Beckett (7-7-2-0-8, 116) lowered his ERA to 3.27. He allowed two solo home runs. Jemmer and The Bot finished up.
For those who care about such things, Beckett received credit for his 18th win (18-6). (Please keep in mind that in his absolutely shitty 2006 season, Beckett led the Red Sox with 16 victories.) Chien-Ming Wang of the Yankees won today in Kansas City and is also 18-6.
With the score tied 2-2 in the eighth, JD Drew lead off with a single. Youkilis lined out to second. With Jason Varitek batting, Drew stole second and went to third as Tek flew to center. Coco Crisp singled Drew home with the go-ahead run.
Boston got their other runs in the third. With two outs, Dustin Pedroia singled and David Ortiz doubled. Mike Lowell then singled them both in.
***
Josh Beckett (3.30, 138 ERA+) / Jeremy Guthrie (3.65, 122 ERA+)
In three of his past four starts, Guthrie has tossed at least six innings and allowed three or fewer runs. Jay Payton is hitting .381 (8-for-21) against Beckett.
From the Globe:
ReplyDelete1. Jacoby Ellsbury, LF
2. Dustin Pedroia, 2B
3. David Ortiz, DH
4. Mike Lowell, 3B
5. J.D. Drew, RF
6. KevinYoukilis, 1B
7. Jason Varitek, C
8. Coco Crisp, CF
9. Alex Cora, SS
--Josh Beckett, SP
Orioles
1. Brian Roberts, 2B
2. Tike Redman, CF
3. Nick Markakis, RF
4. Miguel Tejada, DH
5. Aubrey Huff, 1B
6. Melvin Mora, 3B
7. Ramon Henandez, C
8. Freddie Bynum, LF
9. Luis Hernadez, SS
-- Jeremy Guthrie, SP
I think that Francona has found his lead off hitter!!
Me likey :)
ReplyDeleteSwamped with work -- instead of 3 people here, there is 1 - me.
ReplyDeleteL and I will try to approve comments asap - Go Sox.
Pedro's pitching today for the Mets.
ReplyDelete1-0 Mets after 1.
Tigers have the bases loaded in the 2nd inning, trailing the M's 2-0
SNY: Pedro's got all of his pitching working today.
ReplyDeleteThat was a very good AB for Pedroia. Works the count, fights off some good pitches, then hits a right-center gapper for a double.
ReplyDeletePedro had a chance to strike out 4 in the 3rd inning. He K'd Biggio but the ball bounced at home plate and went to the backstop and Biggio reached. He struck out the next two guys, then gave up a single to Mark Loretta. Mike Lamb then flew out to center to end the inning. That would have been awesome to see Pedro strike out four in an inning.
ReplyDeletePedro just led off the bottom of the 3rd with a double over the head of Carlos Lee! Heh. Wow.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, that double he hit was off of Roy Oswalt.
ReplyDeleteThis date in history - 1978 standings:
ReplyDeleteBos 86-55
NYY 85-56
This date in 78 was a Saturday and the Sox lost their third straight game as D. Eckersley lost to R. Guidry 7-0. The 10th of Sept. would bring new meaning to the words boston massacre and introduce RSN to Bobby Sprowl.
In 2004 T. Wakefield lost to the Seattle Mariners 7-1. Wildcard lead would remain at 3.5 games.
Guthrie is on a "mission"
Pedro was moved over on a bunt from Reyes, then Castillo walked. Beltran then hit a sac fly and scored Pedro.
ReplyDeleteStrange inning.
D. Eckersley lost to R. Guidry 7-0.
ReplyDeleteI was at that game. I was 14 and it was my 3rd game at Fenway. Took a VT Transit bus down with my father.
Burleson singled to start the bottom of the first, then an out, then Rice singled. Then -- no more hits for Boston.
MFY got all 7 runs in one inning -- the 4th, I think.
Yep, it was the 4th.
ReplyDeleteIn conclusion, Don Zimmer is fucking shitheaded cockasscunt pisshole.
you are correct, all seven runs came in one inning the fourth. That was also Eck's only loss to the yankees that year as he won his other 4, including three straight starts on 6/21, 6/26 and 7/3.
ReplyDeleteA-Rod hits Dong #52
ReplyDelete2-0
And Beckett says Frag you Huff you are staying right there on second base.
ReplyDeleteA-Rod hits Dong #52
ReplyDelete2-0
Will be good to see him cooled off in Boston (fc).
Pedro's next AB, he grounded one to short, but Loretta, filling in for the injured Adam Everett, bobbled it and the throw to first - not in time. Pedro legged it out. Reyes quickly grounded out to short with the bases loaded to end the inning. 2-0 Mets still.
ReplyDelete2,3,4 coming through!
ReplyDeleteRallies that start with 2 outs are fun.
ReplyDeletePedro's in a bit of trouble in the 5th. 89 pitches, men at second and third. Walks Loretta. Now the bases are loaded.
ReplyDeleteLooks like he's run out of gas.
Willie Randolph's keeping him in. He's pitching from the wind-up to Mike Lamb with the bases loaded. So Pedro's running on fumes and trying to get one more batter to be in line for the win.
F8 and the inning is over. Pedro's done, pumps his fist, and he's done after having thrown 5 shutout innings at Shea.
Pedro left the diamond with the fans chanting his name.
ReplyDeleteAs Beckett continues to be very very good in his career year!
ReplyDeleteMost wins in a season, most K's and he has 3 starts left this season!
Beltran doubles and Alou hits a dong. 4-0 mets.
ReplyDeleteBeckett is DEALING. Looking good.
ReplyDelete10-5 M's in the Top of the 4th in Detroit. Bonderman gave up 6 runs, Grilli gave up 3. They've used four pitchers so far.
ReplyDeleteOuch. Make that 13-5.
ReplyDeleteQuestion: How the fuck is it possible for a game between toronto and tampa bay to be delayed?
ReplyDeleteJust checked the score on yahoo....I'm busy watching football however, wtf
Gameday says: "Delayed (Power)"
ReplyDeleteTampa should learn to pay their electric bills more quickly.
ReplyDeleteWhy doesn't gameday have the strikezone anymore?
ReplyDeleteEllsbury is seeing the ball so well right now, bringing his momentum from that long hitting streak in Pawtucket up here to Boston.
ReplyDeleteLyndon is a fun player to watch.
Interesting. Wonder if it has to do with that hurricane, but I thought that was already up the coast in S. Carolina...
ReplyDeleteWell they get thunderstorms almost every day in Tampa Bay. Not out of the realm of possibility to have a power outage because of that.
ReplyDeleteThat tropical system (tropical storm) is approaching North Carolina before it goes off the coast and bothers only the fish.
dusty's gonna start a bcb with the umpires.
ReplyDeleteWas going to write how the the MFY's luck out again. Six games left against Baltimore and they will not face Bedard, but I see they have faced him more than the Sox have this year.
ReplyDeleteFragging MORA
Tigers get one, so now they're down a touchdown and extra point.
ReplyDeleteStrike 'em out, THROW 'em out!
ReplyDeleteGreat throw by Tek, but Hernandez sure overslid that bag.
ReplyDeleteYOOOOOOOOOOOOK!!!
ReplyDeleteGreat footwork again from Beckett.
The second best team in defense flashes some leather, yeah boy!!!
ReplyDeleteBases loaded for Alex Gordon in KC. He's the go-ahead run.
ReplyDeleteBASES-CLEARING DOUBLE FROM GORDON. TIE GAME!! 3-3
ReplyDeleteWay to go, Alex G.
ReplyDeleteHeh. Youk steals second. That was hilarious the way he went in there. He's lucky there wasn't a throw. Failed hit n' run.
ReplyDeleteRS, Pedro's line today: 5 IP, 6 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 4 K. 92p/65st.
ReplyDeleteinjury delay --- yook on the sb???
ReplyDeletei guess not - as tek walks.
ReplyDelete2-run double for Posada. 5-3 mfy
ReplyDeleteShite. Markakis has not been very nice this series.
ReplyDeleteSLEEHW oCoC!!
ReplyDeleteMets beat the Astros 4-1. Pedro gets the win, he's now 2-0.
ReplyDeletevaritek batted from both sides of the plate in the same AB there, didn't he? ...with the pitcher switch mid-AB.
ReplyDeleteDid you see LBJ climb the wall on that homer?
Youk, Youk, Youk.
s1c: Just sayin', we're in the 40th anniversary of a great pennant race that the Sox ended up winning. If you wanna talk about '78, do it on the 30th anniversary next year.
ReplyDeleteOn a Yankee blog;)
Good start here. GET BECKETT #18.
ReplyDelete'Tek has not been good in hit-and-run situations today.
ReplyDeleteSeesh. Man at third, 2 out. One more chance to get Beckett in line for a win. Come on, OCOC!
ReplyDeleteOCOC!!!!!
ReplyDeleteYEAH OCOC!!!!! Woooo!!! That was awesome. TIMELY HITTING. Beckett owes you a beer if the Sox win.
ReplyDeleteyes, im back from the depths of week 1 of the football season...for now.
ReplyDeletetime to catch the rest of this one then head back up to my house in waterloo...
Key hit by Coco in the Carbo spot, 2 outs in the eighth.
ReplyDeletes1c: Just sayin', we're in the 40th anniversary of a great pennant race that the Sox ended up winning. If you wanna talk about '78, do it on the 30th anniversary next year.
ReplyDeleteCould care less about '67. Was not a Sox fan at the time, try Dodgers.
As for '78, think of it as exorcising demons. Lots of similarities between this season and that, but two big differences Pitching and Manager.
The Red Sox this year have kept the best record in all of baseball for almost the entire season, no major slumps. '78 Sox--huge slump, blowing a big lead. But if you're gonna bring it up, I want lots of updates in that final week when the '78 team had its amazing comeback that no one talks about.
ReplyDeletec'mon jeemer...jeem as you've jeemed so well before...
ReplyDeleteVERY nice scoop Dr. D!
ReplyDeleteDr. D!
ReplyDeleteGood tune by local Boston ska-core favorites, Mighty Mighty Bosstones ;-)
But if you're gonna bring it up, I want lots of updates in that final week when the '78 team had its amazing comeback that no one talks about.
ReplyDeleteAlready planned in fact if you look at that team they fell behind at least two but if I remember correctly it was 3 1/2 games, before they came back to force the tie! Was daily talk in the dorm that pennant race.
o we hate the announcers for the O's? Thorne and Palmer? I am not really annoyed by them. They are complimentary to Sox players and they seem to know what the hell is going on.
ReplyDeleteBot time
ReplyDeleteBOT.
ReplyDeleteAubrey-ana Huffington out in the Beltway. Two more, Pap.
ReplyDeleteBot 9th -- just turned TV on to watch.
ReplyDeleteo we hate the announcers for the O's? Thorne and Palmer? I am not really annoyed by them. They are complimentary to Sox players and they seem to know what the hell is going on.
ReplyDeleteYesterday I said they were the best out-of-town announcers I've heard. Really very decent.
Now back to working and modding.
Get 2, infield. I should've said outside the Beltway.
ReplyDeleteA room-service grounder would be nice.
ReplyDeleteMo in for the ninth for them. Don't be scared, Royals. It's the same pitch every time.
ReplyDeleteThat's two. I want a win....
ReplyDeleteI see no connection between 1978 and 2007.
ReplyDeleteMight as well give updates of the 1905 Red Sox or 1942 Red Sox or 1996 Red Sox.
I do not believe in "demons" -- most of people who pushed the Curse were not Red Sox fans -- but if I'm wrong and there were any hanging around, 2004 wiped them out.
WOOT!!!
ReplyDeleteSnuffed 'em!
14. Beckett is now an 18 game winner!
Why not recap 1988 -- a year in which the Yankees blew a larger-than-1978 lead to the Red Sox?
ReplyDelete5.5! (at least, as KC is still alive) 18 to play....right?
ReplyDeleteLUV the BOT.
ReplyDeleteYankees just beat KC, so Wang is now an 18 game winner, as well.
ReplyDeleteAnd on Saturday, game 2 of the Yankees/Red Sox series, Wang and Beckett will meet and go against each other. That will be a very fun game to watch. Certainly a Cy Young match-up.
ReplyDeleteWang's an 18-game weiner.
ReplyDeleteBeckett was the first 18 game winner this year.
ReplyDeleteW/L is so not meaningful.
ReplyDeleteDetroit is really determined to mess up my plans. I'm expecting them to make a run at the wild card, then play us in the ALCS.
ReplyDeleteThat scenario's becoming increasingly less likely.
What's our magic number?
"Wang and Beckett will meet and go against each other. That will be a very fun game to watch."
ReplyDeleteCool, that's the one I'll be at Fenway for. Not that Nixon33 cares. Then again, you never know with rain and stuff, could be a different matchup by then.
I will celebrate this win by going to Neil Hammmmburgerrrr tonight!
Magic # is 14.
ReplyDeleteThe two seasons are similar in lots of ways. A stud pitcher in their careers (Eck vs Josh), an old pitcher on the way out (Tiant vs Schilling), a consistent double digit pitcher (Torrez vs Wakefield), and a young closer (Stanley vs Papelbon).
ReplyDeleteBoth teams got off to big lead over the Yankees and both teams record have been close all year as in best record since 1978 etc.
Is there any impact on the 2007 team from that team? Not really, unless you want to count the fact that Remy and Eck have brought up that season as a reason for this team not to let up numerous times this year. I also don't remember me saying that this team is going to blow this lead. I think I have been pretty positive all year about this team (except for last night when I basically said I don't want to see Daisuke the rest of the season).
I also remember that season for other reasons, mainly that fall semester being my first exposure to obnoxious Yankee fans (guy across the hall), the end of my baseball career (was the last summer I played semi-pro), and other shared memories with my father. Even though that season ended watching Yaz pop up as I skipped classes to watch the game it was still a special season in a lot of ways for me.
Big difference:
ReplyDeleteThe 2007 Red Sox have an actual manager in the dugout rather than a stinking pile of shit.
I think I also pointed out that this team has a manager this year also, I think Francona should be considered manager of the year.
ReplyDelete"And that," as Robert Frost has noted, "has made all the difference."
ReplyDelete(or a lot of it, anyway)
Oh, one other comparison both teams had an off beat pitcher who came out of the bullpen and started games that year Spaceman Lee and Sexy Lips.
ReplyDeleteI don't mind the posts, but I also don't see the point.
ReplyDeleteAdd Robert Frost to the list with Augusto Pinochet, radical resistance theory and that Slavic philosopher whose name I never remember. Zizec. Zozec. Zoidberg.
ReplyDeleteJust catching up on the game thread here. I have one question, which others have asked.
ReplyDeleteWHY DOES ANYONE TALK ABOUT 1978?
Wondering if J.D. will get any credit for starting the winning rally on WEEI / other blogs / newspapers tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteHe gets a big atta boy from me today!
Yeah, I'm totally down with Sox history and stuff but in this case, and like you say, obviously this isn't why you're doing it, but to be in a season where we had a 14 game lead and now it's closer, and it's September, I just don't want to hear about 1978. But it's your call.
ReplyDeleteMagic # to make playoffs is 10. Here's why I hate the wild card: Let's say the Yanks clinch the WC before we clinch the division. At that point, we'll both be in the playoffs. So the moment we clinch the division becomes unexciting. I miss the old division races.
I miss the old division races.
ReplyDeleteIn this situation, yes. But in 2004 the wild card was certainly a good thing. Would you have said the same thing if this was 2004?
"Would you have said the same thing if this was 2004?"
ReplyDeleteI've talked about this before here. I totally hate the wild card, always have. Doesn't mean I'm sitting here thinking, Man, that was such a fake championship for us....
It's part of the game, and even now every year I know all we have to do is make the playoffs, division doesn't matter. I hate that that's how it is.
I thought I was going to hate the wild card too, on principle. But in reality I enjoy how it creates more races and more excitement.
ReplyDeleteI want to hate it, but I don't.
.I totally hate the wild card, always have.
ReplyDeleteJere and I are in 100% agreement on the wild card.
Same thing for me with the DH. I hate the idea of the DH, but that's the rule in the league my team plays in and it's nice we have a great DH, but I still hate it.
The only thing I like about interleague play (spit) is when I fill in my scorecard, I get to list the pitcher.
Well, everyone knows how I feel about interleague. An abomination.
ReplyDeleteCertainly feels so much nicer to win the division.
ReplyDeleteI love watching the pitchers hit, and I hate knowing that hitting isn't a big part of a national league pitcher's game. It's understandable for an AL pitcher to be a bad hitter in interleague play and the World Series, but an NL pitcher? Come on. Put some more effort and time into the hitting because that's a valuable spot in the batting order you're taking up.
But I guess it's too much to ask.
Does anyone know where to see/read the postgame sessions the players do?
ReplyDeleteTry:
ReplyDeleteNESN
Various Globe stories have embedded video of post-game interviews (example)
And maybe redsox.com
ish said...
ReplyDeleteIt's understandable for an AL pitcher to be a bad hitter in interleague play and the World Series, but an NL pitcher? Come on.
Guys who hit every fifth day are not good hitters pitchers or not...Mirabelli, Cora, Hinske, Pena...These guys all circle around 250 and lower all year.to be a good hitter takes alot of time and alot of ab's.....to expect a pitcher to do it ,in today's game, is laughable....and too actually want to see it, that's painful..
Then laugh at me, but I love seeing pitchers come up with big hits. You're right, though. They get so little at-bats, both in the Majors and the minors (AA and AAA pitchers hit only when both teams in a game are NL affiliates) that even the best hitting pitchers are going to be below-average. But my point was that if you're pitching in the National League, you know you're going to have to bat.
ReplyDeleteBut this is 2007 and teams aren't paying their pitchers large contracts to hit. I guess if you're a better hitter than pitcher they'd move you to another position, but it's a spot in the lineup that can come around in some pretty important situations. Sure, late in the game you pinch hit, but some of the best scoring opportunities come early in the game.
What would you think if teams actually did put more emphasis on hitting with their pitchers? What if it paid off? I think being able to increase the batting average of the NL pitchers, even by as little ten or twenty points, can be more beneficial to a team than you'd think. With 2 outs and men on, you're at the plate with a .105 batting average and you know your at-bat is just a formality. As a pitcher in that situation all you need to do is reach base so the top of the order can come up: work a walk, dunk one just behind the infield, find a hole, etc.
We could go on and on and on about this, but I don't think it's painful to at least try to take away the "automatic out" status from a pitcher.