Showing posts with label SEATTLE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEATTLE. Show all posts

4.12.2007

Rain rain, go away...but don't come back as snow!

This isn't as live shot, but you get the idea

It doesn't look like there will be any baseball played at Fenway this afternoon. Although I am not a meteorologist, nor do I play one on this blog, with persistent rain, temps in the 30's and blustery winds plaguing the Hub all day, you don't have to be Al Roker to figure the field will be unplayable even if the conditions let up.

Which they're not supposed to. In fact as the temps go down the chances that precip will turn into snow flurries increases, and the Mariners have already had their share of snow-outs this season.

What that means is that there will be no rubber match in this intriguing three game set. The first game saw an offensive explosion as the Sox took advantage of a rusty Mariners team, and in last night's game the Sox couldn't buy a hit off Felix Hernandez (luckily they're paying J.D. Drew $70 million to get hits for them) in what was an old fashioned pitcher's duel.

Seattle isn't scheduled to return to Fenway again this season, but Boston does play 6 games against them out West, so perhaps the game will be rescheduled for Safeco Field.

It's too bad that we probably will have to wait a while to see Act III of this baseball diamond drama.
BTW, it's 80 degrees and sunny here in the Tampa Bay area today. Just thought I'd throw that in.


***UPDATE: At around 4:10 Major League Baseball officially postponed today's game. No makeup date has been announced yet****

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4.11.2007

No Dice: Seattle phenom bests Boston & Matsuzaka

Mariners 3, Sox 0

WP: Hernandez (2-0)
LP: Matsuzaka (1-1)

Sox box
SUMMARY:
The eyes of the world fell upon Fenway Park last night as two nations eagerly awaited the home debut of one of the most talked-about pitchers on the planet, Daisuke Matsuzaka. But when it was all over a 21-year-old Venezuelan named Felix Hernandez stole the show by tossing a 1-hit, complete game shutout against the Sox; "King" Felix allowed only 3 baserunners all night and silenced the raucous Boston crown in a game that took an NL-like 2:20 to complete.

HERO: Hernandez 9IP, 1H, 0R, 2BB, 6Ks
The kid who just turned 21 April 8th tossed his second straight gem, following his Opening Day 12-K shutout masterpiece over Oakland. For an encore all he did was take a no-hitter into the 8th at Fenway and walk away with a complete game shutout against a lineup that had scored 14 runs the day before.

GOAT(s): Boston lineup
The same 9 guys who slammed Seattle for 14 runs on 14 hits on Tuesday afternoon was completely shut down, and shut out, the next day. I know Hernandez was lights out, but almost being no-hit in your own crib on such a huge night was embarrassing.

REVIEW:

The most anticipated home debut in recent Red Sox history began amid international fanfare and a flurry of blinding flashbulbs, but ultimately ended in disappointment and defeat for Boston.

The much-ballyhooed first Fenway performance of Dice-K had a playoff feel to it despite the fact that it was just the 8th game of the season, but it was a young hurler for the Mariners who ended up stealing the spotlight from his heavily-hyped counterpart. Felix Hernandez, who had been an unremarkable 16-18 with an ERA of 4.50 coming into this year in two seasons with the Mariners, turned the talk away from Dice-K for now after his second consecutive dominant outing.

It wasn't as if Dice pitched poorly- 7IP, 8H, 3ER, 1BB, 4Ks- but he was not his usual super-sharp self. Howeva, when your teammates get no hits or runs for you while you're pitching, it doesn't really matter what the pitcher does.

The game started out well enough for Matsuzaka and Boston. With enough cameras and Japanese people in the park to make Fenway feel like Little Kyoto, Dice-K came out and squared off against his countryman and fellow Japanese League alum Ichiro. As the flashbulbs flickered with an almost surreal intensity, Matsuzaka's first pitch to the Seattle centerfielder was a curveball for a strike (evidently in Japanese culture it's not very gentlemanly to throw anything but a fastball in that situation, yet evidently Dice-K didn't care.)

Five pitches later Ichiro grounded out, appropriately to Matsuzaka, and the hype was over and the game underway.

Unfortunately that would be about as good as it would get for Boston. After escaping the 1st inning unscathed, Dice was touched up for 2 hits and a run in the 2nd, but he gave the hitters a chance to catch up by holding it at 1-0 until the 5th. That's when Seattle "blew the game open" by scoring two runs courtesy of 2 singles, a double and a Boston error. With Boston batters doing nothing but giving the Mariners infield practice, those three runs might as well have been 13.

As Dice-K was struggling a bit with his control Hernandez was quietly putting together another awe-inducing performance. Not only were the Sox hitters struggling to get on base, Youk's flyout to left leading off the 7th was the first ball Boston hit out of the infield all night!

The only positive for the Sox came in the 8th inning, when new fan favorite J.D.Drew led off the frame with a bounding single up the middle to break up the no-hit bid. The game and atmosphere at that time was eerily reminiscent of the last near no-hitter thrown in Fenway, Sept 2, 2001, when the Stank's Mike Mooseina's attempt was broken up by Jurassic Carl Everett leading off the 9th.

Matsuzaka was lifted after the 7th and had nothing to be ashamed of. He threw 103 pitches, 68 for strikes, and on any other night would have probably picked up a victory. But it was that kind of night for the hometown team as they just happened to run into a buzzsaw on the mound. In two starts this season Hernandez' linescore reads like this: 17IP, 4H, 0R, 4BB, 18K. That's what you call impressive my friends, and Hernandez made sure that although the word-wide stage was set up for Dice-K, he was going to make sure some people noticed him, too. And when you've got a 100mph fastball and an 87mph slider, people are going to notice.

In the end the home debut of Dice-K will go down as an extremely memorable one.

But for all the wrong reasons.

NOTES & QUOTES:

-Seattle catcher Kenji Johjima had faced Dice extensively in japan and came in with a career .271 average (32-118, 5HRs) against him; he doubled twice in 4 at bats tonight

-there were 179 press credentials issued to members of the Asian media

-Ichiro finished 0-4 against his old nemesis with one strikeout and is now 0-8 with 4 Ks in the series

-Drew is the only player to hit safely in all 8 games, and needless to say he is leading the team in batting at .393 (11-28)

"...because of how well the opposing pitcher pitched today, I felt I had to hold them to as few runs as possible, and I wasn’t able to do that today."- Matsuzaka after the game

Read more about the big night at Fenway here, here and some brash comments by Jose Guillen here.
RECORD: 4-4

GB: -1

UP NEXT: Seattle, WED 4PM

Wakefield (0-1, 1.50) vs. Washburn (0-0, 3.00)

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Game Preview: Matsuzaka's Fenway debut

Mariners (2-2) at Red Sox (4-3)
7PM, Fenway Park
ESPN 2 & ESPN 2 HD

Daisuke Matsuzaka (1-0) vs. Felix Hernandez (1-0)

The day has finally come. After an intense off-season filled with record-setting rights fees, rancorous negotiations, trans-continental meetings and a whole lot of wooing the Japanese/ American phenomenon known as Dice-K will make his Fenway Park debut tonight against the Mariners.
He already got his feet wet in the major leagues last week when he tossed a 6-hit, 10-strikeout gem against the Royals, but his home debut, of which two nations have been waiting for since he agreed to his Red Sox deal in December, should contain enough hype to make the World Series seem like an exhibition.

The game will be televised nationally by ESPN and internationally by every television station in Dice-K's homeland, as he is the biggest local here to hit the states since Ichiro became the first Japanese position player to play in Major League Baseball in 2001. Ironically his former Japanese League nemesis will be the first batter Dice-K faces in his Boston premiere, further adding to the aura of intrigue and curiosity surrounding the hurler's much-anticipated debut.

The two foreign superstars have met on the ball field before as their career paths crossed for two seasons in 1999-200 in Japan, and the Diceman came away with a significant advantage in those meetings. Ichiro, one of the best hitters of all-time, could manage only 8 hits in 34 at bats (.235)against the crafty righty, and he has already been quoted as greatly looking forward to this long-awaited rematch with his respected foe & countryman.

Today might not be a good time to catch Ichiro napping after he took the collar last night, striking out against Josh Beckett three times for only the 6th time in his illustrious career. Combine that humiliation with going up against his old nemesis and the chances of him earning the Silver Sombrero again tonight are slim to none, but Dice-K and Red Sox Nation will settle for just keeping the lanky & dangerous outfielder off the base paths tonight.

Although the 200+ media members on hand will mostly be focused on the Dice/Ichiro angle, the Sox better pay attention to the kid opposing Matsuzaka on the mound; 21-year-old Felix Hernandez won the Mariner's opener last week in grand fashion, allowing 3 hits and no runs while striking out a dozen A's in the first opening day start of his young career, and looks like he could be another strong young fireballer to come from the West Coast.

It should be a great time at the old ballyard tonight. The Sox are coming off a splendid 14-3 beatdown of the M's, they have one of their best pitchers going for them, and the game is going to be seen by millions of viewers around the globe.

No pressure, Dice, no pressure.

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