8.31.2006

G134: Red Sox 6, Blue Jays 4

Woo-Hoo!

Mike Lowell hits a three-run home run in the first inning -- the first three-spot for the Red Sox since the second inning on August 23 (70 innings ago) -- and it suddenly feels like we're rooting for a major league team.

With the game tied 4-4, two outs in the seventh and Dustin Pedroia on first, Alex Cora hits a fly ball to the warning track in right. Alex Rios drifts back, and after the ball hits off his glove, he bats the ball into the right field stands for a two-run home run. !!! Boston leads 6-4 and Jonathan Papelbon slams the door.

Who knows -- maybe this is the first victory in what turns out to be a historical comeback?

***

Roy Halladay (3.12) / Julian Tavarez (4.71), 7 PM

David Wells -- who had the team's best ERA in August (2.65 in five starts) -- has cleaned out his locker and is at his apartment awaiting further instructions.

Meanwhile at the Fens, it's the Battle For Second Place. With Sexy Lips on the hill. (gulp)

Some final wallowing in the 2-7 road trip: The Sox scored 19 runs while allowing 43. They hit .198 (58-for-293) overall and .136 (8-for-59) with runners in scoring position. That averages out to fewer than 7 AB per game with a runner on second or third.

Steven Krasner, ProJo:
[A]fter scoring three runs over the first two innings of last Thursday's game in Anaheim, Boston tallied just 11 runs over its final 70 innings on the trip, only once posting more than one run in an inning -- two in the sixth against Seattle on Sunday, homers by Ortiz and Mike Lowell, the team's only hits that day.
Boston has scored three runs or fewer in seven straight games:
0824 At LAA W 2- 1
0825 At SEA L 0- 6
0826 At SEA L 3- 4
0827 At SEA L 3- 6
0828 At OAK L 0- 9
0829 At OAK L 1- 2
0830 At OAK L 2- 7
It's the team's worst stretch since May 24-June 2, 1976 (nine games, but those Sox went a respectable 4-5):
0524 Vs DET W 3- 0
0525 Vs DET W 2- 0
0526 At MIL L 2- 6
0527 At MIL W 2- 1
0528 Vs BAL L 1- 4
0529 Vs BAL L 2- 7
0530 Vs BAL W 3- 1
0531 Vs NY L 3- 8
0602 Vs NY L 2- 7

Ortiz Out Of Hospital?; Wells Or DiNardo On Hill Tonight?

While the Herald reports that David Ortiz was released from the hospital last night, a Red Sox spokesman said that was "totally inaccurate".

David Wells is tonight's scheduled starter, but he may be traded by game time.

The Sox would love one of the Dodgers' top three prospects -- outfielder Matt Kemp, third baseman Andy LaRoche, or first baseman James Loney -- but the Dodgers aren't biting. So Wells may return to San Diego for catcher George Kottaras, who began this year ranked as the Padres' #2 prospect by Baseball America.

Lenny DiNardo was scratched from his Pawtucket start last night and would likely get the ball if Wells is dealt. ... The San Diego Tribune reports that the Padres have reached an agreement with Rudy Seanez.

Mike Lowell on the team dealing Wells: "Would I understand it? Yeah, I'd understand it from the front office standpoint, depending on what we're getting. I don't want to get a dozen bats. We're more than a David Wells away right now."

The Red Sox return to Fenway tonight for a 10-game homestand. The reception? Francona: "They'll be welcoming us with open arms." ... Youkilis, after being told that fans, while frustrated, would likely understand the reasons for the team's poor showing: "Are you dealing with rational people? I don't know, they're Red Sox fans."

Tony Massarotti, Herald (my emphasis):
What is happening to the Red Sox now simply defies logic, probability and all measures of fairness and decency ... From top to bottom, the Red Sox have received more than their share of criticism this year for a season gone wrong. But now, with more than a month left in the schedule, the Sox are having any reasonable chance at success (or even competitiveness) stripped away from them through no fault of their own.
Look at that -- the team's craptastic August is not being blamed on the moral failings of any player(s) or lack of hustle or desire any crap like that. At least not "now". How bad did things have to get for that to be the case? As of yesterday, the Sox are playing without their:
starting catcher
starting shortstop
starting left fielder (and MVP candidate)
starting center fielder
starting right fielder
backup right fielder
designated hitter (and MVP candidate)
#2 starter
#4 starter

Lester Has Enlarged Lymph Nodes

The Red Sox have confirmed reports that doctors found enlarged lymph nodes on Jon Lester during the course of medical tests on his back.

Lester has been admitted to Massachusetts General Hospital for further evaluation. Initial reports indicated Lester spent much of the time the Sox were in Seattle in the hospital.

8.30.2006

G133: Athletics 7, Red Sox 2

Update: The Tigers won the Bronx nightcap 5-3.

***

Schilling got his 3,000th career strikeout (Nick Swisher, 1st inning), but allowed six runs and 11 hits in 5.1 innings.

Eric Hinske and Dustin Pedroia drove in today's runs; for Pedroia, it was #1 of his major league career. Every starter got a hit except for Alex Cora. Jonathan Papelbon pitched the bottom of the eighth, his first appearance in six days.

Coco Crisp hurt his wrist on a dive last night, so he was out of the lineup today.

New York won this afternoon 2-0, so Boston is 8.5 GB in the all-but-decided AL East. Toronto is 10 GB with a chance to close within one game of the Sox before the big battle-for-second begins tomorrow night. (The Red Sox are 7 GB the White Sox for the wild card.)

Trivia for those who didn't watch the game: Which player was the 3,000th strikeout victim for two different pitchers? (Answer later in comments.)

***

Curt Schilling (3.95) / Barry Zito (3.64), 3:30 PM

Schilling's first strikeout this afternoon will be the 3,000th of his career, making him the 14th pitcher to reach that lofty total.

On his BB/K ratio (only 683 career walks): "That's huge; that's bigger. I don't know where I'll fall on that scale as far as how many walks people have when they got to 3,000, but I'd imagine I'll be close up there. ... Earlier in my career, the two guys I wanted to emulate were Clemens and Maddux. I wanted Clemens's power with Maddux's control. I never quite got to either one of them, but I felt like I was kind of a mishmash of the two in some cases."

Schilling will have the best ratio (easily) among members of the 3,000K club.
                  K    BB   K/BB
Nolan Ryan 5714 2795 2.04
Roger Clemens 4566 1536 2.97
Randy Johnson 4509 1402 3.21
Steve Carlton 4136 1833 2.25
Bert Blyleven 3701 1322 2.79
Tom Seaver 3640 1390 2.61
Don Sutton 3574 1343 2.66
Gaylord Perry 3534 1379 2.56
Walter Johnson 3509 1363 2.57
Phil Niekro 3342 1809 1.84
Fergie Jenkins 3192 997 3.20
Bob Gibson 3117 1336 2.33
Greg Maddux 3148 936 3.36

Curt Schilling 2999 683 4.39

Pedro Martinez 2986 697 4.28
The Red Sox have lost Schilling's past four starts. ... Since the Yankees series, Boston has scored an average of 2 runs per game (9 games, 18 runs); the Red Sox have scored a mere 9 runs in their last 6 games.

Zito took a no-hitter into the eighth inning last Friday in Texas, finishing with 8.1 innings and two hits allowed.

Yankees-Tigers play a day-night DH in the Bronx (1 PM, 7 PM). Royals-Twins at 1PM and Devil Rays-White Sox at 2 PM.

Will Wells Be Traded After Tomorrow's Start?

All the papers offer some medical information on David Ortiz's condition, but there are also reports that the Red Sox are shopping David Wells.

Since Wells has been one of the team's best pitchers in recent weeks, it would be a major concession that the team has little chance at making the playoffs. The Red Sox trail New York by 7.5 games and are 6.5 GB Chicago for the wild card. Boston still has three games remaining with both the White Sox and Twins.

If Boston does decide to deal Wells, who cleared waivers on August 3, they would likely do it by midnight tomorrow, so he would be eligible for a team's post-season roster. (ESPN's Buster Olney said a source put the odds at "80-20 or 90-10" that a deal would be made.) Wells is scheduled to pitch against Toronto tomorrow night at Fenway.

Boston has apparently spoken with the Dodgers, Padres and Cardinals. One report said Boston had asked the Dodgers for 21-year-old outfielder Matt Kemp, who hit .279 in a six-week stint in LA earlier this year and is currently batting .349 for Las Vegas (AAA).

Theo Epstein refused to discuss the matter, but Padres GM Kevin Towers said he had spoken with Epstein on Monday afternoon.
We've had some dialogue, but nothing is imminent. ... I think Theo is just trying to find out which clubs would be interested if they decided to move him. He's putting his feelers out. That's kind of where it's at. ... I wasn't getting the impression from Theo that they were raising the white flag or anything. He just wants to be proactive in case they get to that point.

G132: Athletics 2, Red Sox 1

Beckett pitched well enough to win (7-5-2-3-4, 104), but allowing two runs was too much for the current Boston lineup to overcome.

In both the second and fourth innings, Youkilis walked and Lowell singled, but nothing came of it. Youkilis doubled with two outs in the sixth and scored on Hinske's single up the middle, making the score 2-1. Hinske was then thrown out trying to steal (??) with Lowell at the plate.

In the seventh, Carlos Pena singled with one out and Mirabelli walked. But Kiko Calero got Pedroia on a grounder to first (which moved the runners to second and third) and Joe Kennedy fanned Crisp on a full count, cut fastball down and in.

Loretta walked with one out in the eighth, but Youkilis and Hinske could not advance him. After Youkilis started a 7-6-2 play that nailed Kotsay at the plate in the bottom of the eighth, Lowell, Pena and Mirabelli went down in order against Justin Duchscherer in the ninth, the last two batters striking out.

I'm sure the Red Sox will win another game at some point this year (though you won't catch me betting actually money on it), but I was actually surprised when they scored a run tonight. At 2-0 after five innings, and only four base runners through 5.2 innings, I figured we were looking at a second consecutive shutout.

Afternoon game tomorrow.

***

Three Red Sox Set For Pawtucket: Trot Nixon will DH on Thursday, play RF on Friday, and DH on Saturday. ... Alex Gonzalez will play SS on Friday and Saturday. ... Jason Varitek will catch 5 innings on Friday and 7 innings on Saturday.

David Ortiz will spend tonight at Mass General.

***

Josh Beckett (5.21) / Kirk Saarloos (4.66), 10 PM

Manny Ramirez and Wily Mo Pena were sent back to Boston today for further medical examination. ... So who's our bench for two games? Kapler and Lopez. They don't add up to even one major league player. Christ.

On the plus side, the Yankees were rained out today, so we'll drop only one half-game tonight.

8.29.2006

Medical Statement On Ortiz

Dr. Thomas Gill, Red Sox Medical Director:
Prior to Monday night's game in Oakland, David Ortiz experienced palpitations and was removed from the lineup. At that time, it was determined that he would return to Boston to undergo further examination and testing to determine the cause of these recurring symptoms. The examination and testing will be done over the next few days led by Red Sox Team Internist Dr. Larry Ronan, with the support of a group of specialists.

David had experienced similar symptoms approximately ten days ago. He was admitted to the hospital on August 19 where he was fully examined by specialists and a series of tests were performed. Based on the results of these tests, and David's symptomatic improvement, he was cleared to play. David had not experienced any additional episodes of palpitations until Monday evening.

With the recurrence of these symptoms, we would like David to be fully examined and tested before he is allowed to return to the field.

Today's Gut Punch: Ortiz Sent Back To Boston For More Heart Tests

The Red Sox will limp through two more games in Oakland, but David Ortiz is already back in Boston.

He was scratched from last night's lineup about 20 minutes before the game because of a recurrence of an irregular heartbeat. (Initial reports that he had the flu were incorrect.) Ortiz experienced the fast heartbeat about 60-90 minutes before the game. He was not taken to a hospital, but simply returned to the team's hotel.

Wily Mo Pena: "He told me it's still bothering him and he doesn't know where it's coming from. Everybody's worried, especially him." Francona: "We honestly think he's OK. ... He's going to get a clean bill of health before we let him play again."

Manny Ramirez will likely not play until Thursday. Tito: "I bet he could pinch hit, but if he aggravates it, we sat one of the best players in baseball two, three, four days then set him back again."

Both Jason Varitek and Trot Nixon should begin brief minor league rehab assignments Thursday. ... The Red Sox have not decided whether to rest Jon Lester for the rest of the season.

Carlos Pena: "Growing up around Boston and being such a fan, it's a dream come true. I've always dreamed about wearing this uniform, and to be able to do it is a blessing." (Mo Vaughn was his favorite player.)

Not only is Boston's August record of 8-19 the worst in the majors, it is also the first time the team has lost 19 games in a calendar month since April 1996.

G131: Athletics 9, Red Sox 0

1:08 AM -- And so to bed.

***

Damn. Ortiz out of the starting lienup. Cora (ss) bumped from 9th to 2nd, Pedroia in at 2B and batting 9th. Loretta is batting third and DHing. [shaking head]

***

Kason Gabbard (3.38) / Esteban Loaiza (5.12), 10 PM

In his last start, Loaiza threw a four-hit, complete game shutout against Toronto. He is 3-0, 1.76, in his last five starts, with 27 strikeouts and three walks. ... David Ortiz is 12-for-28 (.429) against Loaiza, with three doubles, six walks and a .529 OBP.

With Beckett and Schilling following Gabbard, I hope Francona doesn't decide to punt this game away around about the 6th inning.

Lineups:
Crisp, CF      Kendall, C
Loretta, 2B Kielty, LF
Ortiz, DH Bradley, RF
Youkilis, LF Thomas, DH
Lowell, 3B Payton, CF
Hinske, RF Chavez, 3B
Lopez, C Swisher, 1B
CPena, 1B Scutaro, SS
Cora, SS Ellis, 2B
Coming In: Boston has lost nine of their last 11 games, 11 of their last 14 games and 16 of their last 22. They are 8-18 in August, the most losses by the team in any month since June 2000 (9-18). And they have hit .188 (36-for-191) the first six games of this road trip, 6-for-34 (.176) with runners in scoring position. ... With 32 games left, the Red Sox trail the Yankees by 6.5 games in the East and the Twins by 5.5 in the wild card.

And now for the good news:

...

...

Umm, I couldn't find any.

8.28.2006

Lester on DL

Jon Lester was placed on the disabled list with a back strain. He was involved in a minor traffic accident on August 18 while driving to Fenway Park.

Carlos Pena was called up from Pawtucket and he will start at first base tonight. Pena had played eight games with the PawSox, hitting .423 with two home runs. ... Doug Mirabelli did not start yesterday because of a sore left ankle. ... Keith Foulke has been unavailable to pitch because of a stiff back.

David Ortiz: "Everything is going in the wrong direction."

Jeff Horrigan of the Herald writes "it's not unreasonable to think" Tim Wakefield will be able to come off the DL during Labor Day weekend. Jason Varitek "also should be activated during the first few days of the next homestand".

The Red Sox traded RHP Tim Bausher and cash to the Reds for RHP Mike Burns. Bausher, 27, went 4-3, 4.91, in two starts and 35 relief appearances at Pawtucket. Burns, 28, was optioned to Louisville (AAA) on June 26 after compiling an 8.78 ERA in 11 relief appearances with the Reds. In Louisville, he was 6-1, 1.75, in 40 appearances, including two starts.

It's Not Dark Yet, But It's Getting There

From Baseball Prospectus, after "running a Monte Carlo simulation of the rest of the season one million times." I'm not sure what that means, but it doesn't look good.
East       Avg W  Avg L   Div    WC    PS
Yankees 97.0 65.0 97.5 0.3 97.8
Red Sox 87.7 74.3 2.0 2.3 4.2
Blue Jays 85.1 76.9 0.5 0.3 0.7

Central Avg W Avg L Div WC PS
Tigers 99.9 62.1 85.8 11.8 97.6
Twins 94.2 67.8 9.2 49.3 58.5
White Sox 93.1 68.9 5.1 36.0 41.0

West Avg W Avg L Div WC PS
Athletics 89.8 72.2 80.0 0.0 80.0
Angels 85.4 76.6 16.6 0.1 16.7
Rangers 82.7 79.3 3.4 0.1 3.4


Average wins by Wild Card: 95.2
What we have here is average wins and losses by each team in those one million seasons and the percentage of times they won the division, wild card and made the playoffs. BP has these percentages extended out to five decimal places; I rounded them off.

Cool Standings has almost the exact same expectations for the East.

I keep thinking that if we can get to within three games of the Yankees by September 15 (when we play four games in the Bronx) then we have a shot. But this chronic squandering of opportunitites -- losing on days New York loses (and, really, all this losing, period) -- is making that very difficult.

8.27.2006

G130: Mariners 6, Red Sox 3

Swept. And held to two hits. By the Mariners.

Now 6.5 games out of the East (as New York held on in Anaheim 11-8). The Blue Jays are 8.5 GB.

***

End of 8 innings -- Delcarmen again retires the Mariners in order, this time on four pitches. Very nice.

End of 7 innings -- Delcarmen retired the Mariners on six pitches. After a long run, Hinske made a flatout dive (a (good) Cocoesque leap) towards the right field line on Rivera's liner for the second out. Snagged it as he was hortizontal in the air and slid to a stop just shy of the stands!

End of 6 innings -- Alex Cora just pulled off an unassisted double play on a ground ball! Mariners had Ibanez (walk) on second and Sexson on first (HBP) with one out. Tavarez went into his motion and did his little Tiant-twist-and-look-at-second-base motion and Ibanez headed back to the back, thinking Sexy Lips had stepped off. But he went into his regular motion and pitched. Broussard hit the ball to shortstop. Cora grabbed it as he was running towards the bag, stepped on second to force Sexson, then tagged Ibanez who was a little off second base, quite confused. (I was watching on the computer on mute, but I'm pretty sure that's how it happened.)

Middle 6th -- David Ortiz's 47th home run of the year has ended Baek's shot at both a no-hitter and a shutout. After one long drive to right hooked foul, Ortiz refined his aim five pitches later. .. One out later, Lowell hits #15. And the Sox trail 5-3. And Baek is off to the showers. Hmmmmm ...

End of 5th -- Goddamn this team! Suzuki gets an infield single to the shortstop hole, Snelling doubles down the right field line, Beltre walks on four pitches, Bases loaded, none out. Ibanez crushes a 2-0 pitch to deep right for a grand slam. 5-1 Mariners. ... After Sexson singles, Snyder is gone and here comes Tavarez. ... But wait, there's more! And after a line out to left, two more singles, a fielder's choice (coupled with a two-base throwing error from Lopez), Ichiro is walked, again loading the bases. Tavarez falls behind Snelling 3-0, but battles back to strike him out. Great linescore:
Red Sox  - 000 01     - 1  0 2
Mariners - 010 05 - 6 10 1
Middle of 5th -- The Red Sox get a run! Hinske walks on 5 pitches. Pedroia walks on 13 (!) pitches. Then Lopez strikes out on 3 pitches. And Cora strikes out on 3 pitches. (Anger ... rising ...) Crisp falls behind 0-2 before grounding to first. Broussard's throw to the bag goes way over the pitcher's head, Hinske scores, but Pedroia is tagged out in a rundown at second. 1-1.

End of 4 innings -- Speaking of no-hitters, Cha Seung Baek is throwing one. A no-hitter, I mean. Hasn't allowed a hit. That's right. No hits for the Red Sox. On his way to a no-no. Imagine that. A no-hitter.

End of 3 innings -- I've never seen or watched a no-hitter, but I just saw Javy Lopez throw out a base runner! OMG!!! Ibanez (who last night advanced from first to second on a fly to Coco) was gunned down as part of a double play on Sexson's strikeout. Snyder, however, is making Jon Lester look like vintage Maddux, having thrown 69 pitches in three innings.

End of 2 innings -- Amazingly, it's only Seattle 1-0. The Mariners loaded the bases in the first on a walk and two infield hits (Pedroia dove for Snelling's grounder and pulled Loretta off the bag with his throw; Cora went into the hole on Sexson's grounder and bobbled the ball when he tried to get a force at third). Synder struck out Broussard and stranded three runners.

In the second, Youkilis had a lot of trouble with the sun in left. Betancourt's line drive sailed over his head and glove for a double, then Bloomquist's routine fly ball fell at his feet for an error. After a BBI to Suzuki, a sac fly scored Betancourt.

Meanwhile, the Yankees lead the Angels 8-2 after 3 innings (Bernie Williams has hit 2 HR). The White Sox beat the Twins 6-1.

***

Kyle Snyder (5.35) / Cha Seung Baek (5.40), 4 PM

Baek made his first start of the season last Tuesday, throwing 103 pitches in five innings against the Yankees. He walked three and struck out six, and allowed three runs. He also pitched in seven games for the Mariners in 2004.

Today's Murmurers Row:
Crisp, CF
Loretta, 1B
Ortiz, DH
Youkilis, LF
Lowell, 3B
Hinske, RF
Pedroia, 2B
Lopez, C
Cora, SS
It never ends. WEEI reported about an hour ago that Jon Lester will miss his start tomorrow night in Oakland, possibly related to a stiff back from his recent fender-bender on Storrow Drive. Kason Gabbard will apparently get the ball.

Running Out Of Time

The Red Sox have had four chances in five days to gain ground on the Yankees in the standings and have taken advantage only once. Boston was 6.5 GB on Tuesday morning.
       NYY      SOX    GB
0822 L 6-5 L 4-3 6.5
0823 W 9-2 W 5-4 6.5
0824 L 4-2 W 2-1 5.5
0825 L 6-5 L 6-0 5.5
0826 L 12-7 L 4-3 5.5
Banged Up: Josh Beckett hopes the cut on his right middle finger has healed so he can pitch on Tuesday. ... Manny Ramirez has patellar tendinitis in his right knee. ... Wily Mo Pena has a sore left wrist. ... Kevin Youkilis is recovering from a stomach flu. ... Mark Loretta has a strained left quadriceps. ... Coco Crisp's right shoulder is sore. ... David Ortiz spent a night in a hospital last weekend. ... Trot Nixon, Jason Varitek, Alex Gonzalez, Tim Wakefield, and Matt Clement are on the disabled list.

And a presumably healthy Mike Timlin has allowed 18 earned runs in his last 21.1 innings and five home runs in his last 14 games. ... In the five games on this road trip, the Red Sox are batting .209 (34-for-163) and have scored 13 runs. 24 of their 34 hits have been singles.

Last night, Raul Ibanez tagged up from first and went to second on a fly ball to Crisp that did not even reach the warning track. The play at second was not close. It was ugly, but not as bad as the night Carl Crawford scored from second on a fly ball to Johnny Damon.

G129: Mariners 4, Red Sox 3

David Wells pitched pretty well (7-8-2-1-4, 97), but couldn't hold leads of 1-0 and 2-1. (He wasn't helped by some atrocious outfield defense from Coco Crisp's noodle arm in center and Gabe Kapler's meandering routes to hits in the gap in right.)

Mike Timlin entered the game in the eighth and promptly coughed up a 3-2 lead -- surrendering a solo home run, two singles and a sac fly.

Boston stays 5.5 GB New York and falls to 5.5 GB of the Twins for the wild card.

***

Since their sweep of the Red Sox, the Yankees have lost four of five games. They lost their third in a row this afternoon, 12-7, to the Angels. (The Angels have racked up 32 hits in two games.) ... Let's see if the Sox can take advantage of the loss tonight.

***

David Wells (5.40) / Gil Meche (4.66), 10 PM

Today's Pet Peeve: Pregame notes inform us that Wells has appeared in 42 games against the Mariners, pitching 194.1 innings. He is 11-11 with a 4.54 ERA.

This information is worthless. Telling us this is a waste of time.

Wells was 24 years old when he first faced Seattle -- on September 4, 1987, his 4th major league appearance. Pitching for Toronto, he faced Alvin Davis, Domingo Ramos, Jim Presley and Scott Bradley -- all four of whom were out of baseball by 1993. How is his performance in that game relevant to how he might do tonight? Have the announcers and writers who blather about stuff like this thought it through at all?

On August 31, 1993, Wells (with Detroit) threw five shutout innings against the Mariners. That bodes well for tonight, right? But on July 25, 1997, Wells (now with the Yankees) allowed 9 hits and 8 runs in 3.1 innings to Seattle. That's clearly bad. ... I'm so confused.

Lineup:
Crisp, CF
Loretta, 2B
Ortiz, DH
Ramirez, LF
Lowell, 3B
Hinske, 1B
Lopez, C
Cora, SS
Kapler, RF

8.26.2006

Ortiz: "I'm A Healthy Son Of A Bitch"

David Ortiz talked at length about his overnight stay at Massachusetts General Hospital last Saturday.

It turns out his heart and chest were not involved at all. Just some dehydration, lack of sleep and a ton of stress.
After game one [on Friday], I went home to take a nap. I was beat up. I couldn't sleep at all. I got up, took a shower and went back to the field. ... The next day it got worse.

It was like my whole body was cramping. ... I'd been having problems sleeping for four or five days. I stress about everything. ... I don't know why. You go home and you start having nightmares. It's frustrating ... There was a lot of stress going on -- especially the ass-kicking we got ...

I don't want to go back to Boston and have people freaking out. I've been feeling better since we got to the West Coast. And I've been able to sleep. I've been sleeping my ass off. ... I'm a healthy son of a bitch.
Perhaps the most amazing thing about this story is that no one knew about it until Carpundit posted about it on Thursday night.

Manny Ramirez should be back in left field tonight. Tito: "I don't think he feels any better, but he's going to play and see if he can do it."

Wily Mo Pena says he has tendinitis in his left wrist, but the inflammation is not near the spot of his surgery earlier this year. ... Tim Wakefield threw off a bullpen mound on Thursday and had little discomfort. ... Matt Clement played catch at Fenway on Wednesday, the first time he picked up a ball in the last three weeks.

The Red Sox are hitting .208 (27-for-130) in the first four games of this road trip.

The Yankees lost another game in the bottom of the ninth, 6-5 to the Angels last night, but the Sox couldn't make hay. Boston remains 5.5 GB in the East and 4.5 GB Minnesota (who beat the White Sox) for the wild card.

G128: Mariners 6, Red Sox 0

A weak effort from a weak lineup. Five hits, three walks, and no Red Sox runner past second base. It's the 4th time the team has been shut out this season.

Schilling did alright until a sixth inning meltdown -- four hits and two errors (on one play) -- bumped the score from 2-0 to 5-0. I missed the errors (Alex Cora and Schilling) and left work mid-inning. Arrived home in time to see Eric Hinske batting for Wily Mo Pena, who had been pulled and was flexing his left wrist (the one operated on earlier this season) in the dugout.

"Bright" spot: Gabe Kapler doubled in the ninth. He now has three hits in his last 38 at-bats. Probably earned himself a few more starts this week. Yay!

The Yankees and Angels are 5-5 after seven innings (Slappy is 0-for-4 with 4 strikeouts).

***

Curt Schilling (3.84) / Jake Woods (3.88), 10 PM

After taking two of three from the Angels, the Red Sox head to Psycho Field. Lineup:
Crisp, CF
Loretta, 1B
Ortiz, DH
Pena, LF
Lowell, 3B
Kapler, RF
Mirabelli, C
Pedroia, 2B
Cora, SS
I saw this horseshit lineup at SoSH and I half-figured it was a joke. No Yook, no Manny, Loretta at 1B, and Kapler still on the team. But there it is, posted at the Globe. ... Now watch us score 17 runs.

The Yankees are in Anaheim.

8.25.2006

Ortiz: Irregular Heartbeat Last Weekend

Tony Massarotti reports that David Ortiz was held overnight at Massachusetts General Hospital last Saturday night to monitor an irregular heartbeat. According to Mazz, Ortiz
acknowledged that he began experiencing a rapid heartbeat Friday night, after a doubleheader against the New York Yankees at Fenway Park. When the problem persisted into Saturday, Ortiz visited Mass. General on the suggestion of the team medical staff, led by medical director Dr. Thomas Gill.
The stay was merely precautionary.

G127: Red Sox 2, Angels 1

Sox win 2-1, Yanks lose 4-2 (Slappy K vs Putz to end it).

Papi gave the Sox a 1-0 lead with his 46th HR leading off the fourth. Boston got a second run with a bases-loaded grounder from Doug Mirabelli in the seventh. Orlando Cabrera thought he could get an inning-ending DP at second and ran to the bag rather than toss to Adam Kennedy (big mistake). Alex Cora beat him to the bag (so the play on Mirabelli at first was only the second out), Mike Lowell scored, and Boston took a 2-0 lead.

The Angels scored in bottom of the 7th, but Wily Mo Pena threw out Juan Rivera at the plate -- Mirabelli stood there, not moving, dekeing Rivera until the last second when he grabbed Pena's throw on the fly and quickly applied the tag.

Josh Beckett was superb (6-4-1-2-3, 71) but had to leave after walking the leadoff batter in the seventh because of a small cut on his right middle finger. Mike Timlin (20th hold) and Jonathan Papelbon (34th save) set the Angels down after that.

5.5 GB. Get on the bus!

***

The Globe reports that the MRI on Manny Ramirez's knee was negative (no structural damage) and diagnosed as patella tendonitis. ... Jason Varitek says he's a week away from playing, either on a minor league assignment or with the Red Sox.

Tonight's lineup:
Crisp, CF
Pedroia, 2B
Ortiz, DH
Youkilis, 1B
Hinske, RF
Lowell, 3B
Pena, LF
Cora, SS
Mirabelli, C
***

Josh Beckett (5.35) / Jered Weaver (1.95), 10 PM

Weaver is 9-0; no AL rookie has ever begun a season 10-0. He scattered three hits over seven shutout innings on Friday against Seattle.

Beckett has gone five straight starts without getting a win. Last time out, he allowed seven hits, nine walks and nine runs to the Yankees in only 5.2 innings. Was that the start that finally pushes Beckett to get his head on straight and start pitching? We'll see.

35 games remain. The Red Sox are 6.5 games back in the East and 4.5 back in the wild card (the White Sox pounded the Tigers 10-0 this afternoon).

No word on Manny's status for tonight.

8.24.2006

Manny As Blank Canvas

David Heuschkel wrote in his Courant notebook:
David Wells did a double take [on Wednesday] upon seeing Manny Ramirez walk across the clubhouse without the slightest hint that he was favoring his leg. Francona has done a good job covering for Ramirez in his two-plus seasons as Red Sox manager. He doesn't publicly question whether Manny's knee or hamstring is sore because he would run the risk of losing the temperamental left fielder for more than a day or two.
So what happened? The two Davids happened to exchange a look across the clubhouse? Wells isn't quoted, so is that all? ... And why would Francona publicly question Manny's health? Can anyone in the public give him an informative answer? I'm content if Tito confines his medical questions to the Red Sox medical staff.

And despite the news of Manny going for an MRI, Heuschkel writes of the Sox: "[O]ne can only wonder whether [Manny] has finally quit on them. Does he even know how close the team is in danger of falling out of playoff contention?"

I must have missed the article in which Heuschkel wondered if Varitek, Wakefield and Nixon had finally quit on the team when they went on the disabled list. How do we know that those guys are really hurt?

Over at the Herald, Tony Massarotti takes the opposite view.
He is human, despite our perception of him, and so you cannot help but wonder: How many times is Manny Ramirez left shaking his head? How many runs must he knock in and how many home runs must he hit before we start to see Ramirez as a man who is needlessly banging his head against the wall?
Mazz admits that from time to time, "Ramirez has had issues with responsibility", but adds that he leads the team in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage, and is on pace to play in a career-high 157 games.
And despite it all, he knows it might all be for naught, that the Sox didn't care enough this year to give him and the other players the necessary elements to win another World Series.

So we ask you: Who's really dogging it here?
He also addresses the scorer's decision flap:
Let us make something indisputably clear here. Not a week goes by without someone griping about a scoring decision. Baseball players are human, right down to every last flaw, and you can bet your sanitary socks that every one of them knows his batting average or ERA. Some are just better at disguising it. At one point or another, most every player has lobbied for a scoring change, though teammates, coaches and managers are far more apt to run interference for those who have a reputation to protect.

But when Manny does it, he's a selfish twit. And so we find out about it.
It's quite nice to see Massarotti take a look at the situation from a different viewpoint. You may not agree with all of it, or any of it, but multiple perspectives can only help the discussion.

Resiliency

Doug Mirabelli, asked whether the 2006 Sox are as resilient as the 2004 team:
I don't know if the '04 team realized they had resiliency until they did it. After Game 3 against the Yankees, if you had talked to anybody and they really believed that they were going to sweep the Yankees from there on out, I would have to say that they were probably lying at that point.

If you looked at it that far ahead at the time, if you looked at it like, 'OK, we need to win four games' instead of saying 'We need to win the next game,' you would have been overwhelmed with the thought process. What the '04 team allowed themselves to do was just concentrate on just winning one game at a time because they knew the next loss would end the season.
Mirabelli says Jason Varitek might be back for the four-game series at Yankee Stadium beginning September 15. ... Tim Wakefield has been told to stay off the bullpen mound for awhile, until his discomfort goes away.

Jonathan Papelbon is considering playing in a series of exhibition games in Japan after the season -- partially because of the money involved (who is in charge of sounding the media's greedy player alert?) -- but the team would rather he not go. Papelbon also says that after this season, he will sit down with management and discuss whether he will start or close in 2007.

Ramirez To Get MRI

Manny Ramirez left last night's game in the fourth inning because of a sore knee. He will undergo various tests today, including an MRI.

Gordon Edes says Francona "looked and sounded concerned that this may be more than a minor tweak" and reminds us of the BP report during the All-Star break that Ramirez was playing with a small tear in his meniscus.

G126: Red Sox 5, Angels 4

Ten Red Sox batters into the game and Boston held a 5-1 lead.

In the first, Crisp walked, stole second and scored on Ortiz's 45th home run of the year (the Big Man has 119 RBI). In the second, Lowell singled, Pena homered, Lopez doubled, Cora bunted, and Crisp singled. Could Boston be on its way to winning a laugher?

No.

After Coco's single gave the Sox a four-run lead, Angels pitchers faced the minimum 23 batters over the last 7.2 innings. Only one Red Sox batter reached first base -- Hinske singled to start the sixth and was quickly erased on a double play. Boston ended the game with 1 LOB.

Lester started (5-6-3-4-2, 96) and was relieved by Tavarez (allowed 4th Angels run in 6th), Timlin (escaped bases-loaded-one-out jam in 7th), Foulke (2 outs, 1 single in 8th), and Papelbon (retired all four batters he faced).

AL: Yankees beat Seattle 9-2, White Sox topped Detroit 7-5, and the Twins beat Baltimore 4-1 -- so the Red Sox remain 6.5 behind in the East and 4 back in the WC.

Linescore of the night:
Cleveland     1 02 312 004 2 - 15 16 1
Kansas City 10 00 003 000 0 - 13 19 0
***

Umm, what do they call it when the game ends and the Red Sox have the most runs???

***

Jon Lester (4.72) / Kelvim Escobar (3.77), 10 PM
Crisp, CF        Figgins, CF
Pedroia, 2B Izturis, 3B
Ortiz, DH Cabrera, SS
Ramirez, LF Guerrero, RF
Youkilis, 1B Rivera, LF
Lowell, 3B Quinlan, 1B
Pena, RF Salmon, DH
Lopez, C Kendrick, 2B
Cora, SS Molina, C

8.23.2006

Mnookin On Manny

Seth Mnookin weighs in on the latest Manny Fuss. Once he gets going (after a somewhat forced analogy), he gives an interesting look at the unique nature of sportswriting and how the scribes must wear and juggle many hats.

And speaking of Sean McAdam, who broke this story, he notes:
McAdam, one of the most respected (and one of the best) Red Sox writers, doesn't cite his sources. That's not, I'm sure, because he doesn't have them; I was able to independently confirm the basic facts with a couple of phone calls from my apartment in Manhattan.
Seth had unprecedented access to all aspects of the Red Sox organization during the 2005 season, so he has sources of his own. ... Don't forget to read the comments. I don't think Seth is excusing the actions of any particular writer, but seeking to enlighten us about what goes on. Simply more information to mull over.

The Manny Circus

Terry Francona was asked whether Manny Ramirez had to be talked into playing on Saturday -- and the media's description of his response was consistent: he "tap-danced around the question"; "Francona insisted (after much verbal tap-dancing)" that the report wasn't true; "Francona bobbed and weaved like Sugar Ray Leonard".

Why won't the media tell us more of what they know? What are they afraid of? That Manny won't talk to them anymore? (Pissing off the team sources can't be that much of a factor, considering the other things they write.)

This story -- and the team's overall dismal play -- is a dream come true for guys like Dan Shaughnessy. This morning, the CHB is in heaven:
It's always a story when Manny takes a day or two to rest his hammy. During Rami­rez's spectacular six-year stint with the Red Sox, he annually misses a few games with a sore hamstring. It works every time, because when it comes to tweaked hamstrings, only the patient truly knows how he's feeling. It's the athlete's equivalent of the fourth grade boy who won't go to school because he has a headache. There are no grounds for a challenge even if you have suspicions.
It's always a story because you make it a story. Many Red Sox players take a day off -- they are usually the more eumelanin-challenged guys -- and no one says a peep.

Name-calling shitstirrers like Dan give fans the impression that Manny begs out of games right and left every season. But like so much of the crap that gets tossed about by the media, it is not true (and easily verified as a lie).

Games Played by Manny:

2005 - 152 of 162 games - Only Ortiz (158) and Renteria (153) played more
2004 - 152 of 162 games - Led team in games played
2003 - 154 of 162 games - Only Nomar (156) played more
2002 - 120 of 162 games - Missed 39 games due to broken finger*
2001 - 142 of 162 games - Only Nixon (148) played more

* - If Manny had not broken his finger and played in 36 of those 39 games, he would have finished at 156, tied for the team lead with Nomar and Hillenbrand.

No matter how many sentences get written claiming the opposite, it is anindisputablee fact: During his Red Sox career, Manny Ramirez has played more games per season than almost any other teammate.

More Dan:
Manny hasn't had much to say this year, but this seemed like a time to give it a shot, so I strolled over to him as he inspected a crate of bats, and I asked him if he'd answer a few questions.

He said nothing. In fact, for a moment I thought I'd willed myself invisible like Wade Boggs. I felt a little like Patrick Swayze standing over Demi Moore in "Ghost." I hadn't experienced this kind of abject diss since trying to talk to Albert Belle back in the 1990s. After a few seconds, during which Manny continued to inspect the lumber and ignore me, he turned, smiled slightly, put his hand on my right shoulder and walked away.
Ha! The only way Manny could have said "F U" any better would have been to ruffle Bozo's curly hair rather than pat him on the shoulder.

What's funny is that Manny apparently was chatting quite freely with the Angels broadcasters before last night's game. Yet he avoids the Boston media like the plague. Isn't that odd.

Dan winds things up by dismissing those people who disagree with his assessment of Manny as "fanboys and sycophants" and writes:
Meanwhile, we wait until Manny is ready. And, as always, we wonder if he cares.
I was going to post some of Manny's fantastic numbers from this season -- he should be getting as much MVP talk as Ortiz, probably more -- but it's not worth it.

I'm asking any Boston sportswriters who might be reading:
Why don't you mention every player who merely jogs to first on a ground ball (it happens several times every night)? Or screws up on the bases? Or makes stupid plays in the field? Why does Manny get singled out? Is it because he doesn't talk to you? Is it because he agreed to play for a lot of money? Why?
The various patterns of who gets criticized (and for how long) and how those players are described in print leads me to believe it's race-related, not a shocking conclusion in Boston, and I've yet to hear an explanation that makes more sense.

Oops - In Insulting Epstein, Callahan Proves Theo's Point

Gerry Callahan doesn't get it. On one hand, he rips the front office for not making any deadline deals (that, as everyone following the team knows, would have involved trading away some of their best young players, especially pitchers). Then, Callahan says that the current Red Sox team is getting old and many of those players can't wait until 2008 for the team to be competitive.
The names won't change next year and neither will the game plan. The only difference is that David Wells will be gone and Curt Schilling will be 40. ... From their basement offices, Epstein and his guys don't seem to notice that there's a window closing on this team. Its core is aging faster than Boy George. Jason Varitek will be 35 in April, which is 73 in catcher years. Manny Ramirez will be 35 in May. Tim Wakefield is 40. Mike Timlin is 40. Nixon probably will be gone in October, as will Mark Loretta and possibly Alex Gonzalez.
First of all -- Boy George????? What century is this?

Second of all, Gerry, you just proved Theo's plan is the correct one, even if you think you are arguing the opposite. It is a fact that a huge part of the current team is old -- three of the starting pitchers are over 40 -- or on the wrong side of 30. That's why Epstein refused to get rid of his promising young pitchers unless an amazing deal came along. And, of course, flat-out steals are hard to come by (though we'll all be saying Arroyo-for-Pena was a Brinks job soon enough).
[T]hey could have made some moves and filled some holes. They could have given Schilling and Co. a chance to get to the postseason and see what might happen. They chose not to. Don’t want to mortgage the future, you know. Remember Freddy Sanchez. And Jeff Bagwell.
Or Jonathan Papelbon. You don't think teams were asking about him last year? I sure wish Theo had traded him for a "name" slugger past his prime. We might have extended the agony of last year's ALDS against the White Sox to four games.

Pap would have been worth that, right, Gerry? After all, the window is closing for the vets.

G125: Angels 4, Red Sox 3

What happened, you ask?

In the top of the 8th, trailing by one run, Terry Francona kept Manny Ramirez and Eric Hinske on the bench and let Doug Mirabelli and Gabe Kapler face Scot Shields. ... Mirabelli grounded out to third and Kapler struck out on three pitches.

Also, in the seventh, tied 3-3, he stayed with Kason Gabbard a little too long, and Gabbard gave up the go-ahead run.

This sucks, obviously -- it would be nice if the manager cared enough to try to win -- but it also sucks because both the White Sox and Twins lost tonight. It was a chance for Boston to close the wild card gap to 3 games, but Tito apparently figured a loss was okay tonight, because his team wouldn't lose any ground. I'd like to think I'm right when I say it won't be his team much longer.

P.S. I hope Manny Ramirez -- who PH for Pedroia to start the 9th and flied to deepest center -- was too hurt to start, and not pouting or benched by Tito. Most likely, we'll never know what wenton last weekend, but if Manny is well enough to bat, he should be in the cleanup spot no matter what. (And if he's actually refusing to play, the team should come right out and say exactly that. Let us know.)

And as I type this -- 1:29 AM -- Seattle's Adrian Beltre hits his second home run of the night -- this one in the bottom of the ninth off Ron Villone, giving the Mariners a 6-5 win over the MFY. ... Thanks again, Tito, for being allergic to pinch-hitters. (Does Gabe have pix of you and a goat?)

***

Kyle Snyder (6.35) / Joe Saunders (3.64), 10 PM

Not watch the game? Why wouldn't I watch the game?

It's baseball season, the Red Sox are on, and I'm watching. ... It's what I do.

Lineup:
Crisp, CF
Loretta, 2B
Ortiz, DH
Youkilis, 1B
Pena, RF
Lowell, 3B
Mirabelli, C
Kapler, LF
Pedroia, SS

8.22.2006

My First Game At Fenway

At about 6:00 AM on Sunday, August 22, 1976, my father and I got on a bus at the Vermont Transit terminal in Burlington, Vermont. I was 12 years old and I was going to Fenway Park for the first time.

The Red Sox were in fifth place in the six-team AL East (for you youngsters, the East included the Yankees, Orioles, Tigers, Brewers, and Cleveland). They were 57-63, 15.5 games behind the Yankees, quite a drop from their near-win in the World Series against Cincinnati the previous October.

I know I watched some of the seven-game battle against the Reds. What I distinctly remember (as opposed to having seen subsequent clips that now feel somewhat like memories) was watching Looie Tiant's 6-0 shutout (and his single and baserunning!) in Game 1 and Fred Lynn's hard crash into Fenway's centerfield wall (padding was added the following spring) early in Game 6.

1976 was my first year as a serious Red Sox fan. I learned to score games and did so every night, listening to Ned Martin and Jim Woods on WJOY.

My father worked at IBM and employees were offered transportation/tickets to about four or five Red Sox games every season. (The price of $25 per person sticks in my mind.) I assume that my father saw how much I was into the Sox that summer and picked one of those weekend game for us to see. The Red Sox were hosting the Oakland Athletics, the team they had swept in the previous year's ALCS. (Oakland had won the 1972, 1973, and 1974 World Series.)

I will never forget walking up the ramp and coming out into the park, on the first base side, and seeing all that green. We had a black and white TV at home and seeing for the first time the green expanse of the outfield and the Wall -- contrasted by the gleaming red seats -- was one of the most amazing things I have ever seen. An older man was smoking a cigar to my left and even now -- 30 years since that day -- a certain type of cigar smoke will bring me right back to that moment.

We sat in Section 17, about halfway up in the grandstand. I wish I still had my scorecard from that afternoon, but nothing from that trip (or from my subsequent trips the next two years (I was there on September 9, 1978, Game 3 of the Boston Massacre) survives.

I did get a copy of the program they sold that day on eBay (in which the first six innings of September 29's 9-6 loss to the Yankees are scored), and thanks to Retrosheet, I know exactly what happened that day.

Oakland              Boston
Billy North, CF Rick Burleson, SS
Bert Campaneris, SS Denny Doyle, 2B
Don Baylor, RF Fred Lynn, CF
Billy Williams, DH Carl Yastrzemski, LF
Sal Bando, 3B Cecil Cooper, 1B
Gene Tenace, 1B Jim Rice, DH
Cesar Tovar, LF Carlton Fisk, C
Phil Garner, 2B Dwight Evans, RF
Larry Haney, C Butch Hobson, 3B

Paul Norris, P Fergie Jenkins, P
Finding out that Jenkins was pitching annoyed the hell out of me because it seemed like every time the Sox were shown on Saturdays on Channel 22 (the only time to watch a game outside on Monday Night Baseball) Jenkins was pitching. I wanted to see someone else.

The Red Sox had won the first two games of the series, 2-1 on Friday night behind Tiant (and Hobson's sac fly in the bottom of the ninth) and 5-2 on Saturday. With me, my father, and 27,524 other fans in attendance, the Red Sox took a quick 1-0 in the first inning, when Doyle scored on Yastrzemski's single. It was also Yaz's 37th birthday.

Oakland took the lead with two runs in the top of the fourth, but they also had two runners thrown out at the plate in that inning. As soon as Tom Murphy replaced Jenkins in the sixth, the A's scored four times and led 6-1.

Boston came back immediately, tying the game in the bottom half of the sixth. Yastrzemski singled and after Cooper was hit by a pitch, Rollie Fingers relieved Paul Lindblad. After Rice struck out, Fisk singled to left, loading the bases. Pinch-hitter Rick Miller doubled to left, scoring two runs. Hobson grounded out to shortstop and Fisk scored. Burleson doubled in Miller and Doyle brought home Burleson. And at the end of a very long sixth inning, we had a 6-6 tie.

Each team had several two-out hits -- Wayne Gross's single in the 8th and Baylor's double in the top of the 9th for Oakland, Rice's single in the seventh, Burleson's single in the eighth and his double in the 10th for the Sox.

In the top of the 11th, Garner singled to left, and was bunted to second. Campaneris's fifth hit of the day moved him to third. Don Baylor laid down a suicide squeeze bunt, which was fielded by Willoughby, but his throw home was too late. 7-6. In the home half, Yaz got his fourth hit of the day with one out, but two force plays ended the game.

And it was back on the bus for the five-hour trip home. I had to make this trip another two (three?) times before I finally saw the Red Sox win.

Two notes: Both relief pitchers who came in during the sixth inning finished the game for their respective teams: Fingers threw six innings and Willoughby tossed 5.1. ... Several players left the game early, and I don't know why. Oakland starter Norris left after 1.1 innings, Evans was pinch-hit for in the 4th inning, and Jenkins was pulled after five innings, trailing 2-1. (I know I have a microfilm printout of Peter Gammons's game story from the next day's Globe, but it's buried in a box somewhere.)

Pedroia To Start Tonight?

I don't want to push the McAdam post down the page, but:

Dustin Pedroia could make his debut with the Red Sox tonight. Alex Gonzalez may be put on the DL and Pedroia was pulled from the first game of Pawtucket's doubleheader in Ottawa last night.

David Wells, the team's #2 starter at this point, apparently cleared waivers and could be traded by the Red Sox.

After Sweep, McAdam Decides To Dump On Manny (On Base 19 Of 20 PA)

(updated with link and some minor stats corrections)

After being beaten by the Yankees five times this weekend, there is plenty of blame to go around. But one person who shouldn't get even one finger pointed at him is Manny Ramirez.

In the series, Manny went 8-for-11 (.727), with 4 singles, 2 doubles, 2 home runs, 7 RBI, and 9 walks. He reached base in 19 of his 20 plate appearances (2 of those were on errors). His OPS was 2.305! He also made a few nice plays in the outfield. ... Manny raised his batting average 10 points in the series --to .330. In August, Ramirez is hitting: .412/.529/.691.

One more time: He reached base in 19 of his 20 plate appearances.

So who gets the most shit when Sean McAdam of the Providence Journal sits down to write his post-mortem? (my emphasis)
On Friday night, in the fifth inning of the disastrous day-nighter that would set the tone for the Lost Weekend, official scorer Joe Giuliotti determined that Manny Ramirez had reached on an error by Derek Jeter. Jeter had gone into the shortstop hole to backhand a hard grounder, only to have the ball glance off his glove and roll into shallow left.

On the play, teammate Mark Loretta, running from second base, was thrown out at home by Yankees left fielder Melky Cabrera.

Ramirez was enraged by the call, and was so angry about it the next day that he had to be talked into playing the Saturday afternoon game. On Sunday, Ramirez sought out an MLB official to try to get the call reversed.

Think about that: In the middle of the Sox' three most dispiriting losses of the season, suffered at the hands of the team's archrival, Ramirez sulked about losing credit for a meaningless single that didn't even involve an RBI.

That's perspective for you. ...

But with his team's season in the balance, Ramirez intended to sit out to protest a scorer's call? Would Jeter do that? Would David Ortiz? Would, in fact, any other player in the game?

It's not much of a leap to think that Ramirez's early exit from yesterday's game -- he pulled himself out of the lineup after the fourth inning, telling trainers he was suffering cramps in the right hamstring -- was connected to the events of the previous two days.

One player yesterday noted that while Ramirez had played hard for much of the season, the events of the last few days seemed to hint at an upcoming "episode" involving Ramirez, in which the slugger takes a decidedly indifferent approach to his play -- if he appears in the lineup at all.
Actually, Sean, it is too much of a leap, because you have presented zero evidence that this was the case. Zee-row. Based on what you've written for us, you've made this up out of whole cloth, pulled it straight out of your ass. It reminds me of how TV commentators are always telling us what Player X is saying to Player Y in the dugout or on the mound. It's all made up -- purely the invention of the person telling the story.

If you saw something, tell us. If you heard something, tell us. I understand that writers need sources that wish to remain anonymous, but with speculation this wild, McAdam should either get something on the record or shut up.

McAdam gets even sillier when he writes this about David Wells:
Finally, there was the eighth inning yesterday, when NESN cameras caught starter David Wells throwing up his hands, then shaking his head in disgust on his way down the dugout runway after catcher Javy Lopez failed to block a pitch from Keith Foulke in the dirt, enabling Nick Green to score from third. ... Green's run proved to be the difference in the game.
I saw the same shot of Wells. Disgusted? Of course, he was disgusted. I'd be worried about any Red Sox player -- including Lopez himself-- who wasn't disgusted at that point.

Angry, pissed off, disgusted, frustrated ... every player on the team should feel all of those emotions. They just got their ass kicked every which way a team can get its ass kicked. By its main rivals and the one team ahead of it in the standings.

Imagine a player was laughing in the dugout. You know damn well they'd be getting ripped by every knight of the keyboard (including McAdam) for yukking it up as the season went down the tubes. (Actually, Manny has been criticized for stuff like this, smiling after making an out. I guess he's got to throw his helmet or smash a water cooler to show he cares.)

So for showing the proper response to this weekend's events, McAdam decides to chronicle what he calls "the team's descent into selfishness". And the person he decides to call out the loudest is the guy who deserves none of the blame -- the guy who reached base 19 out of 20 plate appearances, batted .727 and slugged 1.455.

There are plenty of reasons why playing for the Red Sox would be attractive, but it's days like this that I'm amazed that any athlete in his right mind would want to come to Boston (for any amount of money) and deal with this kind of crap on a daily basis.

8.21.2006

G124: Yankees 2, Red Sox 1

Watch out, Toronto, here we come.

***

Cory Lidle (4.64) / David Wells (6.06), 1 PM

Wow. Craig Hansen was sent to Pawtucket after the game. Bryan Corey takes his spot.
Cabrera, LF Crisp, CF
Jeter, DH Loretta, 2B
Abreu, RF Ortiz, DH
Rodriguez, 3B Ramirez, LF
Cano, 2B Hinske, 1B
Wilson, 1B Lowell, 3B
Williams, CF Pena, RF
Fasano, C Lopez, C
Green, SS Gonzalez, SS

Was This Your Celebrated Summer?

I don't even want to hear his excuse.

There can be no rational explanation. It's impossible. His decision to go with Timlin and then Lopez -- and leave his best arm (who had not pitched at all in the series) in the pen -- was inexcusable. He should be fired. This is a man who does not want to win.

In a playoff-caliber battle, Curt Schilling gave everything he had. He had waited through a one-hour rain delay, and thrown 73 pitches through four innings. Knowing he had to go deep into the game, he fought his way through the fifth, sixth and seventh innings, needing only 10, 14 and 12 pitches, retiring nine of 10 Yankees.

David Ortiz wanted to win. His long home run broke a 3-3 tie in the fifth inning and he hustled his way to a double leading off the bottom of the ninth. Manny Ramirez drove in the first run of the night and was on base five times. Coco Crisp tried, in vain, to snare HGH's home run in the 10th and possibly hurt his left wrist.

(Did you see the sweat pouring off Giambi when he was back in the dugout? I could have put him in front of my house and watered my lawn. ... Jon Miller said he got that sweaty running out the home run.)

But the man at the helm -- in what was the first must-win game of the summer -- did not go for the throat. He didn't want to win. The choice of pitcher to start the eighth was not his only misstsep. Having Kevin Youkilis, the team's third-best hitter, bunt in the ninth was also the decision of an idiot (even Joe Morgan was surprised). The bunt did not work, and the Yankees intentionally walked Mike Lowell, leaving the game in the hands of Eric Hinske and Doug Mirabelli.

In the eighth inning on October 16, 2003, when the manager walked away from the mound and did not make a pitching change, John Henry -- who had wanted to fire the Grinning Jackass before the 2003 season even began -- turned to Larry Lucchino and asked (through gritted teeth, no doubt): "Can we fire him now?"

Last night, as he watched Francona make decisions that were 180 degrees away from everything the organization has been preaching for three years, I wonder what Henry was thinking.

G123: Yankees 8, Red Sox 5 (10)

Another game, a new worst loss of the year -- as Tito descends to a depth of managerial idiocy that might surprise even Grady Little.

***

9:45 PM -- Mark your calendars. John Kruk said something intelligent: "You can't count a team with Ortiz and Manny out. They need a leadoff hitter to get on base. Frankly, I'm not sure why they ever moved Youkilis out of the leadoff spot."

9:15 PM -- Rain delay with the Red Sox ahead 2-0 after two innings. Boston strung together four straight hits against Mussina in the first (Loretta single, Ortiz single (w/Damon error), Ramirez RBI double, Youkilis RBI single).

Schilling has thrown 41 pitches already (including 10 to strike out Derek Jeter in the first), but looks great (fastball at 96-97 and a good split). ... Before the game, Jermaine Van Buren was sent down and Javy Lopez called up.

***

Mike Mussina (3.54) / Curt Schilling (3.83), 8 PM

A matchup of pitchers of Game 1 of the 2001 World Series and Game 1 of the 2004 ALCS.

The ever-so-comfy at the plate Yankees are the first team to score 12 or more runs in three straight games against the Red Sox at Fenway Park.

This shit has got to stop. Now. And while Schilling should not waste any time brushing a Yankee back -- his first opportunity would be Johnny Damon -- he should also shave Bobby Abreu, who has reached base 12 times in 18 plate appearances in the series.

8.20.2006

New Day Rising

In trying to find some good news for the remaining 40 games of the regular season, we have to look almost exclusively at the offense. (Which is sad, because at the start of this season, I was thrilled at our staff -- and thought it was a strength.)

Last Tuesday night (8/15), Mike Timlin said: "We've been throwing the ball really well. I'm not calling anybody out, but we haven't scored a whole lot. We're pitching well, we're holding teams down, and they're doing the same to us."

I'll avoid an obvious political crack about claiming things are peachy when they are going down the crapper and simply note that this is very silly. And wrong. Only three Red Sox pitchers have an ERA under 5.18 since the All-Star Game -- and Mr. Timlin, with a spiffy 6.46 (11 runs in 15.1 innings), is not one of them. They are Jonathan Papelbon (1.80), Curt Schilling (4.47) and Rudy Seanez (4.73). That's it.

No one expects any team to get through a six-month season without injuries, but we have missed significant time from many pitchers: David Wells (103 games), Matt Clement (59), Tim Wakefield (31), Keith Foulke (59), Lenny DiNardo (81), David Riske (41), and Timlin (16). The constant shuffling of bit parts to fill these holes has been very difficult. Plus the unexpected (though not exactly shocking) failures of Clement and Tavarez. The younger pitchers have been as good as could be expected (I contend Jon Lester has been better) and we have been too quick to expect them to dominate.

BTW: Did you know that Papelbon is only six months younger than Beckett? Or that Kevin Youkilis is more than seven months older than Coco Crisp?

Among the 15 AL teams, the Red Sox are currently 11th in ERA (NY is 5th), 9th in WHIP (NY 4th), 9th in batting average against (NY 3rd), 10th in on-base against (NY 4th), and 11th in slugging against (NY 5th). ... The good news is that if the pitching can simply be passable, things should be fine if the bats wake up. (Two big ifs in that sentence.)

One thing I have mentioned before is the way Red Sox batters often give away at-bats, as if they cannot concentrate for the entire plate appearance. This seems mirrored in the way Francona will concede certain games about the 6th inning or so. Actually, this has been recurring problem with Sox hitters for several years, and our manager in 2003 used to give up on games all the time, which was one big reason why that club had so many late inning rallies and wins. (The Yankees of 1998-2001 made plenty of outs, they struck out and grounded into double plays, but they concentrated for each and every at-bat, even the scrubs, in a way I've not seen Red Sox hitters do. This pains (and annoys) me.)

So. Right now, the Red Sox are 3rd in the AL in runs scored (7 fewer than NY and 10 fewer than the White Sox), 1st in on-base percentage, 4th in slugging and 4th in extra-base hits. Boston also leads all MLB teams with 518 walks (26 more than the Yankees). ... Since the ASG, Manny Ramirez is hitting .374/.449/.672 and David Ortiz is at .297/.424/.656. ... Mike Lowell is slumping (.228/.295/.360) and Eric Hinske should offer some relief. Whether Terry Francona will sit Lowell now and again is a different matter. Alex Gonzalez is also regressing (.235/.291/.435).

We are currently 39-22 at home (as opposed to 30-31 on the road) and after this weekend and a nine-game west coast swing, Boston will play 18 of its last 29 games at home. So that's a plus.

In summary (though the situation is not nearly as dire):
One. One game. One win. That's all.

Not four, not three, not two.

One.

Tonight.

The game won't start for a few hours, so please enjoy this picture of a puppy:

Example

8.19.2006

Rant

Example

G122: Yankees 13, Red Sox 5

.

***

Mid 6th: Yankees 10, Red Sox 5

This team is a fucking joke. Wells is a colossal a-hole, but I have way more respect for him than I do for Beckett. Sox tied it in the 5th, so what does Josh do? Give up a double and three more walks, of course. Of his eight non-intentional walks today: 5 on 4 pitches; 1 on 5 pitches; 1 on 6 pitches; and 1 on 8 pitches. ... We're gonna put up with three more years of this braindead idiot? ... Delcarmen came in and walked in a run (on four pitches) before giving up a three-run triple to Dumbo (on a 3-1 cookie).

I'm reaching the end of my rope with these fuckers. ... Still hoping for a Papi walkoff though.

After 5: Red Sox 5, Yankees 5

And the Eunuch gives the lead away. He hits Cora with his first pitch, walks Yook on four straight. Loretta bunts the runners over on the first pitch, then Ortiz hits a sacrifice fly to LF on the first pitch. Posada was not in position to catch the ball and it hits off his glove as Cora scores. Manny intentionally walked. Lopez hits the first pitch to center. It's a pretty routine play, but Bernie has to slide/dive for it. He has no range whatsoever. Tie game.

Mid 5th: Yankees 5, Red Sox 4

Hey look -- Beckett gave the runs right back! What a surprise! ... Two doubles (one to Slappy on an 0-2 pitch), two walks (one intentional) and an uncontested steal of second from Dumbo.

Jason Johnson sucks, Jon Lester is raw, but Beckett is supposed to be a major league pitcher. And so often this year, he has not been. I'd love to see someone come out of the Sox dugout, walk to the mound, grab Beckett's chin hair and slap him in the face -- hard -- and tell him to get his head out of his ass.

I'm really starting to hate him.

***

Mid 4th: Red Sox 4, Yankees 3.

With one out, Johnson walked Loretta and Ortiz. Manny then crushed a slider over the Monster and onto the roof of the parking garage, ending the no-hitter, the shutout, and the NY lead. Lopez singled down the left field line, Lowell reached when E-Rod couldn't make a good throw on his dribbler (ruled a hit) and Pena also singled down the left field line (the 6th straight Sock to reach safely). Lopez scored on WMP's hit and gave the Sox the lead.

Johnson threw more pitches in the 4th (30) than he did in the first 3 innings (29).

***

After 3: Yankees 3, Red Sox 0.

Beckett has thrown 64 pitches. His near-refusal to throw his curve (fear of blisters?) means that every single hitter is waiting for his fastball. And yet, even though the Yankees scored 386 runs yesterday, no Red Sox pitcher will throw inside -- even once -- to brush a New York hitter off the plate. Why not?

Beckett has walked four in three innings and allowed a solo HR to Bernie Williams. He looked like absolute shit in the first inning -- and only escaped trouble because of a stupid bunt by Jeter and a Slappy GIDP. Cabrera and Abreu have both stolen second, as Beckett didn't even bother to look over to first base.

Manny has been the only Sock on base, courtesy of a walk. After that, Lopez struck out and Lowell GIDP. Exactly what you'd expect from Tito's moronic lineup.

There must be some Tito-Theo tension going on re: roster construction, because while I yell at Francona a lot, but he can't be this dumb. Can't be. It feels like one of the Jimy-Duquette feuds of yesteryear.

***

Randy Johnson (4.92) / Josh Beckett (5.02), 1:20 PM

Lineups:
Damon, DH         Youkilis, 1B
Jeter, SS Loretta, 2B
Abreu, RF Ortiz, DH
Giambi, 1B Ramirez, LF
Rodriguez, 3B Lopez, C
Cano, 2B Lowell, 3B
Posada, C Pena, RF
Williams, CF Kapler, CF
Cabrera, LF Gonzalez, SS
Looking at that 5-6-7 order, it's obvious Tery has taken his stupid pills this morning.

Finally: Rudy Seanez was designated for assignment last night and Jermaine Van Buren was recalled. The Rudy move comes about three months too late. I still can't believe they sent Breslow back down before this series. Oh no, Theo, we won't need a LHP who throws 90-92 with control.

Reality Check: Winning three games with with Beckett, Schilling and Wells is quite possible. Taking two of those three leaves the Red Sox 2.5 out with 38 games left. Not a disaster. But the turnaround for the hitting and pitching must begin now.

G121: Yankees 14, Red Sox 11

Ugh. What is there to say?

If you saw it, you know Lester, Hansen and Timlin all shit the bed. (You still sure the problem is the hitting, Mike?) If you missed it, well, good for you.

Boston pitchers allowed 34 hits, 15 walks and 26 runs to the Yankees today, who now lead the East by 3.5 games. ... Tonight's game set a new MLB record for the longest nine-inning game: 4:45.

Beckett throws his first pitch in about 12 hours.

And so to bed.


***

Holy Shit!!! Does Tito read JoS?
Youkilis, 3B
Loretta, 2B
Ortiz, DH
Ramirez, LF
Hinske, 1B
Pena, RF
Crisp, CF
Mirabelli, C
Cora, SS
More likely, Theo visited the manager's office and said (quietly and slowly): "We've tried it your way for too fucking long. Now we're gonna do things the smart way. Here's tonight's lineup. Get any crazy ideas in the next hour and decide to change it, you're fired."

***

Don't let us win tonight.

Dear Tito: Please write out this lineup tonight:
Youkilis
Loretta
Ortiz
Manny
Hinske
Pena
Crisp
Mirabelli
Gonzalez
Thanks.

8.18.2006

G120: Yankees 12, Red Sox 4

The game was not as close as the final score would indicate.

Johnson did alright, considering who he is, but Francona stayed with Snyder way too long. Contrast Tito allowing Snyder (trailing 4-3) to allow four straight batters to reach base in the top of the seventh with Torre pulling Wang (up by 8-3) after the leadoff Sock got on in the bottom of the 7th.

Torre said he was managing this game as if there was no second game. Tito appeared to do the exact opposite. ... And Lester is no lock tonight.

I would comment on Francona failing to hit Pena for Gonzalez in the 8th -- when a long ball could have brought the Sox to within 8-6 (but decide to have him bat for Ortiz down by 9 in the 9th) -- but I fear I would throw my computer out the window and have a stroke.

***

Yankees 1st: I opt for ESPN -- with former Red Sox announcer Sean McDonough and current baseball moron Steve Phillips -- over the YES broadcast on Sportsnet. ... 86 degrees. ... Jason Johnson making his 20th start, 6.26 ERA and a .337 OBA. ... Damon looks at ball 1 at 1:10. Clubs a 2-2 pitch over Crisp's head into the triangle, standup triple. Jeter grounds a single past JJ (on the 7th pitch) and into center field. 1-0. Abreu singles to center, Jeter to second. Giambi pops to Gonzo in short center. Slappy (full count, 7th pitch) pops up to pretty much the same spot, this time caught by Coco. Cano grounds quietly to second. Very nice, could have been WAY worse. Johnson staying away from most of the hitters. 29 pitches.

Red Sox 1st: Crisp bunts the first pitch from Wang right back to the mound, easy out. Fucking A. Way to "get something started", leadoff man. Loretta lines a 2-1 pitch down the LF line and into the corner. Just gets into second, looking like he's running underwater. Ortiz swings at the first pitch (grrr) and pops up to short left. Manny gets ahead 3-0 and Wang throws an intentional ball four. Youkilis works a full count and flies to left. Abreu makes the catch about 10 feet in front of the track. Wang: 17 pitches.

Yankees 2nd: Posada lines out to Manny in left. JJ threw him 7 pitches -- MFY working the count like the Sox should be doing. Craig Wilson strikes out. Cabrera pops out to Lowell, who makes thecatch on the lip of the Yankees dugout. he fell in, but no damage. Good inning for JJ -- he absolutely has to get the lower half of the MFY lineup. JJ PC: 12, 41 total.

Red Sox 2nd: Lowell hacks at the first pitch and grounds weakly to second. WTF? Hinske (wearing #12) sees three balls, takes a strike, then doubles to the gap in LCF. Damon watches it roll the wall, then throws it in. Lopez flies to straightaway center and Gonzalez flies to right. ESPN's gun has Wang at 94-96, so why does he have one of the worse K rates in baseball? Wang: 11 pitches, 28 total.

Yankees 3rd: Damon grounds out to first, Yook unassisted. Jeter grounds to shortstop -- Gonzo grabs it on the short hop and throws him out. Two outs on six pitches. JJ brushes Abreu back with ball 1, gets a couple of quick called strikes, but walks him in a 9-pitch AB (ball 3, the 8th pitch, was a very nice strike). Abreu steals second on a 2-1 pitch to Giambi, who strikes out. JJ: 21 pitches, 62 total. (Looks like we'll see Snyder soon.)

Red Sox 3rd: Crisp tries to bunt on the first pitch -- again -- and fouls it off. Cut that shit out, Coco!! (Tito, if you're not calling that crap, please have a chat with Crisp. And if you are calling for bunts, you're fired). Crisp ends up grounding to second. Loretta pulls an inside pitch that hits off the Wall, above the linescore. It bounces away towards the corner, but it's a double anyway. After two balls in the dirt, Ortiz lines right to Wilson at first. Wang falls behind 2-0 to Manny, and then walks him intentionally (again). Youkilis walks on five pitches (see? making Wang work is good), loading the bases. Lowell lunges for an outside pitch and flies routinely to right. He should not be hitting 6th. Wang: 23 pitches, 51 total.

Yankees 4th: Slappy grounds a single through the hole into left field. Cano grounds the first pitch to second. Loretta moves to his right, backhands it, takes two more steps to the bag, then turns and throws to first. Youkilis gloves the ball on a short hop for the double play! Posada, who should have been called out on strikes on what was ruled ball 3, flies to center. JJ PC: 15, 77 total.

Red Sox 4th: Hinske doubles again -- this time to right center, one hop to the bullpen wall. (It's a crime that Lowell is hitting ahead of him.) The strike zone is quite small and Wang is struggling when he has to throw more than a few pitches per AB. So naturally, Lopez hacks at the first one, and flies to right. It's towards the corner, so Hinske can take third. Gonzalez grounds the first pitch to Jeter's left. It's a pretty routine play -- we've seen Gonzo make it many times this season while stifling a yawn -- but Jeter has to dive for it. He makes the play and Hinske scores. Tie game 1-1. Crisp tries to turn away from a 1-2 pitch inside and gets rung up by the third base ump. Wang PC: 8, 59 total.

Yankees 5th: Wilson strikes out again, this time looking. #9 hitter Cabrera works a six-pitch walk. Big mistake. Damon golfs a 0-1 pitch for a two-run home run to right and starts smirking. All Hinske can do is watch it land about 5-6 rows up. Yet another give-back. NY 3-1. ... Synder up in the pen. ... Jeter grounds a single past Gonzalez's dive towards the hole into left field. ... Dave Wallace out for a talk. ... Abreu lines the first pitch over into LCF for a hit, Crisp throws it in. ... And here comes Tito. ... Snyder (10th game, 6.23 ERA) in. 1st & 3rd with 1 out. ... Giambi chops a single that gets past both Yook and Loretta, into right. Jeter scores, Abreu to second. NY 4-1. Slappy hits a high fly to center. Crisp battles the sun, and makes the catch as Abreu tags and goes to third. Cano grounds out to third. Johnson's line: 4.1 IP, 7 H, 4 R, 2 BB, 3 K, 21 BF, 95 PIT.

Red Sox 5th: The 2-3-4 hitters against Wang. Loretta is called out on strikes, as the home plate ump's zone is now expanding. Bastard. Ortiz grounds out to first on the first pitch. Ramirez barks at a "strike" on 0-1, then Wang is miffed when he throws a strike on 0-2 and it's called a ball. Manny flicks the next pitch -- a good pitch on the outside black -- down the right field line. It lands on the good side of the pole -- HR. NY 4-2. Youkilis lines out to third. Sox get one back.

Yankees 6th: Posada flies deep to right. Hinske drifts back and makes the catch over his head with his back against the short wall, where the pen meets the stands. Wilson grounds out to third and Cabrera pops to Gonzo in short left. A quick, seven-pitch inning from Snyder (19 pitches total). ... Let's go bats!

Red Sox 6th: Lowell walks to start things off. And Hinske crushes another double -- his third in three Red Sox AB! -- that hops into the Boston pen. Theo = Genius! ... Mound visit for Wang and the oft-used Proctor is up. ... Lopez grounds back to Wang, who looks the runners back and throws him out. Gonzalez -- after waving at absolute crap outside -- lines to left center. Damon makes a sliding catch for the out, but Lowell comes across. NY 4-3. Crisp (1st pitch) flies out to Damon in left center. Coco has seen a total of 9 pitches in his 4 AB (and he bunted at 2 of them) and Tito wants to give him the most PA of any player.

Yankees 7th: Snyder facing the top of the order. Damon flies to Manny in short left. Jeter reaches when his grounder to Lowell's left hits off his glove for an error. Abreu singles to center (he's 3-for-3 with a BB) and Jeter stops at second. Snyder to Giambi: ball 1, ball 2, Wallace visit/Delcarmen up, ground ball to where Loretta would be, except he's shifted way over towards first. Ball rolls into right-center, Jeter scores, NY 5-3, Abreu to second. On 1-2, Slappy drills a double to left that gets by Manny to the wall. NY 6-3. (Love giving those runs back.) ... And it's Delcarmen time. ... Cano lines a single just over Loretta's glove to right-center. NY 8-3. Posada lines out to Manny, who makes a tumbling catch in left. Two outs. Cano steals second and goes to third on Wilson's single to left. He doesn't challenge Manny's arm. Cabrera lines out to center. (Snyder: 2 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 3 ER)

Red Sox 7th: Loretta doubles into the left field corner, his third double of the afternoon. ... Wang out, Myers in. ... Ortiz taps a 2-2 pitch weakly back to the mound. One out. ... Myers out, Proctor in. ... Manny pops up the first pitch to left. Two outs. (The Sox are sure making this easy for Torre.) Youkilis pops up the second pitch to Posada near the Sox on-deck circle. ... Wang'sline: 6 IP, 7 H, 3 ER, 4 BB, 2K, 29 BF, 90 PIT

Note: It would have been nice to have Craig Breslow to face Giambi and other MFY lefties. But he was sent down to make room for Hinske -- and so we have no LHP in the pen. Meanwhile, Tavarez is using up a roster space. If the Sox lost him on waivers -- though with his contract, I doubt it would happen -- but if it did, who cares? Very poor decision by the front office on the eve of this series.

Yankees 8th: Damon grounds to Loretta's right and Yook makes a great stretch for the out. Jeter grounds to shortstop. Two outs on four pitches. Abreu doubles to the left fielde corner and Giambi walks on five pitches. ... MDC out, Seanez in. ... Slappy strikes out on a pitch in the dirt and the ball goes to the backstop, but Lopez makes the throw to first.

Red Sox 8th: Lowell opens with a single into the left field corner off Proctor (yes, he's very slow). Hinske strikes out looking, frozen on a curve after hitting a hard foul down the RF line. Lopez gets a ground-rule double into the right field corner. Then Gonzalez strikes out -- as Wily Mo Pena rots away on the bench. ... Christ, Tito, this is a pennant race, you moron. Does Wallace have any smelling salts? Is anyone awake in that dugout? ... Crisp lines out to first.

Yankees 9th: Seanez still in. Cano singles. Posada walks on four pitches. Wilson walks, bases loaded. Cabrera pops up (1st pitch, after two walks, ha!) to left. Damon singles to center, NY 10-3. Jeter flies to right, Hinske has the ball hit off his glove (sun) for an error, bases reloaded. Abreu strikes out. Giambi walks, NY 11-3. Slappy walks, NY 12-3. (ESPN shows Tito turning and walking out of the dugout, down the runway. Kudos for not pulling Seanez and wasting another arm.) Cano strikes out.

Red Sox 9th: Farnsworth in. Loretta flies to center. Pena hits for Ortiz. Now that bald fucker sends up? Unbelievable! WMP fouls to Posada. Kapler walks. Youkilis doubles to left-center, Kapler scores. 12-4. Lowell flies out to center.

Showdown

Lineups:
Damon, CF         Crisp, CF
Jeter, SS Loretta, 2B
Abreu, RF Ortiz, DH
Giambi, DH Ramirez, LF
Rodriguez, 3B Youkilis, 1B
Cano, 2B Lowell, 3B
Posada, C Hinske, RF
Wilson, 1B Lopez, C
Cabrera, LF Gonzalez, SS
Pena sits for Game 1. However, no wailing and gnashing of teeth yet -- he'll probably play tonight.

Wang has made three starts against the Red Sox this year, allowing 23 hits, 7 walks and 11 runs in 18 innings (5.50 ERA). In his two Fenway starts (May 6 and 22), he gave up 10 runs and 15 hits in 11 innings.

***

Here we go.

When asked when he last pitched in a game as important as this afternoon's contest, Jason Johnson said, "Never? Something like that, it's been a long time, if at all. ... I'm a little bit jittery."

The Yankees speak: Damon: "We know it could be for the division." ... Slappy: "It's very important for us to play well." ... Craig Wilson: "It's my understanding they don't like us." ... Steinbrenner: "We better play better than we did [Thursday]."

Friday, 1 PM - Chien-Ming Wang (3.84) / Jason Johnson (6.26)

Friday, 8 PM - Sidney Ponson (5.82) / Jon Lester (4.09)

Saturday, 1 PM - Randy Johnson (4.92) / Josh Beckett (5.02)

Sunday, 8 PM - Mike Mussina (3.54) / Curt Schilling (3.83)

Monday, 1 PM - Cory Lidle (4.64) / David Wells (6.06)

Note: Manny Ramirez is batting .500 (17-for-34) with five home runs and 14 RBIs against the Yankees this season.

***

History: The last time the Yankees came to Fenway for a five-game set -- in mid-July 1959 -- the Red Sox swept the series. (In all of the Fenway games, the Red Sox scored runs in bunches.)

Thursday, July 9 -- Red Sox 14, Yankees 3 (Sox score 7 in 3rd)

Friday, July 10 -- Red Sox 8, Yankees 5 (Sox score 5 in 4th)

Saturday, July 11 -- Red Sox 8, Yankees 4 (10) (Don Buddin hits grand slam off Bob Turley in bottom of 10th)

Sunday, July 12 -- Red Sox 7, Yankees 3 (Sox score 4 in 1st)

Monday, July 13 -- Red Sox 13, Yankees 3 (Sox score 4 in 1st and 9 in 6th)

Actually, it was kind of a six-game series -- on July 8, the day before the Fenway series began, the Red Sox lost at Yankee Stadium 11-5. (I'm assuming this was a makeup game.)

8.17.2006

Thursday Afternoon in New York

Orioles - 103 305 000 - 12 9 0
Yankees - 110 000 000 - 2 7 2
And so ...
East

Yankees 70 48 --
Red Sox 69 50 1.5

Gonzo's Sore Knee: Left or Right?

Alex Gonzalez has a sore knee. But which one?

David Heuschkel, Courant:
Add shortstop Alex Gonzalez to the growing list of injured Red Sox. He was not in the lineup because of a sore right knee. Gonzalez hurt it leaping for a line drive on the last road trip.
Steve Buckley, Herald:
Gonzalez acknowledged his left knee has bothered him, but not so much that he has to be out of the starting lineup. ... Francona explained the shortstop's ailing left knee needed a rest.
Ian Browne, RedSox.com:
Shortstop Alex Gonzalez, who has had his right knee taped heavily the last few days, was replaced by Alex Cora in Wednesday's lineup.
Yesterday afternoon, in the Globe's Extra Bases blog, Kelsie Smith:
Francona, uncertain which knee is hurting the shortstop, said Gonzalez has been limping a bit and could play but would be uncomfortable.
??? (I hope it's not both knees.)

Gonzo, who is hitting .094 (3-for-32) in his last nine games: "I'm fine with my knee. I can play with my knee like that." ... Which knee, Alex? Arrrgg.

David Ortiz thought Magglio Ordonez had caught what turned out to be his 42nd home run of the season. "This right field has got me all [messed] up." ... From the bullpen, Kyle Snyder said, "It was definitely capable of being caught. If [Ordonez] had a split-second better jump, I definitely think he would have had a shot."

Coco Crisp is batting .333 in August and .345 (10-for-29) during the current homestand, raising his batting average to .281.

Two possible relief pitchers are off the market. Scott Schoeneweis was traded to the Reds and it looks like Baltimore will hang onto LaTroy Hawkins. ... Keith Foulke likely will be activated Friday.

Trot Nixon will probably return during the Sox's next homestand, which begins on August 31. ... Tim Wakefield may return a few days before that, in Seattle on August 27.

Last night's game was the 5,000th of Bruce Froemming's 36-year career. Only the legendary Bill Klem has umpired more games (5,374). Froemming's first game was at Shea Stadium in 1971, when a Mets/Expos was called after five innings because of snow.

Francona said that Wells's performance -- allowing Boston to avoid a sweep -- "quieted things down a little bit". ... Heh. That won't last long.

Sox Get Eric Hinske, Carlos Pena

Michael Silverman of the Herald reports that the Red Sox have traded for left-handed hitter Eric Hinske.

In 197 at-bats, Hinske is hitting .264/.353/.513. Boston will send a minor league player to the Blue Jays and pay approximately $1.4 million remaining on Hinske's contract this year (but pay only half of his $5.6 salary for 2007).

David Heuschkel points out:
Hinske's production has decreased since he was 2002 American League rookie of the year, posting career highs in homers (24), RBI (84) and batting average (.279). He hasn't hit more than 15 homers or driven in more than 69 runs since.
The Red Sox also signed minor league first baseman Carlos Pena. Another good option for the September bench.

8.16.2006

G119: Red Sox 6, Tigers 4

David Ortiz's two-run home run (#42) in the bottom of the fifth gave the Red Sox a 3-1 lead. But David Wells gave the runs right back -- does this happen to the Sox way more often than other teams? -- allowing a solo shot to Magglio Ordonez and a two-run bomb to Brent Clevlen. Tigers 4-3.

But, lo and behold, Justin Verlander gave those runs back. With one out, he walked Mike Lowell and with two outs, gave up a single to Javy Lopez and another walk (his 7th) to Alex Cora. Jim Leyland stayed with his starter (he was at 100 pitches) and Coco Crisp lifted a 2-1 pitch to the opposite field. It hit off The Wall above the standings, and two runs scored. (Cora also scored, but Bruce Froemming (umping his 5,000th game) blew the call, not seeing Cora get in under the tag.)

Craig Hansen relieved Wells with one on and two outs in the seventh and ended the inning with one pitch. He then made quick work of the Tigers in the eighth (single, DP, groundout). (Does that count as a second inning?) Jonathan Papelbon needed only six pitches in the ninth.

Crisp has looked much better in the leadoff spot; he walked, singled and doubled, and made a nice diving catch in right-center. Ortiz homered and walked three times; Cora and Mike Lowell each walked twice and Lopez walked and singled.

ESPN had the game, with Gary Thorne and Steve Phillips. ... Moronapolooza. ... We did the wise thing, and watched the game on mute.

Baltimore scored one run in each of the first three innings against Corey Lidle and made it stand up (overcoming an obvious blown call and gift to the Yankees on what should have been a game-ending double play), beating the Yankees 3-2, cutting the Chokers' lead to two games. Damon made the final out. ... The Royals are routing the White Sox, so it looks like Boston will be two back in the WC also.

***

Justin Verlander (2.95) / David Wells (6.23), 7 PM

The Red Sox are currently three games behind both the Yankees in the East and the White Sox for the Wild Card. ... Schilling:
I'm not talking about the Wild Card. I don't care about the Wild Card. That's for second-place teams. We can't think like a second-place team right now.
Win tonight, David, and I'll send you a few of these:

Example

Frustration

After David Ortiz's single brought in Coco Crisp in the bottom of the eighth, it looked hopeful. The Red Sox had managed just six hits and only two runners had advanced past second base, but the game was tied at 2-2.

Then, with Mike Timlin in his second inning of work, Wily Mo Pena dropped Craig Monroe's popup down the right field line and Carlos Guillen scored the go-ahead run. (The inning began with a walk and a one-out single.) In the last of the ninth, the Sox went down in order, Pena taking a called third strike to end the game.

Terry Francona, on the fly ball: "I think he saw the stands coming, knew he needed to catch it and get rid of it. Probably tried to do everything a little too quick and couldn't handle it."

Wily Mo: "I didn't take my eyes off it. I always have my eyes on the ball. I didn't think about the wall. I was just thinking about trying to catch the ball. ... That ball just hit my glove and then fell down. I didn't take my eyes off it."

It looked like Pena thought he was a little closer to the stands than he actually was. (Monroe got credit for a single on the play.)

Afterwards, Timlin was frustrated: "We've been throwing the ball really well. I'm not calling anybody out, but we haven't scored a whole lot." ... In their last six losses, the Sox have lost by a total of only nine runs.

Jon Lester said he's starting the night game on Friday. So the matchups look like this:

Friday: Jason Johnson / Chien-Mien Wang
Friday: Jon Lester / Sidney Ponson
Saturday: Josh Beckett / Randy Johnson
Sunday: Curt Schilling / Mike Mussina
Monday: David Wells / Cory Lidle

Keith Foulke plans on being in the Red Sox bullpen this weekend. ... Sources say the Red Sox and Orioles are talking about a deal for LaTroy Hawkins. Pitchers Scott Schoeneweis and Russ Springer have also cleared waivers.

Last night: For the first time in major league history, two 18-innings games were played on the same day. The Cubs beat Houston 8-6, and Arizona edged the Rockies 2-1.

8.15.2006

G118: Tigers 3, Red Sox 2

3 GB.

***

Jeremy Bonderman (3.76) / Curt Schilling (3.89), 7 PM

Amalie Benjamin, Globe:
Trot Nixon headed to the hospital today after a minor infection developed in his right elbow, a team source confirmed. The infection -- which just needed to be checked out and cleaned up -- should not significantly derail Nixon's return to the team from the disabled list.

The Wave

Steven Krasner, ProJo:
Don't blame Manny for this one.

The fact that Manny Ramirez was a dead duck at the plate in the eighth inning, taking the air out of the Sox' promising comeback, was the fault of third-base coach DeMarlo Hale.

The Red Sox had runners at first and second with one out in the eighth, having whittled their deficit to 7-4 against flame-throwing Joel Zumaya, whose fastball regularly hits 100 or higher on the radar gun. Ramirez was the runner at second.

When Mike Lowell ripped a single to center, Ramirez initially started back to the bag, not wanting to get doubled up in case the liner was caught, a good move on Ramirez's part. When he saw the ball headed for a safe landing in center, he took off.

And when he arrived at third base, Hale, who should have seen Ramirez initially going back to the bag, was frantically waving him home. Ramirez, though, was an easy out on the relay from shortstop Carlos Guillen to catcher Vance Wilson for the second out of the inning, quieting the crowd and effectively putting an end to any chances Boston may have had of winning the game.
Hale said that he did Ramirez hesitate. He also saw Curtis Granderson playing deep in center and assumed the throw would go to third base. Hale: "Manny did the right thing. He froze on the liner. The ball was hit toward right-center and they were lined up to throw to third. ... The defense is usually lined up for home plate."

Guillen said he was "surprised" to hear second baseman Omar Infante yell and point toward home. "I thought he was going to hold." ... Wilson says Guillen "is the most alert infielder I've ever played with."

I wish Manny had done what did at least once when Dale Sveum was coaching third -- ignore the windmill, trust his instincts and stop at third. Still, Hale would have to screw up like that about 20 more times before he gets into EZ Pass territory.

Also: Shame on NESN's Jerry Remy for assuming right away that Manny was dogging it on the bases. He changed his tune once he saw the replay, but as one SoSHer put it, "The fact that Remy jumped to the 'lazy conclusion' right away says more about Remy then it does about Manny."

Tim Wakefield threw off a mound for about 10 minutes yesterday and said he had made
a little progress. ... The pain is there. I know it's there. But it's not as sharp a pain as it was before. ... I want to be further along but ... it's a bone injury. You have to wait for it to heal. ... I don't want to come back too early, make three or four starts and be out of there and then be out for the year.
Jonathan Papelbon is a little tired:
I'm going to start speaking up a little bit more and start listening to my body a little bit more. I've arrived at the part of the season where you really have to be able to balance your body and your workload. ... I want to be able to last the entire season.
Doug Mirabelli is the first player in baseball history to hit as many as six home runs in fewer than 200 at-bats for six consecutive seasons. ... On Sunday, Jeffrey Farrell (5 IP) and Yulkin German (4 IP) combined to throw the first no-hitter in Lowell Spinners history, a 2-0 win at Hudson Valley. ... Keith Foulke hopes to join the team for its West Coast swing.

Jackie MacMullan has a great article in the Globe about tipping pitches. Former manager Cito Gaston:
I got pretty good at telling what pitchers were going to throw by the way they held their fingers outside the glove. I could pick up the grip for a curveball, because most pitchers held their fingers tighter when they threw it. With other guys, it was a matter of rhythm and repetition, or the way they turned their shoulder, or their placement of the glove.

8.14.2006

G117: Tigers 7, Red Sox 4

Shithead List of The Night:

1. Josh Beckett -- Sucking yet again (6-6-5-4-6, 104).

2. Terry Francona -- After a perfect 7th from Seanez (on 6 days rest), he let him pitch the 8th, where he got one out, but allowed 2 singles, 2 walks and 2 runs. Enjoy your nap, Tito?

3. 3B Coach DeMarlo Hale -- For sending Manny in the 8th. Three singles loaded the bases for Lowell with one out, Sox down 7-3. Lowell lined a single to center, Manny waited at second base to make sure it wasn't caught, then ran to third. Hale was waving him in, Ramirez looked back to the outfield in disbelief, but kept going. Granderson was lobbing the ball in to the infield -- of course, Ramirez would be held at third -- but when catcher Vance Wilson began jumping up and down and waving his glove, shortstop Carlos Guillen made a strong throw home and Manny was dead. Then -- after being screwed on a check swing strike 2 call -- Pena struck out and the rally (and Boston's chances for the night) were gone. (Hale also sent Pena home in the 5th, another questionable decision, but the Tigers botched the relay and Pena was able to score.)

Yankees won 7-2 (Sox 2 GB); White Sox winning big against the Royals (Sox would be 3 GB in WC).

***


Nate Robertson (3.82) / Josh Beckett (4.92), 7 PM

Lineups:
Granderson, CF   Crisp, CF
Monroe, LF Loretta, 2B
Young, DH Ortiz, DH
Ordonez, RF Ramirez, LF
Guillen, SS Youkilis, 1B
Casey, 1B Lowell, 3B
Infante, 2B Pena, RF
Inge, 3B Lopez, C
Wilson, C Gonzalez, SS
Also: the Red Sox recalled LHP Craig Breslow from Pawtucket and sent down catcher Corky Miller.

***

Facing the four worst teams in the American League -- Cleveland, Tampa Bay, Kansas City, and Baltimore -- the Red Sox went an unimpressive 6-7. And that included a three-game sweep of the Orioles.

But Boston has closed the gap in the AL East to one game, and now the fun begins.

Before we can obsess on the upcoming five-game series against the Yankees, the Red Sox have three games against the Tigers. Detroit still has the best record in baseball (76-41, 7.5 games better than Boston), but has lost five straight games (including three to the White Sox over the weekend). The Tigers have lost 4.5 games to the White Sox in the standings in the last six days -- from 10 games to 5.5.

Mark Loretta on the Tigers games: "I don't know that they're any more vital than these last three games were. I think if this was September 15, I think you look at it a little bit differently." ... The Red Sox have 46 games left on the schedule.

Michael Rosenburg, Detroit Free Press notes:
In the next three days, the Tigers face Josh Beckett, Curt Schilling and David Wells ... Sounds daunting. Yet for every game of this Boston series, the Tigers' starting pitcher will have a lower earned-run average than his Red Sox counterpart.
Tonight's pitchers were roommates when Robertson was first called up to the Marlins in 2002. (Both pitchers were drafted by Florida in 1999.)

Robertson gave up eight runs and nine hits in 5.1 innings in his only start at Fenway Park last year. ... David Ortiz (batting .229 (8-for-35) in his last 10 games) is 1-for-11 with three strikeouts against Robertson; Manny Ramirez is 2-for-8, Kevin Youkilis is 3-for-7 and Coco Crisp is 6-for-22, with two homers.

Only three Tigers have faced Beckett: Placido Polanco (3-for-16), Sean Casey (2-for-4) and Vance Wilson (1-for-4).

This is the 1,931st time the two teams have played against each other. Boston has a 995-935 edge. ... Boston won two of three games in Detroit in early June.

The Yankees (Johnson (5.03)) host the Angels (Lackey (3.33)), at 7 PM.

What's New With Slappy McBluelips?

Same old, same old.

Example
Ken Davidoff, Newsday:
Don't worry if you missed the Yankees game yesterday. It was a repeat.

It was the one in which Alex Rodriguez crushed a ninth-inning homer when only a statistically unlikely rally could have helped his club.

It also was the one in which A-Rod hit into a big double play against the Angels.

And after the 5-3 loss, for those of us granted access to the Yankees' clubhouse, it was the one in which the reigning American League Most Valuable Player vowed that he was about to bust loose.

"There's no question, this is the best I feel by far, head and shoulders, all year," Rodriguez said. "I haven't been able to hit two balls like I hit [Saturday and yesterday] in back-to-back games. I'm starting to drive the ball. That's something that I had no idea how to do the first three months of the year."

Oh. Well, that's interesting. ...
Example
Filip Bondy, New York Daily News:
You don't want to pick on A-Rod. You want to write about almost anybody or anything else, after the Yankees lose again, 5-3, to the Angels. But then A-Rod goes and plays another game that doesn't really help the Yankees win, only helps them lose. He flubs a ball in the first, commits a slight mental mistake in the fifth, he strikes out twice when it counts, grounds into a double play, leaves a couple runners stranded.

At the same time -- and this may be the most worrisome notion of all -- Rodriguez declares he is playing his finest baseball all season ... "I feel 100%. Feel like spring training just ended. I'm fresh out there. Me swinging the bat like now can be conducive to a better streak."

Is he delusional? Maybe, but Rodriguez also has learned something very important in his three seasons in the Bronx. It's not April or even August that counts. It's October. ... The problem at the moment is that the Yankees must still earn an October, and that is no sure thing. They are a mere game ahead of the Red Sox, a game behind the White Sox in a potential wild card race. ...
He feels 100%? The New York Post states that Slappy hinted that he has been injured all season.
Rodriguez "... was booed throughout the day for fielding and hitting deficiencies until he homered with two outs in the ninth inning of a 5-3 loss to the Angels in The Bronx. ... "I could care less," Rodriguez added. "I'm so happy when I hit a home run." ... He also inferred that injuries have played a part -- both offensively and defensively -- in his pinstriped season to forget.
How did he infer that he's been hurt? Unfortunately, the story made no more mention of the matter.

Example

Wakefield Eyes Return; Nixon Takes BP

Tim Wakefield has Monday, August 21 -- the fifth game of the five-game series against the Yankees -- as a possible return date:
Is it realistic? I don't know. ... I'm trying my darnedest to get back. ... Someone said this and it's true: I feel like I'm in a traffic jam. You feel like you're just slowly inching along. It's a little frustrating. I feel like I should be better than I am and I'm not.
Francona says Wakefield would not need a rehab start.

Trot Nixon swung in the batting cage on Saturday. Tito: "I bet by the time we go on the road [August 22], I bet he'll be at least close to playing ... maybe not for us. I bet that's the timetable we're at least thinking about having him play. That's probably pretty close."

The Daily News had a story about Jeremy and Josh Papelbon. ... Industry sources say Orioles reliever LaTroy Hawkins has cleared waivers. Before the trade deadline, the Red Sox, Yankees and White Sox expressed an interest.

8.13.2006

G116: Red Sox 11, Orioles 9

It must be pennant-race time. I had that feeling in my stomach for the first time this season. (I should be a wreck on Friday.)

Jonathan Papelbon, after pitching two innings and throwing 24 pitches yesterday, was needed for two outs in the ninth inning today. He ended up facing five batters and throwing 31 pitches (16 strikes and 15 balls).

Craig Hansen, with a 11-7 cushion, allowed singles to two of the first three Baltimore batters. Papelbon had Corey Patterson struck out, but was squeezed on what were called balls 1 and 4, so it was a walk and the bases were loaded.

Kevin Millar hit a double play grounder to shortstop, which should have ended the game, but Alex Cora brought his glove up a bit too fast and it rolled into short left field for an error. 11-8, bases loaded.

Papelbon fell behind Nick Markakis 3-1 before coming back to strike him out on a 95 mph fastball. Papelbon fell behind 3-0 to Brian Roberts -- Remy said he hasn't had this much problem with his control all year -- and ended up walking him to force in a run. 11-9, bases loaded.

Melvin Mora battled through a nine-pitch at-bat, fouling off three pitches, before grounding hard to third. Mike Lowell backhanded the ball, spun around and threw a bullet to first. Game over. Whew!

Lowell also hit a first-inning grand slam. Kevin Youkils hit a three-run shot in the seventh and Doug Mirabelli added a solo blast in the eighth (the Stud has hit a bomb in three straight games).

Manny Ramirez's 27-game hitting streak is over. He was in the on-deck circle when Youkilis made the final out in the eighth. Manny walked and scored in the first, flew to deep right to end the third, lined out to shortstop to open the fifth (Tejada made a fantastic diving catch to his left), and reached on an error by the pitcher in the seventh. It was a little squib to the first base side of the mound that was spinning wildly. When Todd Williams touched it, it darted off in another direction; then he tossed it wildly to first.

The Yankees lost 5-3, so the East lead is down to one game.

***

Daniel Cabrera (4.95) / Jon Lester (3.86), 2 PM

Lineups:
Roberts, 2B     Crisp, CF
Mora, 3B Loretta, 2B
Tejada, SS Youkilis, 1B
Conine, LF Ramirez, DH
Gibbons, DH Pena, LF
Hernandez, C Lowell, 3B
Patterson, CF Cora, SS
Millar, 1B Kapler, RF
Markakis, RF Mirabelli, C
Wily #5! ... And Tito assures us that Ortiz is just getting a rest before the games with the Tigers and Yankees.

More On Saturday's Broadcast

Laura already mentioned the comments of Fox play-by-play guy Matt Vasgersian on the Fahey hit/out in the top of the 9th, but I have to cite them also.

I found it amazing that after Manny Ramirez dug the ball out of the corner and started a play that ended up with the potential go-ahead run for the Orioles thrown out at third -- leaving Baltimore with no one on and two outs rather than a man at second and only one out against Papelbon (with Mora and Tejada coming up) -- Ramirez was still criticized more than Fahey on the play. Criticized for ... well, I don't really know what for ... allegedly actions in the past, I guess.

From the replay, it looks as though Manny slowed down as he neared the corner, but that was because he expected the ball to bounce out towards him, as it usually does. When it died in the corner, he sprinted in to get it and quickly fling it to Gonzalez.

Talk about a no-win situation. Cut down a potential game-winning run in the ninth inning, helped out by the runner's dumb decision, and have the announcers make fun of you for something that didn't happen.

Sadly, I have come to expect this kind of crap from just about every announcer out there (even Orsillo and Remy aren't above some gratuitous, out-of-context, Manny-bashing), but I'm still a little surprised every time I hear it. I expect the announcer to be a little more professional than a drunk fan in the bleachers making cracks about the opposing team. Silly me.

Another complaint about the Fox and ESPN broadcasters (local guys probably do it too, but I'm less aware of it) is when they make reference to former players or events that happened many years ago -- some very famous, some not well-known at all -- and never explain what they are talking about. And it's the national audience -- with more casual viewers in the audience -- that most needs an explanation, or some explanation.

Two examples from yesterday's play-by-play guy Matt Vasgersian (one I understood, one I'm still scratching my head about):

After a poor swing by a Red Sox player, he likened it to "a Bernie Carbo at-bat" and then never mentioned anything else about it. What he was referring to (I'll bet some younger readers here don't know) was Carbo's 8th-inning pinch-hit AB in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series. Cincinnati was ahead 6-3, and the Red Sox were four outs away from losing the Series. Carbo took a very poor swing at a pitch in the dirt, but just barely fouled it off to avoid striking out and ending the inning with two guys on base. He then hit a three-run home run to center field that tied the game, allowing Carlton Fisk to win it in the 12th.

He also mentioned someone "doing the Bob Welch thing". What the hell he was talking about? Striking out Reggie Jackson to end Game 2 of the 1977 World Series? Winning an undeserved Cy Young Award? Dealing with alcoholism? What?

Vasgersian also informed us that when it came to deciding what cap Roger Clemens will wear on his Hall of Fame plaque, "a case could be made for three teams really", then said it really will come down to the Red Sox and Yankees. ... I'd love to hear his case for Toronto. Are you out there, Matt?

For the record, and typing as a serious Clemens-hater, if anyone can't figure how what cap Fatass should wear, they should have their head examined. (There is a website out that discusses in fantastic detail how much he achieved in Boston, but I can't find it now.)

Amusing moment: Jerry Remy discussing how Jason Varitek "is familiar with our pitchers ... uhh ... the Red Sox pitchers". Oops.

8.12.2006

G115: Red Sox 8, Orioles 7 (10)

ALIVE!

Manny Ramirez singled to left in the bottom of the tenth to extend his hitting streak to 27 games and when Baltimore left fielder Brian Fahey overran the ball, Gabe Kapler scored the winning run.

Fahey made a bonehead decision in the top of the ninth when he doubled into the left field corner with one out. He tried for a triple. Ramirez dug the ball out and threw to Alex Gonzalez (who tripled into the same corner last night), who fired a perfect relay to Mike Lowell. And Fahey was dead. Jonathan Papelbon got the third out and then set the Orioles down in order in the 10th.

Baltimore held a 7-3 lead in the sixth, but Boston tied the game on a two-out, two-run triple from Wily Mo Pena (who also doubled and homered), followed by a two-run home run to deep left by Doug Mirabelli.

Are you smarter than Orioles manager Sam Perlozzo? Let's see: Tie game, bottom of the 10th, the toughest part of the Red Sox order coming up. Who do you bring in to pitch?
            ERA  WHIP  SV   OBA  OOB OSLG
Pitcher A 6.80 1.74 0 .337 .387 .593
Pitcher B 3.35 1.03 27 .194 .267 .359
Neither pitcher worked in Friday's game and the team was off on Thursday. ... Tough choice huh?

Perlozzo kept Pitcher B (Chris Ray) in the pen (waiting for a save situation?) and went with Pitcher A (Bruce Chen). Nice move, Sam!

More a little later ...

***

Kris Benson (4.71) / Jason Johnson (5.96), 1:20 PM

Benson has a 13.50 ERA in two starts against the Red Sox (Fenway ERA: 18.69 ERA), including allowing a career-worst nine earned runs in 4.1 innings on May 7. He is 0-4 with a 6.52 ERA in his last five starts. This will be his first appearance since July 25, after which he went on the DL with tendinitis in his right elbow.

Let's pound him like a drum. Manny Ramirez, with a 26-game hitting streak, is batting .818 (9-for-11) against Benson.

Obligatory Lineup Bitch: Coco again #1. Hey, at least Pena is batting ahead of Mirabelli.

8.11.2006

G114: Red Sox 9, Orioles 2

Boy, that was nice.

Wells had excellent command of all of his pitches (7-9-1-1-4, 98) and the 7-run third inning was more than enough. Wells is never flashy, but when he's on, he's more than solid. I feel confident he'll be very important over the next two months. ... Kyle Snyder finished up and fooled several Orioles with his 12-to-6 curveball (Jay Gibbons and Kevin Millar both struck out looking at it).

Wily E. Pena ended the top of the fourth by throwing out Jeff Conine at the plate. Conine tried to score from second on Millar's single, but Pena unleashed a missle that Javy Lopez caught head-high on the fly and tagged Lopez out by 5-10 feet.

In New York, Cory Lidle lasted only 79 pitches (4-4-3-2-3) as the Angels beat the Yankees 7-4. Derek Jeter made the final out of the game, fouling out with a man on base and reducing New York's lead to two games.

***

8:30 PM -- The Red Sox scored 7 runs in the third inning and lead 8-0.

Mike Lowell has been a veritable highlight reel. After being drilled squarely on the left side of the helmet in the first inning, he has tumbled completely into the third base stands while making a fantastic catch on a popup, singled home a run in the third and stolen third base.

Alex Gonzalez tripled into the left field corner. Yup, the left field corner. ... Manny Ramirez is already 2-for-3 and has hit in 26 straight games. ... David Wells struck out the first two Orioles on only six pitches and looks very good.

***

Adam Loewen (5.72) / David Wells (8.05), 7 PM

God damn it all to fucking hell!

Lineups:
Roberts, 2B Crisp, CF
Mora, 3B Loretta, 2B
Tejada, SS Ortiz, DH
Conine, LF Ramirez, LF
Hernandez, C Youkilis, 1B
Tatis, DH Lowell, 3B
Patterson, CF Pena, RF
Millar, 1B Lopez, C
Markakis, RF Gonzalez, SS
WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU, TITO? Coco leading off? Pena 7th? Don't you fucking get it at all?

Youkilis's Leadoff OBP of .395 is way fucking better than Crisp's Leadoff OBP of .285! This is not golf -- getting a lower score is not preferred.

Can someone affiliated with the Red Sox please tell me why this is allowed to continue? Can one of the Red Sox beat writers get an answer from Francona? Tito's "stretch out the lineup" bullshit doesn't wash with me. The Red Sox should strive to have as many baserunners on base when Ortiz and Manny come up to bat. Simple as that. And it is especially crucial at a time when they are the only ones hitting with any consistency.

Youkilis is the team's best choice for the top of the order. Crisp has a .375/.408/.486 in 76 PA in the #7 spot. That's really good! So what's wrong?

Terry, don't do anything radical. Just write: Youkilis, Loretta, Ortiz, Ramirez, Pena, Lowell, Crisp, Gonzalez, Lopez (or Mirabelli). Boom. You're done!

Arrrggggggggggg.....

Example

***

The Red Sox begin an 11-game homestand tonight. They have a 35-17 record at home (and are 31-30 on the road). They have won 8 of 9 games against Baltimore so far this season.

Last Saturday, Adam Loewen allowed just 1 hit on 6.1 innings and struck out eight against the Yankees. But he has walked at least five batters in each of his last three starts.

Wells allowed one earned run over six innings against Tampa, scattering eight hits. ... Miguel Tejada is 15-for-44 (.341) with five home runs and 10 RBIs against Wells.

In New York, Corey Lidle faces the Angels and Joe Saunders. ... The White Sox begin a series against the Tigers (who hold a 8.5 game lead in the Central) and the Twins host the Blue Jays.
East
New York 67 44 -- v LAA
Boston 65 48 3 v Bal

WC
Chicago 67 46 -- v Det
Minnesota 67 47 .5 v Tor
Boston 65 48 2 v Bal

The Driver Speaks

David Ortiz: "You always go through these times every year and then we start playing better. We've got to hang tight and go home and win some games. There's nothing you can do but hang in there."

***

The road is getting rougher, there won't be any smooth pavement for dozens and dozens of miles, but we never get off the bus. Never even consider it. ... Not even when the toilet backs up, the AC quits, our head is pounding, and the sweaty guy next to us starts eating his lunch with his mouth open and humming. ... Homicidal thoughts come and go, and return. We consider leaping out of the window. ... A couple of people got off a few hours back, and we shook our heads in pity. ... We're riding this bus to the very end.

The driver will get us there.

Limping Home

The quick six-game road trip against the Devil Rays and Royals looked like a breeze before coming home to battle the Tigers and Yankees. Not so, Boston. Instead, the Red Sox have limped home after going 1-5. They are three games behind the Yankees in the East and two games behind the White Sox for the wild card.

Boston has gone 4-10 in their last 14 games, and three of those wins came on walk-off hits from Ortiz (2) and Loretta (1). The fourth victory was a 3-2 game in Tampa, in which the Sox battled back and took the lead in the eighth inning.

Last night, Curt Schilling (7.1-11-5-2-7, 107) allowed 1 single, 9 doubles and 1 home run (the single was the last KC hit of the night?!). The 10 extra-base hits allowed tied the AL record set by Washington's Dale Gear in 1901 and tied by Cleveland's Luis Tiant against the Red Sox in 1969. It was the most extra-base hits by Red Sox pitcher since Bill Monbouquette gave up eight to the Yankees on June 11, 1964. It was also the third time in his last five starts that Schilling has surrendered at least 10 hits.

Boston grabbed a 4-2 lead on a long three-run home run from Wily Mo Pena in the top of the seventh. (Digression: In his last 10 starts since June 19, Bronson Arroyo is 0-5 with a 5.29 ERA. He has allowed 11 home runs in his last five outings. He went back to his cornrows yesterday in his 10th attempt to get his 10th win of the year. It didn't work.)

Armed with a lead, Schilling came out and retired the Royals in order in the seventh on only eight pitches. He had thrown 89 to that point and it seemed like he could go the distance. In the eighth, Schilling got the first out, then gave up doubles to Sweeney and Teahen, a walk to Brown and another double to Sanders. That tied the game at 4-4. Shealy followed with a single -- the 5th straight Royal to reach base -- and Kansas City regained the lead for good. ... Lowell, Kapler and Cora went down in order in the top of the ninth.

Schilling said "It happened so fast. ...
I was so fired up going into that eighth inning. I knew I was in control. I got that first out, and even though it would have been a bad trip at 2-4, it's still a win going home, and everything felt fine. ... [I]f we want to play baseball instead of golf in October, we're going to have to pitch better. ... I gave the game away. I gave a game away we should have won ... I don't know that there's any in-depth explanation.
Manny Ramirez singled on the first pitch he saw in the first inning, extending his hitting streak to 25 games and tying George Metkovich (1944) and Wade Boggs (1987) for the seventh-longest streak in team history. It is also the longest streak in the American League this season and the longest by a Boston player since Johnny Damon had a 29-game streak in 2005. ... If Keith Foulke is activated today, Corky Miller will likely be sent to Pawtucket, once again giving the team 13 pitchers.

More Schilling, on dealing with the absence of injured players:
The Yankees found a way to do it, day in and day out and, like I said, if we want to play in October, we better find a way to do it too, starting tomorrow.
I looked at the Yankees schedule. They have had their own rough patches. They went 3-6 from May 14 to 22 (and they allowed 13 runs in one of those wins) and 3-8 (including four straight losses) from June 8-19. They lost 4 of 5 from July 19-23. And they have lost 2 of their last 3 games. ... They begin a four-game set (Friday-Monday) at home against the Angels, then host the Orioles for three more before next Friday's doubleheader at Fenway.

8.10.2006

G113: Royals 5, Red Sox 4

Swept. By the Royals. In Kansas City. For the first time in 15 years.

The season just keeps getting better.

Friday AM: Coco saw 9 pitches all night. Yook saw 9 in his 7th inning at-bat alone (and 29 for the game -- in the same number of PA as Crisp). Plus Crisp's attempted steal in the first inning, on the first fucking pitch to Ortiz, was jaw-droppingly stupid. Was that called from the bench?

No one not named Ortiz or Ramirez is hitting much of anything, but if Coco stays in the leadoff spot any longer, I'm going to seriously fucking lose it. I can't imagine John Henry or Theo Epstein agrees with this bone-headed shit.

And why pull Pena for Kapler for the bottom of the 8th? Is Kapler that much better in right field? Plus that spot in the order was 2nd in the top of the ninth. Would have been nice to see Wily E. instead of Krapler.

This loss was not Francona's fault, with all the slumping, it is imperative that he gives the team its best chance to win.

***

Curt Schilling (3.78) / Runelvys Hernandez (8.54), 8 PM

The Royals have not swept a three-game series against the Red Sox at Kauffman Stadium since 1991. ... The Yankees (Mussina) finish up their series in Chicago (Vazquez) tonight.

Curt Schilling hopes to extend his major league record of 53 starts without allowing an unearned run. The current streak goes back to June 14, 2004. (Schilling's other 53-game streak was from April 10, 2001 to July 5, 2002.)

Coco Crisp is leading off again, Kevin Youkilis is batting 5th and Wily Mo Pena is hitting #7 after Mike Lowell. ... Bad Tito! No Chaw!

What's The Frequency, Bill Reynolds?

Bill Reynolds's column this morning in the Providence Journal is headlined: Hey, Sox, the future is now.

Let's read along:
The Red Sox did not want to give up the future.

Wasn't that the mantra?

Wasn't that Theo Epstein's response to why the Red Sox failed to make any significant moves at the trading deadline two weeks ago?

Wasn't that the reason the Sox did nothing, while Brian Cashman significantly upgraded the Yankees, essentially giving up nothing to do it?

Makes you wonder.

It seems to me the future is now. Manny and Ortiz in their prime. Schilling near the end, maybe Varitek, too. It seems to me that in a season where the National League looks like an overpaid International League, the Yankees have had their problems, the White Sox have a hangover after last year's World Series win, and no one seems able to name four position players on the Tigers, the future is now for the Red Sox. Not off in some hazy distance somewhere.

Now!
The Yankees improved, but Lidel and Abreu did not upgrade the team "significantly". And Cashman did give up something: a boatload of cash. Which, despite their large payroll, is a concern of the Red Sox. ... Manny is 34 and, as much as I love him, he is no longer in his prime. I'd put his best years at 1999-2002 (two years in each of Cleveland and Boston). Bill, do you truly believe that Varitek is in his prime right now?
The focus should be to be doing all you can do to win now, for the simple reason that there are no guarantees in sports. The future always is as unpredictable as a windblown popup. No one can put their hands around it. You try and win when you can for the simple reason that who really knows when you're going to get another chance.
I pretty much agree with this -- and it's one of the main reasons I get so pissed at Francona. However, many sportswriters, and I'll bet my next paycheck that Reynolds is one of them, talk about the season as a marathon, and how you cannot manage every game as if it was Game 7. In other words, sometimes you have bring in a less-effective pitcher because you cannot burn out your best arms before July. In (more) other words, Reynolds's quote -- "The focus should be to be doing all you can do to win now ... You try and win when you can ..." -- is not really accurate during the baseball season. (Even though I subscribe to it sometimes as a moody fan.)
This is a team that just a few weeks ago was being called as good as any in the American League. And now they seem to be in need of a jump start, a victim of too many injuries and a bullpen that seems as tired as a triathlete.

A team that needed help at the trading deadline and didn't get it.
Who called the Red Sox as good as any team in the league? Was it you, Bill? Name a name or two. If you like, you could start with mine, because I believe it even now. ... But first you say the Sox are as good as any AL team, then they needed help at the deadline. Every team could use some "help", certainly, but you're not making sense here, Bill. Which is it? ... And do you believe both of these statements? Only one of them (and if so, which one?) Neither of them?
Rest assured this would be different if the Sox had not won in 2004. There would be a sense of urgency, a sense that it was imperative to win now. That was the climate in 2004 when Theo traded Nomar, controversial, the sense that nothing was more important than winning now.

So what happened to that sense of urgency?
2004 changed a lot, but if you have any evidence that Theo is resting on the laurels of that wonderful season, please present it. I'd love to see it. ... And, if you recall, the Red Sox were three measly outs from being swept by the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS. If that had happened, Theo would have been absolutely roasted by the Boston media for trading Nomar and having less than nothing to show for it. ... And how many local sportswriters were agreeing that trading Nomar and picking up O-Cab and Eyechart in mid-2004 was part of the "winning now" philsophy? (Hint: Zero.)
Now it seems muted, as if winning in 2004 took the pressure off, and now we hear talk about some long-range plan. It sounds great in theory, certainly, until you start looking up at the Yankees in the standings and the season starts to seem as if it's slip-sliding away.

Theo's reluctance to trade his young pitchers is understandable. In a game where pitching is key, the thought of giving up young arms is the new sin.
Oh, so now Theo's decision to keep the young arms is understandable? Bill, could you please pick an opinion and stick with it through the entire column? ... And is this really the first time you have heard of the Sox's long-term plans? Have you been in a coma since Theo was first hired? He -- and everyone else in the organization -- have pounded the idea of the "long-range plan" like a drum since Day 1. Or are you just making fun of the idea of having a long-range plan? Would you rather the Sox give barrels of money to once-good veterans on the wrong side of 35?
But what are the odds that all three of the young guns -- Craig Hansen, Jon Lester, and Manny Delcarmen -- are going to turn out to be great? Probably not too good.
So a 21- or 22-year-old rookie pitcher has to be "great" or the Sox should trade him for a two-month rental? Would you trade Lester for any pitcher out there? Do you have any standard for the kind of player you'd like to get in return? You aren't really saying anything of substance here, Bill. And any deals I read about involved at least two of those pitchers. There was no deal with just one of them involved that I heard about (though I could be wrong).
That's the other thing about doing something significant at the trading deadline. It sends a message to the clubhouse that you're serious. It sends the message that nothing is more important than right now, the best message any team can have. Rest assured that players in the clubhouse couldn't care less about the organization's future. To them the future is the next series, not some year in which the odds are they'll be somewhere else anyway.
The Red Sox should never do something for the simply sake of doing something. Also, Gabe Kapler says the team's actions at the deadline wasn't a big deal to the players.
Kapler: "I think we as a unit and as a group understand that this organization busted its [butt] to try to find the right deal. They stayed up late at night, worked as hard as we worked in an effort to help improve the club. We know the team put in countless hours and Theo put in every ounce that he could put in, that he thought he made the best decision possible at that moment. I trust that he knows enough. ... [A]ll the pieces of this puzzle are here in this room ..."

Coco Crisp: "If [Theo] was trying to do something and it didn't happen, it must not have been right. It's very simple."
Bill, why are you calling Kapler and Crisp liars?
And maybe the Sox did try at the trading deadline, and other teams backed out at the last minute. Who knows?
In other words: "I'm going to write this column and make claims regardless of whether I have any solid information on which to base them."
What matters is results. All the rest is fodder for talk shows, the woulda-shoulda-coulda banter that goes back and forth like a game of catch.
So why wouldn't you want to wait until at least the end of the regular season -- instead of nine days -- before passing judgment? That's the earliest we will see the tangible results of what the Sox did: They will either make the playoffs this year or not.

Of course, you might also want to wait and see what waiver deals are made and whether these potentially good arms that the Red Sox held onto to (for now) actually pan out, before (sort of) saying it was a mistake to keep them.
The Red Sox can spin this anyway they want, but if this team fails to make the playoffs, this season should be viewed as a major disappointment. ... This is a team that's supposed to be in the playoffs, not were positioning itself for some undetermined future.
Major? Perhaps. Read the first few pages of Seth Mnookin's "Feeding The Monster" for very clear evidence that Epstein saw 2006 as a transition year of sorts -- still quite competitive, but clearly experiencing a changing of the guard and having to address the need to get younger. And the fromt office has always talked about a huge crop of talent coming to Boston in 2007-08.

Finally, there is no reason why the Sox cannot make the playoffs this year. They are not 10 games out of the East or the wild card.

Reynolds's column is nothing more than a bunch of contradictory gibberish, silly strawmen and a profound ignorance of both recent Red Sox history and the oft-quoted opinions of the front office.

Notes on KC TV Announcers

Got the RSTN (Royals Sports Television Newtwork) feed last night. In the first inning , Bob Davis (I think) was blabbling like a senile moron. I probably should know for sure before I rag on him, but what the hell ...

He first said that Fenway Park was a great park for hitting home runs (this year, it is the hardest park in all of baseball in which to hit a HR).

That went right into a discussion of the Fenway bullpens "out where Ted Williams used to patrol". TSW, of course, played left field for the Sox. (He probably meant to say that the Red Sox built the bullpens to bring in the fences so Ted could hit more home runs, but he didn't come remotely close to hinting that that was his point.)

Later, Paul Splittorf talked about a game in which Ortiz, then with the Twins, was hit on the wrist with a pitch by a Royals pitcher. Later in the game Ortiz belted a home run. It turned out that the earlier pitch had broken his hand -- so he had hit the HR with a broken wrist.

I checked Retrosheet and Ortiz has been hit by a Royals pitcher only once in his entire career -- August 3, 2001. And he did not hit a home run in that game.

It was his only HBP of 2001. Ortiz was hit in the 2nd inning and stayed in the game until he was removed after doubling in the 10th inning. He also played the next two days. I doubt those games were also played with a broken wrist.

A Staff-Wide Urgency

Tonight's starter Curt Schilling:
There's more responsibility on the starting pitching staff right now than there has been in the past. ... You can call it pressure, but I don't know if it's pressure ... I look at that as my responsibility every time I'm out there. I'm supposed to throw more innings than the other guys. I'm supposed to pitch deeper in the games. That's how I feel.

And there needs to be a staff-wide urgency to do so. What you have to do, though, is take that terminology and translate what it means for you. Do you need to be doing more work between starts? Do you need to be doing more preparation between starts? Do you need to be doing less off the field between games? All the little things that go into being as good as you can possibly be on that fifth day. ...
Schlling obviously didn't mention anyone by name, but I can't help but feel he was referring more to Beckett than Jon Lester, Jason Johnson or Kyle Synder.

Jonathan Papelbon has blown two save opportunities in the last three games. "I don't bring anything home with me. As soon as I leave the ballpark, I'm done with it. Tomorrow's a new day. The sun's going to rise. I just have to study some film and make adjustments. We've got two months to go. There's no reason to be sitting right here and pouting or getting upset."

Keith Foulke pitched one inning for Pawtucket last night, allowing a run and two hits (16 pitches, 12 strikes). In four rehab appearances for the PawSox, Foulke allowed allowing one run in five innings. The Sox will see how he feels the day after pitching two straight days before deciding to call him up.

Manny Ramirez is now 5th on the Red Sox all-time home run list. He hit #231 last night, passing Mo Vaughn. Dwight Evans is 4th, with 379. ... Doug Mirabelli is expected to start behind the plate tonight.

G112: Royals 5, Red Sox 4

How bad can things get?
Royals 9th: Red Sox lead 4-3. Papelbon pitching. German triples. Gathright strikes out. DeJesus flies out to left, German scores, game tied 4-4. Grudzielanek doubles to left field wall. Sweeney singles to left, Grudzielanek scores, KC wins 5-4.
In Chicago, the Yankees blew a 7-0 lead, but Rivera stranded the potential tying run at third and beat the White Sox 7-6. The Twins also won, so Boston fell 3 GB in the East and 1.5 GB in the wild card.

***

Josh Beckett (5.00) / Mark Redman (5.38), 8:10 PM

8.09.2006

Coco Cannot Keep Leading Off

Coco Crisp is leading off because Terry Francona thinks Manny Ramirez needs Kevin Youkilis's protection in the #5 spot.
I don't want anybody to walk David and Manny and not pay the price or feel that they won't be paying the price. I think Youk can handle that responsibility. ... I like Youk hitting first a lot, but when you lose people you have to make some changes to stretch out your lineup, and we think this is the best possible way to do it.
Overall, Youkilis's OBP is 71 points higher than Crisp's (.396 to .325). And in the leadoff spot, the difference is enormous.

Leading Off
       AVG   OBP   SLG
Coco .228 .285 .291
Yook .300 .392 .450
Which batter would you want hitting ahead of the RBI guys? ... Memo to Tery: Pena can bat #5. Then Lowell and Crisp.

Here's some good news: X-rays on Mark Loretta's left elbow were negative. ... Also: Doug Mirabelli took batting practice yesterday and hopes to play on Thursday. ... Tim Wakefield played catch from 120 feet. Francona said a return to the rotation in two weeks is a bit optimistic.

8.08.2006

G111: Royals 6, Red Sox 4

Lester struggled with his control (5-6-4-3-5, 105), Hansen and Seanez each allowed a crucial run, and the Red Sox offense was once again pretty much MIA. (Box)

Boston got 10 hits: Manny doubled and singled (23-game hitting streak) (so did Gonzalez), Ortiz hit his 41st home run (his 1,000th career hit), and Pena clubbed a 2-run bomb to deep left (451 feet), but overall the bats look weak and ineffective.

Inexplicably, Crisp is still batting leadoff. He went 0-for-4 with a ninth-inning walk. ... If Ortiz and Manny are the only guys hitting the ball right now, don't you want the guys who get on base most often batting right before them? Isn't that what you learn on the first day of Baseball 101? Tito?

NYY Update: Paul Konerko homered off Mariano Rivera in the bottom of the ninth and Jermaine Dye singled home the winning run in the 11th against Scott Proctor as the White Sox won 5-4.

***

Jon Lester (3.59) / Luke Hudson (4.67), 8 PM

[Yankees (Wang 3.58) at White Sox (Garcia 4.87)]

Dear Red Sox: Start Winning

The Red Sox are 4-7 in their past 11 games, 12-12 since the All-Star break, and 15-16 since the end of interleague play early last month.

Tony Massarotti, Boston Herald:
Ramirez and Ortiz have been nothing short of sensational this year, but there is only so much two men can do. Since the All-Star break, Ramirez and Ortiz have 16 home runs and are batting a combined .339, which is almost as much as the rest of the team is slugging. ...

Somebody else needs to step up. And soon.
Over at the New York Times, Yankee sycophant Murray "No! 2004 Never Happened! Never! (fingers in ears) I Can't Hear You! Naaaaa, Naaaaa, Naaaaa!" Chass can barely hide his glee:
The Boston Red Sox are a poor excuse for a good baseball team. For the second year in a row, they have squandered an advantage they had over the Yankees, this year even more grievously than last. Like last year, they will very likely pay for their profligacy.
Mike Lowell thinks he'll play tonight in Kansas City. ... Doug Mirabelli could be ready by Wednesday or Thursday: "I don't think playing in Kansas City is that far-fetched. Once we get the swelling out of there, I should be fine. The mobility is a lot better, but the pain and stiffness are still there."

In addition to being named AL Player of the Month for July, David Ortiz was named Co-Player of the Week (with Travis Hafner) for July 31 to August 6. Ortiz was 10-for-27 (.370) with two doubles, five home runs, eight RBIs, 27 total bases, and a cool 1.000 slugging percentage.

Devil Rays bullpen coach Bobby Ramos on Tampa's 7-6 win on Sunday: "That was a World Series game." ... Gordon Edes notes that since the start of the 2004 season, Corky Miller is 1-for-55 (.018). It is the lowest average of any major leaguer, including pitchers, with at least 50 plate appearances in that span.

More Edes:
Remember at the trading deadline, when the Sox had a deal on the table for Pirates pitcher Kip Wells but backed off because of concerns raised by his medical records? Wells wound up going to Texas, made one start for the Rangers, and complained of fatigue afterward. He has been shut down while doctors examine his shoulder.

Peter Gammons continues to make considerable progress in his recovery from a brain aneurysm, said a friend of the family who had lunch with Gammons recently. Gammons is at his home on Cape Cod, continuing his rehab on an outpatient basis, but he's up and around, walking, talking, and getting stronger.
Bob Ryan: "Hey, you, with the Red Sox bedspread: You might as well face facts: There has never been a better summer to be a Yankee fan." ... Never? What the hell is Ryan talking about?

Chicken Little O' The Day: Steven Krasner, Providence Journal:
In the meantime, the Sox are losing ground in the divisional race. They also are in a virtual dead heat with Chicago and Minnesota in the wild-card chase. A free-fall is looming.

8.06.2006

Ortiz Is First Red Sock To Hit 40 HR In Three Straight Seasons

With his home run this afternoon, David Ortiz is the first Red Sox player to hit 40 homers in three consecutive seasons. Only two other Boston players -- Carl Yastrzemski (1967, 1969-70) and Manny Ramirez (2001, 2004-05) -- have hit 40 or more homers in three different seasons. ... Flo: "I had no idea. I think I'm going to have start following history, what do you think?"

Jonathan Papelbon on throwing three straight fastballs to Dioner Navarro, who hit the third one for a game-tying home run in the eighth:
I wanted to go in on him there. ... I left it over the middle of the plate. I got him out the night before on an elevated fastball. He probably did his homework. It's all hindsight right now. I probably should have mixed it up a little bit better on him.
Shoulda seen the splitter on 0-2.

An MRI of Mike Lowell's left foot did not show a fracture and he hopes to play on Tuesday. Interestingly, the Globe reports that Dustin Pedroia started at third last night for Pawtucket.

Keith Foulke started and pitched two scoreless innings (1 H, 1 BB, 2 K, 30 pitches, 19 strikes) on Saturday for Pawtucket. He says he's ready ("I'm waiting for a call") but the team plans to have him pitch back-to-back outings for the PawSox on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Doug Mirabelli has a sprained left ankle and will be out three or four more days. ... Sunday's catcher Corky Miller played in the majors with the Reds (2001-04) and the Twins (2005).

Jim Bowden, current Washington Nationals GM, traded for Wily Mo Pena in March 2001 when he was the Reds's GM:
I've always said -- and I believe this -- if you are patient with Wily Mo, as I believe we were when we had him, by the time he hits 27 or 28 years old, he's going to hit 40-50 home runs a year in this league. You have to understand, the Yankees signed him to that contract and he was forced to learn to hit in the big leagues. It cost him three years of development. ...

He's 24 years old right now, and I think he's really in a perfect place. He's got two of the greatest hitters in the game -- David Ortiz and Manny Ramírez -- that he can learn from and emulate. ... As he matures as a hitter, he's going to become more selective at the plate and really improve as a hitter. Let's see the numbers he starts to put up when he gets 500 at-bats.
Nick Cafardo of the Globe says that Ortiz will likely be an overwhelming selection as the AL MVP, but could get some competition from Derek Jeter. He quotes a stupid AL GM: "If the Yankees beat out the Red Sox, I think you have to give it to Jeter in a slight margin of victory."

Why do people still link a player's individual award to the performance of his teammates or -- even worse -- to players in another city?

G110: Devil Rays 7, Red Sox 6 (10)

This one was worse.

I missed about half of the game due to work -- the good half as it turned out (grrr) -- and after my MLBtv crapped out, I listened via radio. Just a pathetic, pisspoor effort.

And for the first time this season, I am having doubts about whether this team can even get to the playoffs, let alone win October games. If they have such trouble with minor league teams like Tampa (god I hate those fuckers and their piece of trash "stadium", and the heckler needs to be force-fed a shit sandwich) -- if the bullpen keeps sucking as hard as it has been -- well ....

Good: Jason Johnson pitched extremely well (6-3-2-1-1-3, 98) and I'm wondering why he didn't start the seventh (Francona dozes while Beckett allows seven straight hits, but he seemingly pulls Johnson early). ... God hit his 40th HR. ... Manny extended his hitting streak to 22 games (though it was a gift-wrapped hit).

Lineup: Coco struck out four times in the leadoff spot while #5 hitter Youkilis singled twice and walked twice. Fucking A, Tito! It's not that hard. Put Yook at the top and leave him there. Put Pena at #5 (even when Lowell returns) and leave him there. Put Coco 7th or 8th.

Arms: Why didn't Papelbon pitch the 10th? He has thrown only two innings in the last week and was at 26 pitches. And the team is off tomorrow. ... Francona used him for five outs with a one-run lead, why not six outs with a two-run lead? ... And why Sexy Lips? Seanez has been better this year; Snyder was out there, too.

Fact: We have not won a game by more than one run since July 25.

Damage: Two games out in the East and tied at .5 behind in the wild card. .. And the mighty Royals on Tuesday.

***

Jason Johnson (6.25) / JP Howell (14.73), 1:15 PM

Joe Maddon on Manny Ortez:
Those guys are freaks, they are. If you throw a strike and they can reach it, they hit it. Hard. Ruth and Gehrig. Batman and Robin, I dunno. They're like the best combo in the history of the world. Peanut butter and jelly. Chocolate and red wine. They're the best I've ever seen.
Corky Miller gets the start behind the plate today -- our fourth catcher in four games! Woo-hoo!

8.05.2006

G109: Devil Rays 8, Red Sox 5

Horrible game. On a day when the Yankees got one-hit by the mighty Orioles staff, the Red Sox fail to move into a tie for first and fell out of the wild card lead.

David Wells retired the first nine Rays, then Tampa batted around in the fourth: five singles, an error and a walk -- and four runs. Wells ended up going six, allowing eight hits and five runs, although only one was earned.

After six innings, Boston trailed 5-1. Coco Crisp's double scored Wily Mo Pena in the seventh and after David Ortiz laid down a perfect bunt single to start the eighth, Manny Ramirez drilled a two-run homer to center, bringing the Sox to within one run. Manny now has a career-best 21-game hitting streak.

After the HR, Jon Switzer got two quick outs, but walked both Pena and Gabe Kapler. With the tying run on second, Alex Gonzalez grounded weakly to second. But those walks meant that Ortiz would have his cuts in the ninth.

Craig Hansen pitched the bottom of the eighth and, unwisely throwing more sliders than fastballs, couldn't hold the line. With one out, Greg Norton singled, BJ Upton walked, and they both scored on Josh Paul's double to deep right (Kapler was very shallow and the ball way sailed over his head). Paul took third on the throw home and came across on a sac fly. Hansen's ERA soared from 4.56 to 5.47 -- and Tampa led 8-4.

The Red Sox rallied against Brian Meadows in the ninth, but they were in too deep of a hole. After Crisp grounded to second, Mark Loretta doubled to left and Ortiz singled to deep right (8-5). Ramirez smacked a hard single up the middle and Youkilis walked to load the bases (both ball 2 and ball 4 were so borderline, I'm amazed that Yook took them and more amazed the umpire didn't ring him up (since they had been strikes for Cy Fossum earlier in the game)). (Also in that at-bat, Yook ripped the 5th pitch down the left field line -- it landed two inches -- literally, two f'n inches -- foul. If it lands fair, the score is 8-6 and the Sox have runners at second and third.)

But it was one out, bases loaded and Javy Lopez with the bat. He was 0-for-4 and had not hit the ball out of the infield. A fly ball was probably our best hope; a strikeout would not have been a disaster. It would give Pena a shot. ... But Lopez hacked at the first pitch and grounded into an pathetically easy 6-4-3 double play. (In his five AB, he saw 12 pitches.)

The fact that Francona is batting Lopez (and Mirabelli a few days ago) ahead of Pena was a goddamn disgrace. Pena must hit 5th behind Manny every single goddamn day. Must. Today, with Youkilis hitting 5th, Pena should have been 6th.

The Sox's 5-9 hitters went 1-for-19, while Tampa's 6-9 hitters went 7-for-13. Dave Hollins, Greg Norton, and Josh Paul -- immortals all -- each had three hits.

It's nights like this -- against shit teams like Tampa -- that we'll look back on with rage if the Red Sox miss the playoffs by a game or two. ... From the SoSH Game Thread:

soxfaninyankeeland:
Any word on why the Orioles released Javy Lopez?
fox13weather:
just back from the game. ... Freeking Javy Lopez, Meadows is STRUGGLING and he hacks away at the 1st pitch. ... Of course, if the MFY had signed him he would have hit a granny in that spot.
Jason Johnson gets the ball tomorrow afternoon.

***

David Wells (11.08) / Casey Fossum (4.89), 7: 15 PM

I wonder which game in history featured the biggest weight differential between starting pitchers?

Wells allowed eight runs and eight hits in 4.2 innings against Cleveland. Here's hoping he's a little more consistent with his location. I have this strange, vaguely irrational, belief that Wells can help in August and September.

Fossum tied his career high with 10 strikeouts against Detroit on Monday, while allowing only one run in seven innings.

Manny Ramirez will try to extend his hitting streak to a career-best 21 games.

Musical Catchers: According to Pawtucket's media notes, Corky Miller is on his way to Tampa, Alberto Concepcion was promoted from Portland to Pawtucket and Mike Leonard was promoted from Greenville to Portland.

Hey!

Mirabelli Twists Ankle -- Who'll Get Hurt Today?; A Claim That Ortiz Isn't Clutch

Doug Mirabelli twisted his left ankle while tagging Carl Crawford out at the plate in the first inning last night and will miss a few games. Mirabelli:
I tried to stick out my foot to block the plate, and his foot hit my foot and moved it to the side. Sometimes the initial pain will subside after 5 or 10 minutes, but this wasn't going away. ... Fortunately the ligaments are okay and there are no fractures.
Tito: He's going to be down for a few days. I think we're real hopeful it won't be a DL. ... Alex Cora is the emergency catcher, but the team will likely call up Corky Miller from Pawtucket (although that apparently would leave the PawSox with no catchers).

Mike Lowell is also expected to be out for several more days. X-rays and a fluoroscope showed no broken bones, but Lowell is having trouble walking and remains concerned: "I can't put any pressure on it. That's concerning me, to be honest. I can't push off on it."

Devil Rays manager Joe Maddon on Ortiz: "It's amazing. He's truly amazing. I don't know what to say. Every team has seen it. He does not miss a mistake. And he's got this propensity in the clutch that's incredible."

However, blogger Matthew T. Sussman says Ortiz is not clutch -- or at least not as clutch as we think. After writing a bunch of stuff that makes very little sense, he closes with this:
Clutch hitting is not built on statistics, it's built on memories. Ortiz did some great things in the 2004 posteason, and he's still doing great things. But it was the drama in 2004 that allow fans to remember every game-winning hit Ortiz knocks. Ortiz smashes a game-winning yardshot off [insert name of generic closer here], and Boston goes nuts. And ESPN leads off with it. And essays are written about how friggin' awesome Papi is.

Those hits re-invoke visions of that World Series championship run. Other players — heck, other Red Sox — are contributing to game-winning series of events, but "PAPI DOES IT AGAIN!" looks great on the front of a newspaper.

So while I completely respect Ortiz's ability and his results, his potent bash-happy lineup has pushed Big Papi to the point where he's a bit overrated.
Seth Mnookin responds.

Ortiz on Maddon's 4-Outfielder Shift: "Bad decision. Everything is fine. I don't care about that shift anymore."

The Red Sox and Orioles got around the Devil Rays' threat to place a waiver claim on Adam Stern by agreeing that Stern will not become Baltimore's property until after the season, when waivers are not required.

8.04.2006

G108: Red Sox 3, Devil Rays 2

Curt Schilling gave up two solo home runs early in the game, but settled down (7-9-2-2-4, 102). He got out of a bases loaded, one out jam in the sixth, by reaching back and striking out BJ Upton and Tomas Perez on seven pitches of pure gas.

David Ortiz hit two home runs: #38 leading off the fourth -- which cut the Tampa lead to 2-1 -- and #39 leading off the eighth -- which broke a 2-2 tie. Not a walk-off, but still clutch.

Manny Delcarmen pitched a quick eighth inning (Travis Lee singled to right and was thrown out at second by Gabe Kapler (sounded like very poor baserunning by Lee)) and Jonathan Papelbon pocketed his 30th save with a perfect ninth.

In Baltimore, the Yankees beat the Orioles 5-4 as Dumbo hit a ninth inning tie-breaking homer. Toronto lost and fell to 9.5 GB.

***

Curt Schilling (3.84) / James Shields (5.43), 7:15 PM

Mike Lowell's left foot remains sore, so Alex Cora gets the nod at third. ... Javy Lopez is with the team, but will get his first start tomorrow night. ... Lineups:
Crisp, CF        Hollins, CF
Loretta, 2B Crawford, LF
Ortiz, DH Cantu, DH
Ramirez, LF Lee, 1B
Youkilis, 1B Norton, RF
Pena, RF Navarro, C
Cora, 3B Upton, SS
Mirabelli, C Perez, 2B
Gonzalez, SS Zobrist, 3B
Boston has lost three of their last four games against Tampa Bay, though they lead the season series 8-6. ... Last Sunday against the Angels, Schilling allowed six runs and 10 hits in five innings. He has a 4.27 road ERA in 2006. Schilling has faced the Rays four times this season.
        IP  H  R BB  K
0419 H 6 6 1 1 7
0430 A 6 6 3 1 9
0527 H 7 8 4 0 7
0704 A 7 9 4 0 7
26 29 12 2 30
Shields held the Yankees to four runs in seven innings, but took the loss. He started against the Red Sox on July 6 at Tropicana Field (5-4-5-3-5). Boston won that game 12-5.

The Yankees (Johnson, 5.07) are in Baltimore (Chen, 7.07).

Adam Stern Going To O's For Lopez

According to Sean McAdam of the Providence Journal, the player going to Baltimore in the deal for Javy Lopez is Adam Stern.

In 366 at-bats for Pawtucket, Stern hit .260/.299/.393 with 21 steals.

Both McAdam and Gordon Edes of the Globe report that the Devil Rays might put in a waiver claim on Stern, in apparent retaliation for what they believe was Boston's illegal contact with Julio Lugo's agent before the trade deadline. (The Red Sox say that Lugo's agent contacted them.)

However, the Rays did not confront either the Red Sox or Lugo's agent with their suspicions and, due to lack of evidence, they are not filing a grievance with the commissioner's office. But they're planning on getting some supposed revenge on the Red Sox in this completely unrelated matter? What a bunch of classless a-holes.

Lowell In Pain; Lopez Tonight; Foulke On Tuesday?

Another Sock headed for the disabled list?

Mike Lowell fouled a ball off his right foot on Tuesday and hit one off his left foot last night. X-rays taken at Fenway after he left the game in the eighth inning were negative, but he'll be reexamined in Tampa today. Lowell:
It was throbbing a bit but as the game kept going, it kept getting worse and was kind of spreading to the other side of my foot. ... I can't put any pressure on it.
Terry Francona on the AL East/Wild Card race: "It's going to be one of the funnest races in a long time. The way teams are situated, it's going to be a lot of fun to watch." ... And watch he did -- as Josh Beckett gave up seven consecutive hits in the sixth inning last night. At no time did Francona or pitching coach Al Nipper make a trip to the mound. Tito: "It happened so fast."

Javy Lopez is expected to join the Sox in Tampa tonight. (Ken Huckaby was DFA'd after last night's game.) ... An Orioles official said Lopez is "not what he used to be, but for what the Red Sox need him for -- a month or so -- he was the best guy out there for them. ... If he plays every day and starts getting hot, there's no doubt he can carry a lineup. But we haven't seen that for a while."

Keith Foulke pitched one inning made for Pawtucket last night (18 pitches, 10 strikes), striking out two and walking one. Foulke:
We're putting it in high gear right now. We're coming back here on Saturday for two or three innings and to get stretched out a little bit. [Boston] is off on Monday and I will be joining them on Tuesday in Kansas City. ... My control was a little iffy. I threw a couple of curveballs and a lot of splits. I'm satisfied with it. ... I want to get stretched out, because when I go back I want to have the ability to give [Francona] two or three innings if he needs me.
Jason Varitek's surgery was successful and he will begin rehabbing immediately. He will miss 4-6 weeks. ... Manny Ramirez's first-inning single extended his hitting streak to 19 games and made him the 45th player to drive in 1,500 runs.

Today's Media Sky Is Falling Sentences: Tony Massarotti, Herald: "Josh Beckett did not merely let down his teammates last night. He pushed them off a sixth-story ledge." ... The Red Sox are 1 game out of first place with 55 to play.

8.03.2006

G107: Cleveland 7, Red Sox 6

Josh "Gopher" Beckett strikes again. Boston held a 3-1 lead after two innings, but Beckett couldn't keep the ball in the park. He allowed at least three home runs in a start for the sixth time this season (he's given up 31 homers altogether this year). (Box)

The first shot was from Aaron Boone -- who wasn't much booed either when he stepped into the batter's box or when he drilled the first pitch off the left field pole for a home run (wtf is wrong with you, Fenway fans?) -- then it was Travis Hafner (two-run) and Shin-Soo Choo (grand slam) in the sixth. Beckett (6-11-7-0-3, 88) allowed seven consecutive hits in that sixth inning. The Sox were in a 7-3 hole.

But they came right back -- as quickly as possible -- in the bottom of the sixth. Jake Westbrook's first three pitches were hit for singles (Wily Mo Pena, Coco Crisp, and Alex Gonzalez). Ken Huckaby did the one thing I told him not to do, hit into a double play. That scored one run and Kevin Youkilis's single brought in another, but Boston still trailed 7-5.

The Red Sox rallied in the 8th against Westbrook. Crisp and Gonzalez singled and pinch-hitter Alex Cora bunted them to second and third. Youkilis's sac fly made the score 7-6, but that was as close as Boston could get. Mark Loretta flied to center to end the 8th. And in the 9th, David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez both flew out to right, and Doug Mirabelli fouled out to the catcher.

Westbrook (8-15-6-1-1, 118) allowed the most hits in one game of any pitcher in the major leagues this year.

Manny extended his hitting streak to 19 games. ... Youkilis, Crisp and Gonzalez each had three hits. ... And Craig Hansen pitched out of a one out, bases loaded jam in the seventh, getting Casey Blake to hit into a 6-4-3 DP.

And for the second time this series, Canada's Sportsnet carried the NESN broadcast. ?!?! This also happened on Monday night, when the Blue Jays were off. I was suffering with ESPN, but when Laura came home from work in the eighth inning and turned on the other TV, she quickly yelled down "NESN's on!" Why, I don't know. But we got to hear Orsillo nearly have a stroke when Papi hit his game-winning blast.

And since the Jays had "played" this afternoon - thanks, Toronto! -- I checked out channel 22 again. And sure enough, there was Don and Jerry. So I quickly bid adieu to ESPN's Gary Thorne and Buck "Nasal" Martinez. ... Sportsnet, I don't know why you're carrying NESN, but keep it up. Hell, bump a few Jays games. They're out of the race anyway.

***

Gordon Edes of the Globe says the Sox have deal in place for Baltimore catcher Javier Lopez. ... Tonight, though, Ken ".207 in Pawtucket" Huckaby gets his first start tonight; he's batting 9th.

Jake Westbrook (4.31) / Josh Beckett (4.76), 7 PM

Beckett allowed four hits, four walks and three runs in six innings in his last start, against the Angels on Saturday. He is 6-1 with a 3.22 ERA at Fenway Park this season. ... In his last two starts, against the Twins and Mariners, Westbrook has allowed a total of only five earned runs in 14 innings. But Cleveland has lost both games, both by a 3-1 score.

The Yankees beat Toronto this afternoon 8-1, dropping the Blue Jays 8.5 games out of first.

MVPapi

Pete Kerasotis, Florida Today:
Unless Ortiz suffers an injury or decides to get in touch with his inner Alex Rodriguez -- i.e., putting up numbers that are the baseball equivalent of empty calories -- he is the American League MVP.
Poor Slappy. There is no escape.

Sox Eyeing Javy Lopez; Manny HR Milestones; Pena Avoids Murder Charge; Bird Update

Jason Varitek has confidence in Doug Mirabelli assuming the Sox's main catching duties, but the team is looking for outside help.

They have spoken with the Orioles about Javy Lopez, who was placed on waivers Monday. The Courant names Jason LaRue, Mike Lieberthal and Henry Blanco as other possibilities.

Matt Clement is being shut down for another three weeks, according to Terry Francona. I wonder if we'll see him at all this year; seems doubtful.

Manny Ramirez's home run last night extended his hitting streak to 18 games. It was his 30th of the season, the 9th straight season (and 11th overall) that he has reached that mark. Only Hank Aaron (15 seasons), Barry Bonds (14), Babe Ruth (13), Mike Schmidt (13) and Jimmie Foxx (12) have more 30-homer seasons. It was career HR #465, tying Ramirez with Dave Winfield for 26th all-time.

Speaking of Foxx, David Ortiz plans on doing some research into the life of Double X. Back in 1938, Foxx hit 50 home runs for the Red Sox (with a .349 average and 175 RBI!), a mark that Tizzle is taking serious aim at this summer. Ortiz:
I want to know everything about him. I'm going to get on the computer and read about him and get to know who he was. I want to know what he looked like, how big he was. I want to know how he swung the bat. I'm telling you, he must have been some [expletive] good hitter. ... I need to know how he put up that number. It's a long season now and it was a long season then. I'm going to get to know Jimmie Foxx. That's what I owe him.
Wily Mo Pena's line drive home run over the Wall last night was struck so hard that after it hit behind the first row of Monster seats, it rolled about halfway back to the infield. Pena: "I was afraid because I thought I was probably going to kill somebody. I thought, 'I'm going to be in jail.'"

In his last six appearances, Jonathan Papelbon has retired 21 of 22 batters. ... Keith Foulke will try to throw off a mound today. ... Bryan Corey is the 25th pitcher to appear in a Red Sox game this season, one shy of the club record. ... The Red Sox now have three pitchers over age 40: Tim Wakefield (turned 40 yesterday), Mike Timlin (40) and David Wells (43).

An update on the little black bird that was hopping around the infield on Tuesday night (Elliott Ginsburg, 64, season ticket holder since 1972: "That thing ran from base to base pretty good. I think he was faster than Mirabelli was getting to the plate last night."): it apparently met its demise at the hands (claws?) of one of the red-tail hawks that lives in Fenway's light towers. (An earlier bird rumour - a post-game snack for David Wells? -- turned out to be untrue.)

8.02.2006

G106: Red Sox 6, Cleveland 5

Once Cleveland closer Fausto Carmona -- who took the loss on David Ortiz's three-run walkoff HR two nights ago -- hit both Doug Mirabelli and Alex Gonzalez with two outs in the bottom of the ninth, the game felt over. Even though Carmona and Cleveland still held a 5-4 lead.

After numerous trips to the mound from the coaching staff and various infielders to calm Carmona down -- his body language was more expressive and indicative of his obvious feeling of defeat than even The Derek Lowe Face -- Carmona walked Kevin Youkilis to load the bases. Then he nearly plunked Mark Loretta with his first pitch before Loretta hit the second offering to deep left. It scrapped the wall -- and Boston had another walkoff win!

Jon Lester threw 36 first-inning pitches and allowed three runs, but Boston rallied in the middle innings. With two outs in the fifth, doubles from Gonzalez and Youkilis and a single from Loretta gave Boston its first two runs and solo home runs from Manny Ramirez and Wily Mo Pena gave the Red Sox a 4-3 lead. Travis Hafner's two-run shot to right-center in the top of the eighth off Mike Timlin put Cleveland back on top -- temporarily.

In New York, the Yankees beat Toronto 7-2, so New York and Boston remain tied atop the East. The Blue Jays fell to 7.5 GB.

***

Jeremy Sowers (3.98) / Jon Lester (3.49), 7 PM

Sowers, a 23-year-old rookie lefty, has thrown back-to-back complete game shutouts -- against the Twins and Mariners. In those 18 innings, he has given up only nine hits and two walks. ... Lester has a 3.12 ERA at fenway. In his first career loss last Friday, Lester allowed five runs and 10 hits (but no walks) over 6.1 innings.
Sizemore, CF Youkilis, 1B
Michaels, LF Loretta, 2B
Hafner, DH Ortiz, DH
Martinez, 1B Ramirez, LF
Blake, RF Lowell, 3B
Peralta, SS Pena, RF
Luna, 2B Crisp, CF
Shoppach, C Mirabelli, C
Marte, 3B Gonzalez, SS
Toronto (Lilly) plays at New York (Wang).

Varitek: Surgery Tomorrow Morning

Jason Varitek spoke to the media this afternoon. "My understanding is it's outpatient [surgery]. I'll have it done tomorrow morning and be out mid-afternoon. ... I'm not going to disappear. Dougie and I will continue to communicate… I'll try and help in any way that I can right now."

Will Carroll, who writes the Under The Knife column for Baseball Prospectus:
Jason Varitek pulled up at second base and hopped, tellingly. What happened was that his deceleration led to a small, probably pre-existing tear of his meniscus coming loose and "locking." There are several reasons this happens; the most likely for a catcher in his thirties is that the meniscus wore down over time and a small piece of cartilage was floating inside the knee or hanging by a flap. It moved into a position where it "caught," giving a small resistance to normal movement or pushing against one of the articular surfaces, felt as grinding in the knee. The surgeons will go in with a scope, wash out the knee, remove any free or hanging pieces of cartilage, and slap a bandage on the opening. To call this a minor procedure is overstating it. While no surgery is minor if it's performed on you, this is as minor and easy as surgery ever gets. Varitek should be out about three weeks ...
Jason Johnson will start on Sunday and Kyle will stay in the bullpen for now. ... Manny Delcarmen could available tonight. ... David Ortiz was named American League Player of the Month for July. In 26 games, Ortiz batted .339 / .429 / .798, with 14 home runs with 35 RBI.

In The Papers

Red Sox owner John Henry got a look at David Ortiz's walk-off stats and offered the only appropriate response: "Wow."

In the story, Providence Journal sports editor Art Martone includes a bit from Seth Mnookin's book Feeding The Monster. After popping out with the bases loaded and two outs in the bottom of the ninth of 2004 ALCS Game 4 (the game was tied 4-4), Ortiz was inconsolable. "You can't do it every time," Jason Varitek told him. "It's not humanly possible to get a hit every single time in these situations."

Of course, three innings later, Ortiz homered off Paul Quantrill to keep the Red Sox's playoff hopes alive. And, since that moment, when the game is on the line, Big Papi has been virtually unstoppable.

One of the main discussions about Ortiz has been at what point to opposing teams finally say the hell with Tizzle, let's gamble with Manny. Yeah, why don't you do that. You can say baseball players fail six or seven times out of 10, but with the game on the line, Ortiz is getting it done eight or nine times out of 10. On the other side, pitchers must know, however far back in their minds they try to put it, that this guy always comes through, and that has to effect their performance -- and just a little less velocity or a few inches of missed location can spell doom. So if Ortiz can continue to shut out all distractions at the plate and keep his cool, he should continue this amazing streak.

Ian Browne (redsox.com) and Gordon Edes (Globe) also cited the stats.

8.01.2006

Got NESN Pregame?

Beth at Cursed to First has the news:
It should also be noticed that this tremendous post on Joy of Sox was referenced by Gordon Edes on NESN's pregame show tonight. A proud day of enhanced credibility for bloggers everywhere. Kudos to Edes for revealing his source, too -- and giving credit where credit was due, even if it was to a "late-night fanboy" as the CHB likes to refer to bloggers.
One of you nuts must have taped the pregame. (Get thee to Youtube.) I have some goodies for anyone who has a recording.

G105: Cleveland 6, Red Sox 3

Alex Gonzalez's two-run home run with one out in the bottom of the 9th had barely cleared the Wall when every single member of RSN (and probably more than a few Cleveland fans) did the simple arithmetic. If Kevin Youkilis and Mark Loretta both get on, David Ortiz can (will) tie it up.

Not tonight. Youkilis lined out to left and Loretta ended the game trying to bunt for a base hit. With Cleveland getting to Jason Johnson (5.2-9-3-2-3, 95) in the first inning and Craig Hansen (1.1-3-2-0-1, 25) in the seventh, CC Sabathia (8-10-1-1-8, 111) cruised to victory in the Boston humidity.

***

CC Sabathia (3.82) / Jason Johnson (6.35), 7 PM

Typing up jaw-dropping stuff about David Ortiz and looking back at my scorecards from the past 3+ years this afternoon, all I really want to do is babble about the Big Man. I think I finally understand the hypnotic allure of cult leaders; Ortiz could get me to do just about anything at this point.

But there were other heroes last night. Tops among them was Kyle Synder (4.1-1-0-0-6), who may have found his proper place on the staff. ... Wily Mo Pena started in right field and drove in three runs with a single, triple and a loooong home run to left. ... Manny Ramirez, who hit his 28th home run in the first inning last night, has hit in 16 straight games, the longest streak of his Red Sox career. And he's 8-for-14 (.571) with four home runs and seven RBIs against tonight's opponent, Sabathia.

Alright, more Tizzle: He hit 14 home runs in July, tying Jackie Jensen (14 in June 1958) for the most in one month. ... He is the first Red Sock to have 105 RBI by the end of July (Ted Williams and Vern Stephens each had 104 in 1949). ... He and Ramirez have homered in the same game 12 times this season, tying the team record they set in 2004. ... And finally, in 161 games since July 31, 2005, the Big Man has 60 homers and 166 RBI.

David Ortiz in Walkoff Situations

(Updated at bottom)

David Ortiz gets another game-winning hit at Fenway Park and we hear it everywhere -- he did it again, it's more surprising when he doesn't win the game, is he human? -- but is it true? Does Ortiz excel over and above his usual performance in walk-off situations?

I took a look at all Red Sox home games since Ortiz joined the team in 2003. When I started, I figured that contrary to what we all think, Ortiz doesn't always win games in walk-off situations. We simply forget the times he has made an out.

Well, in the last two seasons, that's simply not true.

He DOES do it all the time.
2003:    2-for-5, HR, 2 RBI, BB
2004: 2-for-8, HR, 3 RBI
2004 PS: 3-for-5, 2 HR, 5 RBI, BB
2005: 3-for-3, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 2 BB
2006: 5-for-6, 3 HR, 10 RBI, 2 BB
Since the end of the 2004 regular season, Ortiz has come to the plate in a walk-off situations 19 times -- and reached base 16 times. He is 11-for-14 (.786), with 7 HR and 20 RBI.

In 2005 and 2006, he is 8-for-9, with 5 HR and 15 RBI!

Ortiz Walk-Off Chances At Fenway:
Date Opp Inn On Out Score Pitcher/Result

2003

0615 Hou 10 1 1 2-2 Dotel
BBI
12 0 0 2-2 Bland
3U (Sox 3-2 in 14)
0719 Tor 9 1 2 4-4 Acevado
4-3 (Sox 5-4 in 10)
0726 NYY 9 2 2 4-4 Benitez
Single to CF (Sox 5-4)
0823 Sea 10 1 1 6-6 Rhodes
P6 (Sox 7-6)
0923 Bal 10 0 0 5-5 Ainsworth
HR (Sox 6-5)

2004
0411 Tor 9 1 2 4-4 Kershner
F8 at track
12 1 0 4-4 Lopez
2-run HR to LF (Sox 6-4)
0415 Bal 9 0 1 7-7 Ryan
F8 (Bal 12-7 in 11)
0507 KC 9 0 0 6-6 Macdougal
K (Sox 7-6)
0529 Sea 9 1 2 4-5 Guardado
F8 (Sea 5-4)
0530 Sea 11 0 1 7-7 Putz
K (Sox 9-7 in 12)
0611 LAD 9 2 0 1-1 Martin
Single to RF (Sox 2-1)
0923 Bal 9 2 2 7-9 Ryan
F9 (Bal 9-7)

2004 Post-Season
1008 Ana 10 1 2 6-6 Washburn
2-run HR to LF (Sox 8-6)
1017 NYY 9 3 2 4-4 Rivera
P4
12 1 0 4-4 Quantrill
2-run HR to RF (Sox 6-4)
1018 NYY 10 0 0 4-4 Heredia
K
12 0 1 4-4 Loaiza
BB
14 2 2 4-4 Loaiza
Single to CF (Sox 5-4)

2005
0602 Bal 9 2 2 3-4 Ryan
3-run HR to CF (Sox 6-5)
0830 TB 9 0 1 6-6 Borowski
BB (Sox 7-6)
0906 LAA 9 0 1 2-2 Shields
Solo HR to RF (Sox 3-2)
0916 Oak 10 2 1 2-2 Cruz
BBI (Sox 3-2)
0929 Tor 9 2 1 4-4 Batista
Single to LF (Sox 5-4)

2006
0611 Tex 9 2 2 2-4 Otsuka
3-run HR to RF (Sox 5-4)
0624 Phi 10 1 1 3-3 Gordon
2-run HR to CF (Sox 5-3)
0626 Phi 9 0 0 6-6 Cormier
4-1
11 1 1 6-6 Gordon
BBI
12 2 2 7-7 Condrey
Single to LCF (Sox 8-7)
0729 LAA 9 1 1 6-6 Rodriguez
BBI
11 2 1 6-6 Romero
Single to LF (Sox 7-6)
0731 Cle 9 2 1 6-8 Carmona
3-run HR to CF (Sox 9-8)
There is nothing left to say.

Update: Reader Franco notes that from the 2004 playoffs, there have been 13 potential walkoff games and Ortiz has delivered the winning hit in 11 of them. In both of the other two games, he walked (one regular and one intentional).