April 16, 2012

G10: Rays 1, Red Sox 0

Rays    - 000 000 100 - 1  7  0
Red Sox - 000 000 000 - 0  4  0
Bard (6.2-4-1-7-7, 111) walked three Rays with two outs in the seventh, one a four-pitch pass to Evan Longoria with the bases loaded. The walks hurt, obviously, but Bard turned in a great start, complimenting his fastball with a devastating slider.

Shields (8.1-4-0-2-5, 115) scattered four singles and allowed only one Boston runner past first base. In the bottom of the ninth, Dustin Pedroia walked with one out, and (with Fernando Rodney now pitching) took second on Adrian Gonzalez's grounder to first. David Ortiz was walked intentionally. Cody Ross saw five pitches; all of them were outside the strike zone, but plate umpire Larry Vanover called three of them strikes, ending the game.
Jere posted a NESN screen shot:
My simple plea: let the players on the field decide the outcome of the games. In Bud Selig's MLB, that is apparently too much to ask for.

Hell of a game, though. Maybe they'd still be playing if a competent umpire was working the plate.
Example
James Shields / Daniel Bard

Wake up, Bert!

The Red Sox are trying to complete a four-game sweep of the Rays.

A quick check of this page tells me the Red Sox have swept a four-game series from Tampa Bay four times: May 3-6, 2002, September 9-12, 2002, August 29-September 1, 2005, and May 25-28, 2006.

The two most recent sweeps were played at Fenway Park.

25 comments:

laura k said...

I love the 11:00 start! This is my favourite game of the regular season.

I'm getting out the broom.

allan said...

Aviles, SS
Pedroia, 2B
Gonzalez, 1B
Ortiz, DH
Ross, CF
Sweeney, RF
Punto, 3B
Saltalamacchia, C
McDonald, LF

allan said...

Valentine, on Youkilis:
"I don't think he's as physically or emotionally into the game as he has been in the past for some reason. But [on Saturday] it seemed, you know, he's seeing the ball well, got those two walks, got his on-base percentage up higher than his batting average, which is always a good thing, and he'll move on from there."

Youkilis:
"I was confused by those remarks. Everyone knows I play the game hard. ... I just go out and play the game as hard as I can."

Pedroia:
"I don't know what Bobby's trying to do, but that's not the way we do things here. Maybe that stuff works in Japan."

***

Serious slapdown by FY!

allan said...

The Sox's 31 runs in this series are the most ever for their first 3 home games in a season, topping the 30 scored in 1942.

9casey said...

Tim Bogar maybe manager by Friday.

Jim said...

Valentine's comment could have been worse--if he'd called out Yook on his weekly Micheal Kay appearance. In fact, the way the Boston media and the blogotwitterverse operates, in a couple of months it will be a 'fact' that Valentine DID call out Youk on Yankee TV.

Amy said...

Whoa! Mutiny in the works if Pedroia, the team player who everyone says is the most dedicated, is pissed off with Bobby.

I never liked BV, never will, still don't. I miss Terry. I am having a really hard time so far this spring finding much to love, except for Pedroia, Ortiz, LBJ (sob), and Youk. It feels like I am really rooting for the uniform most of the time. Sigh.

Amy said...

9C, is that hopeful thinking on your part?

Not that I think Bogar is a great candidate, but it would not break my heart to see Valentine canned.

Tom DePlonty said...

On the Sox pre game show on NESN, Cafardo is criticizing Youk and Pedroia for not talking to Valentine, to "understand the full context of his comments" (or something like that), before talking to the press themselves.

allan said...

Cafardo is criticizing Youk and Pedroia for not talking to Valentine,

Unlike Valentine, who spoke to Yook before going to the press ... Oh, he didn't do that? ... Nice double-standard, Nicky. ... Go back to sleep.

allan said...

Tim Bogar maybe manager by Friday.

A Friday in late 2013 or early 2014 (when his contract is up)? Yeah.

This Friday? And maybe they'll dump Pedroia, Gonzalez, and Lester while they're at it.

Kathryn said...

Just play ball and win games.

This is far too much melodrama.

Those were uncharacteristically harsh words from FY toward the man in charge. We have not seen this from him in the past.

Pokerwolf said...

Looks like the players don't like how Bobby does things. It's also really good to see that BV has really settled down the clubhouse and has brought everyone together. Although, he probably didn't expect the players to all be against him. (If they aren't there yet and we're hearing this stuff in the press already, then they'll definitely get there.)

9casey said...

My comment about Bogar was more tongue in cheek.... Just kinda screwin around..

laura k said...

Those were uncharacteristically harsh words from FY toward the man in charge.

And well deserved. Maybe the man in charge will learn to speak to players directly rather than about them (negatively) to the media.

Pokerwolf said...

Agreed, Laura. Insulting players in the press is a really bush league move.

Kathryn said...

And something Francona NEVER did. He went out of his way to not discuss this stuff with the media.

allan said...

You know how I say that after 2004 and 2007, I quickly shrug off losses and say we'll get 'em tomorrow?

Not today. I am fuckin pissed off.

laura k said...

And something Francona NEVER did. He went out of his way to not discuss this stuff with the media.

Right. But supposedly the Sox need a manager who brings more excitement. This is not the kind of excitement I want. Winning - that's exciting.

What a terrible end to today's game.

allan said...

Those were uncharacteristically harsh words from FY toward the man in charge. We have not seen this from him in the past.

Well, Pedroia called Tito "a tool", but they had a special relationship!

allan said...

From SoSH:

espn: Since 2009, Larry Vanover has called strikes on 36% of takes with 2 outs in the 9th inning, 2nd highest of any ump

***

allan said...

Gonzalez:
As far as the end of the game goes, those pitches that were called on Cody, that's not right. They were in the left-handed hitter's box. The way I see it, we missed the playoffs by one game last year. If he walks there, like he should have, or assuming he gets a hit, and we end up winning today, that could make a difference.

Ross:
We've been playing this game for so long that you recognize pitches early and you see them out of the hand, and you say, 'That's a ball,' and then it crosses wherever and it's called a strike. I've taught myself over the years to take those pitches and not expand my strike zone. Make him make a mistake. He didn't make a mistake. As soon as it comes out of his hand, I'm in shutdown mode, saying, 'No, that's a ball.' Then it's a strike. Next one -- ball. No, strike. What are you going to do? Move on and go get them tomorrow.

allan said...

This'll get people calling for robots, and that's not wrong. We're beyond the point at which it's silly that we don't have an electronic strike zone. ... The Red Sox might've improved to 5-5, were it not for Vanover. They might've fallen to 4-6 anyway. We'll never know.

***

Jere said...

"-if he'd called out Yook on his weekly Micheal Kay appearance [...] the way the Boston media and the blogotwitterverse operates, in a couple of months it will be a 'fact' that Valentine DID call out Youk on Yankee TV."

Kay's show is a radio show. (Unless you meant that the misinformation will make it so Kay's radio show is actually a TV show.)

allan said...

Ross:
We’re trying to get something going right there in a late situation, and that’s unacceptable. ... If I’m going up there and striking out every at-bat, I’m going to get benched. But it’s not that way with (umpires). They can go out there and make bad calls all day, and they’re not going to be held accountable for it.

***