself by complaining that the D-Rays were playing too hard in spring training; wonder how he'll take it when a few of his players get hit this weekend. Cause you know they will. Even without Petey around.
Keep an eye on: Sean Casey and Alberto Gonzalez
The Mayor will have a chance to prove what a valuable offseason addition was as he gets the call to start at first base while Youk shifts over to third with Mike Lowell going on the DL; Gonzalez has the unenviable task of filling in for captain Derek Jeter while he is out with bad quads.
Preview:
Call me crazy or take away my RSN membership, but I've got the same feeling about the 90 zillionth installment of The Rivalry as I do about having to wake up extra early on any given morning: "It's too fucking early! Hit the snooze button and let me know when its really time to get up!"
These meetings used to feel like special occasions, games to look forward to and to watch every pitch of every inning to see if the cursed Sox could finally get over on the blessed Stanks.
But over the last 4-5 years, everything has changed. One reason is that Boston has won 2 World Series since the last time New York tasted champagne-drenched postseason success. Another is because of the damn unbalanced schedule MLB has adopted, the teams play each other 18-19 times per season, watering down the freshness of what used to be a rare thing. Throw in a postseason matchup nearly every year and what you get is too much of what was a special thing.
You know the old saying about eating ice cream every day? That's what this series has become.
Maybe my blase attitude has to do with the fact that neither team is looking like beasts of the AL East right now. Both are struggling with injuries to key players, both hold identical mediocre .500 records, and neither one has seemed to find an identity early in the season.
In other words it's hard right now for anyone to have reason to hate either team other than going off that 100 years of hatred thing.
Anyway the teams have the series scheduled, and a rematch next weekend in the Bronx, so we might as well try to enjoy it, right? Who cares if they are looking up at the surprising Orioles in the division now, or that the players opposing fans love to hate, Jeter and Curt Schilling, won't play in the series? It's still Sox vs. Yankees, the fans still hate the other team, and by golly if we have to see them play each other 20+ times a year then I might as well root for the Sox to rip their fucking faces off, right?!
Maybe I am ready for this series after all.
Posted by J Rose at 3:42 PM 0 comments
Labels: SERIES PREVIEW, SOX/STANKS, STANKEES SUCK
4.10.2008
Sox prevail in long, messy game at Fenway
Sox 12, Tigers 6
WP: Wakefield (1-0)
LP: Robertson (0-1)
SV: Papelbon (3)
HRs: BOS-None; DET: Ordonez (1)
SUMMARY:
The Sox survived what was an interminable and nearly unwatchable debacle of a game tonight when they strung together three 4-run innings to hold off the Tigers. The contest featured 18 runs, 23 hits, 16 walks, a wild pitch, 2 hit batters, an error and a passed ball. And it took 3:45 to complete.
But at least they won.
Superstar: JD Drew 3-3, 2R, 2BI, BB
The hottest hitter on the team is none other than the man who Sox fans were lambasting for being too brittle when he had to miss the first three games of the season due to back issues. After this 3-hit effort, Drew is now batting .440 (11-25) and has hit safely in all 7 games he's played in.
The Biggest Loser(s): 8 of the 9 pitchers who threw in this game
Of the nine hurlers who tossed baseballs tonight, only one, Hideki Okajima, did not allow a hit, walk or a run. Only three did not allow a walk and only two did not allow a run.
Absolutely putrid.
RECAP:
After witnessing the second straight four hour debacle against the steaming mess that is this Detroit Tiger team, on top of a Little League game last night and tossing an hour of BP at practice tonight, I think I am at a loss for words to describe this game.
Let's just say that my kid's game last night was by far more crisp, entertaining and watchable than these last two against Detroit.
Anyway, I'm completely spent from all this baseball, so I'm gonna hit the sack and try to get a better handle on this in the morning.
And whatever you do, don't watch the NESN replay of this game if you want to keep your sanity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Okay, I'm back. And it's amazing how in the light of day this game doesn't seem as bad as it did watching it last night. I guess the combination of me being dog tired and the fact that no pitcher on either team could retire the side in order just made the game seem like one long, bad George Clooney sports movie.
Actually there were a couple of 1-2-3 innings, but only thanks to a pair of double plays turned by Detroit; at least one batter reached base in every inning for each team.
What it all added up to was a near 4-hour marathon with 386 pitches thrown, and when the dust settled Boston had to be content with coming out of their first home series with a 5-5 record while the Tigers are left scratching their heads, wondering how a potential World Series squad can already be out of it at 1-8.
Detroit did manage to take an early 2-0 lead when Tim Wakefield (5IP, 3H, 1ER, 5BB, 5K) got wild and allowed a walk, a single, a wild pitch, a sac fly and an RBI single to Placido Polanco in the 4th, but Boston answered with in the bottom of the frame when they roughed up Tiger starter Nate Robertson (5.1IP, 8H, 4ER, 2BB, 6K) for four runs on three hits and two walks.
After Papi (0-3, 2BB), the only Sox player who didn't register a hit, struck out to open the inning, Manny and Youk both walked and Drew followed with an RBI single to right. Hot-hitting Coco Crisp (2-3, R, 2BI, 2BB) then sliced a ball off Pesky's Pole for a double that scored Youk, and a groundout by Sean Casey and single by Kevin Cash each resulted in runs.
The game stayed at 4-2 for a few innings despite the numerous baserunners allowed by each starter, and in the 6th inning both managers called on their pens to keep the score as is. Evidently neither pen got the message.
After pitching scoreless sixths both Zack Miner and Manny Delcarmen came unglued in the 7th. Manny D, who continues to regress from promising set-up man to future Paw Sox mop up man with every outing, gave up a monster shot to the previously homer and RBI-less Magglio Ordonez with one out in the 7th, pulling the Tigers to 4-3, which then prompted Tito to pull him one out later. Okajima got the final out of the inning to keep the lead at one.
Fortunately Miner (1IP, 1H, 3ER, 3BB, 2K) was worse than Delcarmen. After walking Pedroia and Manny with one out in the bottom of the inning, ManRam (1-3, R, 2BI, BB) delivered a booming double to deep left center that scored both runners and gave the team some breathing room at 6-3. Righty Francis Beltran fared no better as he walked Drew and Coco then surrendered a single to Casey (2-5, 3BI) that scored pinch runner Ellsbury and Drew for what seemed like a commanding 8-3 lead.
Long story short Julian Tavarez came on in the 8th (why Tito took Oki out nobody knows) and couldn't get anybody out; he gave up two walks and three hits before a double play grounder killed what could have been an even bigger inning for Detroit, and before we knew what happened the score was 8-6 and Francona had to bring in Papelbon to end the inning, which he did with just two pitches.
Boston put the game away for good in the 8th by scoring four more times, highlighted by a 2-run double by Youk, and by the time Paps got Marcus Thames to ground into a fielders choice to end the game everyone that had witnessed this ugly affair was just glad the Sox came out on top.
And speaking of long, ugly affairs, the Stanks come to town tomorrow night.
Rest up, Nation.
RECORD: 5-5
AL EAST: 1.5 GB
STREAK: W1
UP NEXT: Fri vs. NYY 705 Wang vs. Buchholz
Posted by J Rose at 9:57 PM 0 comments
Labels: DREW, GAME RESULT, MAYOR CASEY, TIGERS, WAKE, WIN
4.09.2008
Game 2 not quite as festive as Opening Day
Detroit 7, Sox 2
WP: Bonderman (1-1)
LP: Lester (1-2)
SV: None
HRs: Bos-None; DET: Thames (1)
SUMMARY:
The Sox pitching was pitiful and the hitting wasn't that much better as the Tigers finally broke their season-opening 7-game losing streak, scoring half as many runs in this game as they had in the previous seven. Throw in the fact that Mike Lowell left the game with a sprained thumb and it all added up to a bad loss for the roller coaster Sox.
Superstar: Edgar Rentanerror 3-4, 2R, 2BI, 2-2Bs, BB,
The 1-year blunder at shortstop was a thorn in Boston's side all night, ripping three hits and opening the floodgates on the Tigers scoring with a key 2-run double in the 4th despite constant harassment from the fans.
Doesn't it figure that a day after the Faithful welcomed back a former goat that a more recent object of the fans' derision would come back to haunt us?
The Biggest Loser(s): Sox pitchers 9IP, 10H, 7ER, 8BB, WP, HBP
From starter Jon Lester (4R, 4H, 4BB in 5.1IP) and middle man Bryan Corey (2R, 2H, BB in 1/3IP) all the way to Javier Lopez, who surrendered a homer and two other base runners in the 9th, the Boston pitching was piss poor again tonight.
RECAP:
Can you say "letdown"?
Coming of the high of yesterday's festive, fun-filled Opening Day display, you had to know that there would be some sort of letdown factor tonight. Kind of like a Tangueray hangover after one of my wife's Christmas parties.
Especially with shaky Jon Lester taking the hill to face a Tiger team so hungry for a win Jim Leyland might even resort to doing something drastic, like threaten quit smoking, if the team didn't get off the schneid soon.
But after jumping out to a 2-0 lead in the 2nd inning thanks to a bases loaded walk to Jacoby Ellsbury and an RBI single by Julio Lugo (a.k.a. Rentanerror 2.0), it looked as if the team might ride the emotional wave of Opening day to another victory over the toothless Tigers.
Unfortunately the wave came crashing down on the Sox in a hurry, starting with an injury to a key player and ending with a miserable loss to the formerly winless Tigers.
It was in that second inning that we learned that Mike Lowell apparently sprained his thumb when he made a diving stop of Miguel Cabrera's grounder in the first inning. Though his replacement, Sean Casey, did have a hit in his first at bat in Lowell's spot to start the rally and later doubled, the 2007 team MVP's absence was a somber reminder that this team is a couple of key injuries away from turning into the D-Rays.
And it was shortly after the Sox took that 2-0 lead in the second that the the game fell apart, too.
Lester retired the floundering Magglio Ordonez to start the 4th, then proceeded to walk Miguel Cabrera and Carlos Guillen to bring the hated former Sox shortstop to the plate with a chance to tie the game.
But this is the same guy who never got a big hit the entire year he was in a Boston uniform, right? Surely he would bounce into a DP or strike out to squelch the threat. Right? Right?!
Instead Rentanerror sliced a double to the wall in left center that sent both runner home and tied the game at two, and if you squinted a bit it was almost as if you could see him standing at 2nd base with a finger to his lips telling the unruly Fenway masses to hush their foul mouths.
It only got worse from there when Lester hung a lazy breaking ball to the next batter, which happened to be Detroit's musclular left fielder Marcus Thames, who turned on the fat pitch and drove it halfway to his namesake river in England to give the Tigers a 4-2 lead they would not relinquish.
That's because Detroit starter Jeremy Bonderman (5IP, 5H, 1ER, 4BB, K) and 4 Tiger relievers shut the Sox down the rest of the way, while Boston's bully continued doing their best Eric Gagme imitations as a quartet of hurlers couldn't keep the score where it was and give the offense a chance to get back in the game.
It all added up to a disappointing night at the yard, and now with Lowell's status uncertain, Papi's continued hitting woes (0-4, .091 for the year) and the instability of the pitchers, suddenly the promise of the preseason has turned into the despressing reality that this team could be in last place in the eat when the Stanks come to town tomorrow night.
But at least they've lost two straight to the Royals.
So we got that going for us.
RECORD: 4-5
AL EAST: 3 GB
STREAK: L 1
UP NEXT: Thu vs DET, 715 Robertson v Wakefield
Posted by J Rose at 9:55 PM 0 comments
Labels: GAME RESULT, LESTER, LOSS, LOWELL, TIGERS
4.08.2008
Welcome back: Sox win in Billy Buck's return to Hub
WP: Matsuzaka (2-0)
LP: Rogers (0-2)
SV: None
HRs: None
Superstar: Dice K 6.2IP, 4H, 4BB, 7K
He wasn't overpowering, but he was incredibly effective, limiting the struggling Tigers to 4 singles while striking out 7. And when he came out of the game with 2 outs in the 7th, Matsuzaka received a huge ovation from the Faithful, because this is the Dice K we expect to see every time he takes the mound.
Combine an anemic offense (5 singles, no runs) with a sloppy defense (2 errors, numerous missed plays) and bad pitching and what you get is an 0-7 team with a $139 million dollar payroll and more problems than a math major.
RECAP:
All that was missing from the Red Sox 2008 home opener was Mike Dukakis, New Kids on the Block, Calvin Schiraldi and a holographic "forgive me" message from Harry Frazee.
Other than that it seemed like every other former hero or goat in the city's history was on hand today as the Sox celebrated the 2007 title team by trotting out familiar faces and championship trophies from all 4 Hub sports franchises, as well as some famous Boston celebrities.
From the moment the pregame festivities began (which of course I didn't get to see live since Extra Innings would never carry that kind of stuff) the entire day had the atmosphere of a gigantic celebration more than a baseball game. It was like Opening Day, Mardi Gras, New Years Eve, Carnival, the Festival of Lights, the Olympics Closing Ceremonies and the Oscars all rolled into one.
Some of the highlights included:
-current and former members of the Patriots, Bruins and Celtics taking the field while wielding their respective trophies
-the unfurling of the 2007 championship banner over the Wall as it replaced the 2004 banner, a cool sight in what hopefully will become an annual tradition
-the handing out of the championship rings to the entire organization, from coaches & trainers to former and current players (hey, a Doug Mirabelli sighting!), all scored to the themes songs of various cinematic classics
-and finally, the most climatic moment of the day - Bill Buckner emerged from Manny's door in the Monster and walked towards to the mound to a chorus of cheers and a long-awaited standing ovation, 22 years after his infamous World Series play became the modern symbol of Sox futility and made him a pariah in throughout New England and the Nation.
It was a moment, despite its contrived and Sox-serving nature, that was both memorable and emotional for all those involved. It was a completion of the cycle from the "woe is us, we're always gonna suck and this is why" sports town to a city of champions chock full of happiness and good will, and it was the ultimate way to say all is forgiven, not just from the fans to Billy Buck but from Billy Buck to the once-bitter fans.
Then Buck threw out the opening pitch, and appropriately it was a perfect strike to Dewey Evans (my all-time fave Sox player, by the way). Following fellow Sox legend Johnny Pesky's cry of "Let's play ball", the pregame pomp & circumstance was over and finally it was time to play ball.
Boston jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead by the third inning on a sacrifice fly by Coco Crisp and a triple by Manny that he scored on when the relay throw went into the Tiger's dugout, but the game felt like an afterthought to the pageantry of the afternoon.
Something that didn't get lost on the crowd was the effort of Daisuke Matsuzaka. Freed from the obligations of pitching in his homeland and starting two of the Sox first three games on two different continents, Dice-K was masterful for much of the afternoon. With the Tiger offense continuing to sputter without its leadoff man/catalyst Curtis Granderson, Matsuzaka mowed through the lineup like Grant through Richmond, allowing just 4 baserunners through the first five innings before escaping a bases loaded jam in the 6th.
By that time it was 3-0 Boston, and when the Sox tacked on another pair of runs in the bottom of the 6th on an RBI double by Youk (3-3, R, 2BI, BB) and a bases loaded walk to JD Drew, the game was all over but the shouting.
And by shouting I mean local boy Steven Tyler's screeching rendition of God Bless America, which sounded like a cat with laryngitis, followed by Neil Diamond's absurd taped offering of Fenway anthem Sweet Caroline, complete with a back up band, dancing Wally and lifeless Sox CEO Tom Werner.
It was about that time that I fast forwarded to the end of this overblown spectacle, just in time to catch Oki blow through the three Tiger hitters, putting the finishing touch on this day of joy and celebration.
So the homecoming was an absolute success. Bucker was feted. Tiger SS and new pariah Edgar Rentanerror was booed. The Sox got back on the winning track, and the now infamous ballpark hawk even made a guest appearance during Youk's at bat in the 6th inning.
Now can we get on with the regular season? Read More......
Posted by J Rose at 6:35 PM 0 comments
Labels: DICE-K, GAME RESULT, HOME OPENER, TIGERS, WIN
Series Preview: Home sweet home! Tigers vs Sox
Tigers (0-6) vs. Red Sox (3-4)
Game 1 Today 205 Rogers (0-1, 3.00) vs. Matsuzaka (1-0, 2.31)
Game 2 Wed 705 Bonderman (0-1, 5.68) vs. Lester (1-1, 3.38)
Game 3 Thu 705 Robertson (0-0, 9.00) vs. Wakefield (0-0, 4.50)
What to watch for: two teams with high expectations and even higher payrolls will go toe-to-toe to prove their horrendous start is just an early-season fluke
Players to watch: the Tigers lineup was being compared to the '27 Yankees this spring, but with Gary Sheffield, Miguel Cabrera and Curtis Granderson all hurting, the potential Murderer's Row has resembled Training Room Terrors. 2007 MVP candidate Magglio Roidonez has no homers or ribbies yet this season, so keep an eye on him to bust out. If he's on a cycle right now.
Preview:
To paraphrase the immortal words of the late, great Dr. Martin Luther King, home at last, home at last, thank God almighty the Sox are home at last!
After 2+ months abroad, traveling from Florida to Japan to Southern California to Northern California to Toronto, spanning over 16,000 air miles, the World Champion Boston Red Sox finally make their 2008 home debut this afternoon on what will be a chilly day at Fenway Park. But something tells me the players will embrace the spring chill a bit more than the spring rolls of a few weeks ago.
Never in the history of sports has a team had to endure such a grueling schedule to open a season, let alone the defending champs of the sport, so it goes without saying that the boys were a little gassed when they finally reached Toronto on Friday.
That ultimate case of jet lag combined with a hungry Jays squad added up to a debacle of a 3 game sweep at the Rogers Center, lowlighted by games filled with shitty pitching, shoddy fielding and spotty hitting.
But at least the Sox have a legitimate excuse for their doldrums.
Detroit spent lavishly in the offseason to acquire a couple of young Marlins, slugging third baseman Cabrera and struggling former ace Dontrelle Willis, and by the time the shopping spree was finished the Tigers had the 2nd highest payroll in the majors at $139 million, trailing only the Stanks' $208 mil ledger.
Where did all that free spending get them? To the bottom of the division they were supposed to run away with, the AL Central, after a winless first week that featured 6 straight home losses in which they were outscored 39-15.
To be fair they have had a number of unfortunate injuries. Stud relievers Fernando Rodney and Joel the Guitar Hero Zumaya both missed most of spring training, starting centerfielder Curtis Granderson suffered a broken hand at the end of the spring, a rib injury recently sidelined Cabrera and a the perennially injured Sheffield just dislocated his finger the other day.
But the team is still loaded with quality hitters (Ordonez, Guillen, Inge, Polanco, Rodriguez) and pitchers (Bonderman, Verlander, Jones), so there's no reason they couldn't have finished with a Sox like record of 3-3 or 2-4 at least.
Either way the slow starts make this series all the more meaningful. Neither club wants to get into any deeper of a hole, and both want to prove that not only were the lofty expectations of reaching the playoffs and winning it all warranted but absolutely attainable.
All we in the nation care about right now is the fact that our team is finally back on home turf. Back to the cozy confines of the field by the Fens, where the hot dogs are warm and the seats will be as cold as the beer.
Rings will be presented. Banners will be draped. Fighter jets will roar overhead and the packed house will roar in approval for the first game played at home by the defending champs.
Makes me wish I could be there in person instead of having to watch it on DVR later.
All I can say is Play Ball!
And welcome home.
Posted by J Rose at 11:01 AM 0 comments
Labels: HOME OPENER, SERIES PREVIEW, TIGERS
4.06.2008
International Men of Misery: Sox swept by Jays
Toronto 7, Sox 4
WP: Halladay (1-1)
LP: Beckett (0-1)
SV: Accardo (3)
HRs: BOS- Drew (2), Varitek (2), Ellsbury (1); TOR-Thomas (2), Wells (2)
Going...going...and the road trip is gone...along with confidence in Delcarmen
Superstar: Frank Thomas 1-4, R, 4BI, GS
The Big Hurt continues to live up to his nickname, especially in this series. Thomas had the big blow for Toronto for the third straight game, this one a game-changing grand slam off Manny Delcarmen in the 5th, and he wound up going 4-12 with 2 homers and 8 ribbies in the series to help the Jays pull off the sweep.
The Biggest Loser: Manny Delcarmen 1/3IP, 1H, 1ER, 1BB, GS
His stat line might not show it because three of the runs were charged to Josh Beckett, but this guy cost Boston the game more than anyone. When you come into a close game with the bases loaded and two outs, all you gotta do is get your starter off the hook.
Instead Delcarmen served up a meatball to Thomas on his first pitch of the afternoon that sailed over the leftfield wall and effectively ended the game right there.
(Dis)Honorable mention: Julio Lugo 0-4, 3 errors, 1 misplay that led to a run
RECAP:
Boy do I wish I could start this recap the same way I stared the last two -- by saying I missed the game.
Instead I sat through every agonizing minute of this road trip from hell-ending debacle, and like every other member of the Nation out there I was disgusted by most of what I saw. For example:
-four Sox errors, three by Julio Lugo, as well as numerous other miscues
-another terrible outing, the second in a row, for the once heralded and now dreaded Mattapan Manny Delcarmen
-another unproductive game from the trio of Ortiz, Manny & Lowell (2-12, RBI)
-the TBS announcing team of Chip Carey & Buck Martinez ( a couple of Carey-isms included "Manny Ortiz" and "exhibit # A"-ugh)
Don't get me wrong there were some good things that happened in this game, including a decent performance by Josh Beckett (4.2IP, 3H, 5ER, 4BB, 6K, HR) in his first start of the year, who looked very healthy before tiring late; three Sox homers, all coming from the 6-7-8 spot in the lineup; and the fact that Boston outhit Toronto, 10-5, a stat that ultimately is meaningless when you check the final score.
But for the third straight game the bad far outweighed the good, and it was painfully obvious that this long, season-opening road trip has in fact exacted a mighty toll on these road weary road warriors, despite earlier claims to the contrary.
The loss was made all the more painful because the expectation and excitement level was at a peak heading into the game. Not only because Beckett was making his 08 debut after spending a few weeks on the DL with a bad back and hip, but the game was the first to be broadcast on TBS' new Sunday afternoon national baseball package, horrible announcers be damned.
And for the first four innings the game lived up to the billing. Beckett began the game with a 98 mph heater for a strike to Shannon Stewart, and then proceeded to bring the blowtorch for most of the outing. Jacoby Ellsbury gave Boston an early lead when he homered off Roy Halladay (8IP, 8H, 4ER, 1BB, 6K, 3HRs) to lead off the third, at which point he was 4-4 with two longballs against the former Cy Young winner, and after Beckett gave the lead up on a two-run shot to Vernon Wells in the 4th, Bsoton tied it right up when Cap'n Tek hit his second homer of the season to lead off the 5th.
Alas that would be the end of the good times for Boston and the Nation. In the bottom of the 5th things unraveled in a hurry for Beckett, as he loaded the bases after getting two quick outs on a single by Aaron Hill and back-to-back walks to Rios & Wells, and by the time Tito went to his struggling bullpen, everyone in the Rogers Center had a pretty good idea of what was coming next.
And by next I mean the very next pitch, as the struggling Delcarmen tried to sneak a first pitch fastball past the veteran DH Thomas, who has been around a little bit too long and is too good a hitter to be fooled by that kind of crap. Thomas turned on the pitch quicker than Mike Vick's cousin, and just like that a close, winnable game became a rout in the blink of an eye for the second straight game, and despite tacking on a couple of runs late you could tell Boston was in full "get us to our home and our beds" mode as soon as the ball cleared the fence.
So the Sox wound up the trip 3-4 and in last place in the East after traveling around the world and back in the last three weeks, and it may be too early to tell what kind of lasting effect this journey to the ends of the Earth will have on this club, suffice it to say it definitely will not be looked at as a positive influence on the situation the team finds itself in now.
Nothing a little home cooking can't cure.
Not to mention a homestand that kicks off with fellow struggling pennant contenders, the winless Tigers.
RECORD: 3-4
STREAK: L3
AL EAST: 2 GB
UP NEXT: Off Mon; Tue vs. Det @ Fenway 2:05
Posted by J Rose at 3:24 PM 0 comments
Labels: BECKETT, BLUE JAYS, GAME RESULT, LOSS, SWEPT
Beckett returns from the DL not a moment too soon
Boston (3-3) @ Toronto (3-2)
Beckett (NR) vs Halladay (0-1, 3.86)
1:00 Rogers Center TBS HD
Last year Josh Beckett was the savior of the Sox pitching staff. While compiling a 20-7 record with a 3.27 ERA en route to a second place finish in the Cy Young voting, Beckett was counted on many times to stop Boston losing streaks and subsequently start a Sox winning streak, all while sending a statement to opponents by matching up against their own aces.
Today, as Beckett returns from the DL due to spring back troubles, will be no different than last year.
After taking 3 of 4 from Oakland to start the season, Boston has traveled back to the Eastern time zone to run into trouble with their AL East nemesis to the north, the Blue Jays. The Sox have dropped 2 straight at the Rogers Center to start this series and 7 in a row to the Jays dating back to last season, and with the starters struggling and the bullpen faring worse, it will be up to the Sox Superman to save the day.
Trouble is Beckett doesn't bat, and the Boston batters haven't exactly been hitting the cover off the ball early in the season. The team is hitting .242 with 5 homers and 19 runs scored in 6 games, while big boppers David Ortiz (.091, 1HR, 2BI), Manny Ramirez (.250, 1HR) and Mike Lowell (.208, 0HR, 0BI) have yet to get untracked.
But the one thing Becks can contribute is stability to the staff, and that is what Boston will be hoping he can provide for them today. The team ERA is currently at 4.50, the starters have a record of 2-2, and members of the pen are touting ERAs of21.60 (Kyle Snyder) and 11.25 Bryan Corey), prompting the release of Snyder and a retooling of the relievers.
Facing Beckett will be Toronto's own perennial Cy Young candidate, Roy Halladay. Doc was a victim of bad defense and no run support both in the spring and in his first outing, in which he allowed 7 hits and 3 runs to the Stanks over 7 innings but lost 3-2, and he's had little success against the Sox over the years. But with Boston's pen in shambles and the hitters yet to show up this season since the opener, this could be the day he dominates the Boston lineup.
All of this adds up to the perfect time for Superman to fly in and save the day. The Sox don't need much from him; 7 or 8 scoreless innings of 2-hit ball will suffice.
Nothing he hasn't provided before.
Posted by J Rose at 11:11 AM 0 comments
Labels: BECKETT, BLUE JAYS, GAME PREVIEW