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2003 Red Sox Notes October 18, 2003 It is Saturday afternoon and I should be preparing to watch the Red Sox first World Series game in 17 years. For me, it was more than half a lifetime ago when the Sox and Mets battled for seven games in the Fall of 1986. I had waited patiently for all those years and it was time for another chance to watch the Bosox in the Fall Classic. Unfortunately, Grady Little robbed me of that opportunity. In 1986, there were many Sox that contributed to the Game Six meltdown against the Mets – Manager John McNamara, Bill Buckner, Calvin Schiraldi, Bob Stanley, Rich Gedman. The offense scored only three runs and Roger Clemens may or may not have taken himself out the game because of a blister. On Thursday night, nearly every Sox player did his job. Pedro had essentially beaten the Yankees. He pitched brilliantly and gutted his way through a rough seventh inning in which he was clearly losing it. The offense whacked three homers and roughed up Roger Clemens. Timlin and Embree continued to get the job done, pitching 1 2/3 innings of hitless relief. The defense played well with the possible exception of Trot Nixon’s unfortunate path to Derek Jeter’s shot in the eighth inning. Still, that was a tough play. The only major gaffe by the players was their inability to push across run number five in the fourth inning despite having a runner on third and no outs. This loss falls on the shoulders of one man - Grady Little. Little as in “little” sense, “little” managing ability and “little” clue about the limitations of his number one starter. Leaving an exhausted Pedro in the game for four consecutive Yankee hits in the eighth inning was possibly the worst managing in postseason baseball history. Even Johnny Mac’s unwillingness to remove Bill Buckner from the field in the bottom of the tenth in Game Six in 1986 does not compare. It was obvious to me and probably most Red Sox fans that Pedro Martinez was losing it in the seventh inning of Game Seven. Jorge Posada hit a ball hard for an out, Jason Giambi belted a long homerun and Karim “Groundskeeper Beater” Garcia hit a hard single. I wondered if Pedro should be taken out when Soriano came to the plate as the go-ahead run. I decided that Pedro should stay in the game to face Soriano because he had fanned the Yankee second baseman three times already. This, however, would surely be his last batter of the night. Pedro whiffed Soriano and the Sox dodged the first dangerous situation since the first inning. David Ortiz homered in the top of the eighth to give Boston a three run lead, which may have kept Pedro in the game. Martinez came out for the eighth which didn’t seem like a terrible move. Let him pitch until he allows a baserunner, I thought. Embree and Timlin will be ready if that happens. After getting Johnson to pop out, Jeter hit a shot to deep right for a double. No sign of Grady. This isn’t good. Bernie Williams follows that up with a hard single driving in Jeter. If giving up a hard hit ball to Bernie Williams isn’t a sign that a pitcher is done, I don’t know what is. Here comes Grady to get Pedro one batter too late. But, Grady leaves the mound without Pedro. Hideki Matsui, a lefthanded batter who had the key hit against Pedro in Game Three is coming up to the plate. Pedro was running out of gas an inning ago. Matsui is the tying run and the right field fence is about 310 feet away. Alan Embree is ready. This can’t be happening. Matsui smashes a ball to right field for a double. Still no Grady. Did he fall asleep in the dugout? Up steps Jorge Posada. Pedro actually finds the strength to throw some decent pitches to Posada but then comes the all-to-familiar lucky Yankee hit. This time it is a weak pop-up to center that lands between three fielders. It wouldn’t be the postseason without the Yankees getting a lucky break … or five. Lucky or not, it doesn’t excuse Grady Little. Embree finally arrives, followed by Timlin, and the Sox survive the inning tied. Unfortunately, Mariano Rivera is coming into the game and he’ll probably be there for three innings. The Sox nearly won the game twice against Rivera. First in the ninth inning when Todd Walker’s flare to right nearly got over Soriano to drive in Damian Jackson with the go-ahead run. The Sox nearly took a one-run lead again in the tenth inning when David Ortiz missed a homer to leftfield by about ten feet. After Rivera pitched his third inning in the eleventh, there was a glimmer of hope. He'd be leaving the game and the Sox had the top of the order coming up in the twelfth innning. If only they can survive the bottom of the eleventh they will be in decent shape, I thought. Aaron Boone ended those hopes quickly. Having suffered with this team for 25 years, I never felt confident that the Red Sox would win the game even when the score was 4-0. My first bad feeling came in the fourth inning when the Sox, already ahead 4-0, had runners on first and third and no outs. A fifth run might take the Yankees out of it completely, but Varitek whiffed and Damon hit into a double play (I don’t even want to think about how rare that is). That one run floated out there like a missed extra point in football. Somehow I knew it would cost us the game. I thought about the past and wondered how big the lead would have to be for me to really be confident that the Sox were going to win. I decided that number was 12. Things looked much better when Pedro barely survived the seventh inning and David Ortiz added insurance in the eighth. During the season, a three run lead with this bullpen was tenuous. But the way that Embree, Timlin and Williamson had pitched in the playoffs, three runs seemed like a lock. They could even go to Derek Lowe. The Red Sox failed to win the American League East because of their bullpen. The irony is that they lost this game because they did not utilize the bullpen. Mike Timlin was in a zone for two weeks. He had been throwing like Orel Hershiser circa 1988, yet somehow Grady didn’t trust him to start the eighth inning. I think that the next time the Sox find themselves in a winner-take-all playoff game, they should purposely let the other team take the lead. The Sox led the Reds 3-0 in Game Seven of the 1975 Series. They led the Yankees 2-0 in the 1978 one game AL East playoff. They even took a 3-0 lead against the Mets in Game Seven in 1986. I can’t possibly see how Grady Little keeps his job. His moves all season were questionable. His moves in the Oakland series were dreadful. His moves in the eighth inning of Game Seven border on “time for an investigation” territory. Was some New York mobster holding Grady’s family hostage? I don’t know how else to explain it. The fans will never forgive him. I wonder how the players feel? I have to believe that they too feel that Grady cost them a trip to the Series. Grady did the biggest disservice to Pedro Martinez by not taking him out of the game. Pedro had beaten New York. The moronic Mayor of New York City criticized Pedro publicly for defending himself against Don Zimmer as if Zimmer has nothing to do with it. Yankee fans ripped Pedro and waved “Kill Pedro” signs at Yankee Stadium. Apparent mind-reader Joe Torre jumped all over Pedro, saying that he was sure that Pedro threw at Karim Garcia’s head on Saturday. The Yankee hypocrites apparently forgot about or decided to ignore the proclivities of a certain Mr. Clemens. I could almost hear Mike Piazza saying “Are you kidding me?” Pedro could have beaten these jackals. The Yankees certainly didn’t beat him. He whipped them for seven innings. Pedro took the high road and defended Grady for not removing him from the game. Pedro might be the only one who does. It seems silly to talk about curses but every time this happens, it makes me wonder. It’s not just the big ones like 1978, 1986 and 2003. There’s something bizarre in nearly every Sox postseason appearance.
Losing any series to the Yankees is agony, but this one was particularly painful because the Florida Marlins were waiting on the other side. The Marlins are a good ballclub, but they are not Bob Gibson and the 1967 Cardinals, the 1975 Big Red Machine or the 108-win 1986 Mets. Those were the Red Sox last three World Series opponents. They are also arguably the three toughest National League Champions of the past 40 years. A little extra anxiety about the Red Sox came over me when the Cubs lost the three run lead in Game Six of the NLCS. After Monday’s Sox victory, a piece of me felt that there might be some destiny that was about to bring the Cubs and Sox together for an epic battle to end at least one Curse. Instead, the Cubs and Red Sox both lost in excruciating and bizarre fashion. I guess that is the real destiny. The similarities are eerie: both teams had three runs leads in the eighth inning with a chance to win the pennant; both teams were five outs away with no one on base; and both teams had their aces on the mound (though at least one ace’s tank was on “E”). But of course, both teams lost. Everyone outside of the baseball fans in New York and Florida (in other words, baseball fans in New York) wanted to see a Cubs-Red Sox World Series. Instead, we will be treated to the New York Monees against the Florida Fanless Fish. Absolutely sickening. I would rather bathe my eyes in lemon juice than watch this year’s World Series. Red Sox fans will hear plenty of grief from Yankee supporters. Don’t listen to any of it. The Yankees have succeeded in recent years for one reason: a gargantuan payroll. If anyone thinks for one minute that the Yankees would even be in playoffs without their escalating payroll, they are either dumb or in a state of complete denial. I will be the first to admit that the Yankees earned their 1998 Championship. They would have won the Series that season with or without George’s limitless funding. Since then, their success has been all about the benjamins. The Yankee payroll now stands at $180 million. The Sox spent about $105 million. Oakland, a team that would have beaten both the Red Sox and Yankees with a healthy Mark Mulder, spent only $50 million in 2003. The Yankee gluttony knows no bounds and I am disgusted with Major League Baseball for not implementing a salary cap when they had the chance. The luxury tax only helps the Yankees. The luxury tax paid by the Yankees should help the very small market teams to be a little more competitive but the second tier teams (Boston, the Mets, LA, Atlanta, Arizona) will fall even further behind the Yankees because those teams cannot afford to pay the luxury tax. For those clubs, there is a salary cap. I think some fans may abandon baseball permanently if the Yankees sign Vladimir Guerrero this winter. Pedro showed in Game Seven why he is not a $20 million per year pitcher. He is a seven inning, 100-pitch starter. Each season he spends a little more time on the disabled list, loses a mile per hour on his fastball and loses his effectiveness a little bit earlier in each game. He’s still a great pitcher but the deterioration is there, albeit at a slow rate. This winter’s contract negotiations will be interesting. Theo Epstein absolutely cannot offer Pedro a guaranteed extension longer than two or three years. I cannot imagine that Pedro will still be an effective starter by 2007. I’ve been wondering if Martinez may eventually become a closer. No matter how good he is, you can’t keep someone in the rotation that tires after 80 pitches. I’m guessing that is where we are headed with Pedro within a couple of years. I was in Fort Myers on February 28th when the Sox played their second exhibition game. Little (no pun intended) did I know how it would all end nearly seven months later. Right now I feel like I never want to see another baseball game as long as I live. But, I have felt this way before and somehow the winter eases the pain. I’m sure I’ll be back in 2004, cautiously optimistic but prepared for yet another emotional beating. That is what being a Boston Red Sox fan is all about. October 13, 2003 THE 2003 ALCS IDIOT LIST 10Ed “Pony Tail Guy” Hillel In case you don’t know who I’m talking about, Ed Hillel was the man who was interviewed by FOX in the Yankee Stadium bleachers on Wednesday claiming that Todd Walker’s homerun off the foul pole (or some guy’s hand, depending on who you ask) was going to be a foul ball. I hate to call Ed (the possible brother of Len Tukwilla, driftwood sculptor) an idiot because he provided me with so much amusement in Game One, but the fact that he made a fool of himself on national television gets him the #10 spot on this list. I’m sure Ed doesn’t mind since he was a celebrity for a day on Thursday. Hope to see you at Game Six, buddy. 9 George Steinbrenner During the ALCS I learned that Steinbrenner wanted to go after David Ortiz during the off-season last winter. Steinbrenner already had former MVP Jason Giambi and Nick Johnson, but apparently wanted Ortiz (a 20 HR, 75 RBI guy in 2002) as well. I guess he wanted to use Ortiz as a pinch hitter. The Yankee gluttony knows no bounds. As everyone outside of New York knows, their success is all about the benjamins. 8 The FOX Broadcast Team Tim McCarver is a Yankee shill. The coverage from FOX is sickeningly anti-Boston and pro-New York. The FOX team turned every situation into the fault of the Red Sox and jumped to conclusions about Zimmer and the Fenway groundskeeper. It’s sad that of the three people in the booth, the most unbiased is the guy whose brother plays for the Yankees. Let’s add to that idiocy the endless shots of Ben and J-Lo during Game 3. Simply painful. 7 Yankees President Randy Levine Levine criticized the Red Sox for their lack of security at Fenway Park and called the atmosphere “lawless.” This is the most classic case of the pot calling the kettle black that I have ever heard. Earth to Randy, your team plays in Yankee Stadium, a place that is legendary for poor fan behavior. Yankee fans are chastised at Fenway Park, but opposing fans are lucky to get out of Yankee Stadium with their lives. What’s next? Will Levine start criticizing the Sox for their high payroll? 6 Don Zimmer I cannot imagine what was going through Don Zimmer’s mind when he charged Pedro on Saturday. He looked like a crazed rhino that had escaped from the zoo. I have to say that Zimmer showed some guts (though no brains) when he went after Martinez. Zimmer also won some points when he apologized during a press conference. I wish some of the other morons involved in Saturday’s events would step up to the plate and take some responsibility for their misdeeds. Now if only Zimmer would apologize for blowing a 14 ½ game lead in 1978. 5 Jeff Nelson We still don’t know who threw the first punch in the skirmish between Jeff Nelson and now famous Fenway groundskeeper Paul Williams, but the fact that Nelson got into it in the first place is incredible. The Yankees are trying to win a series and Nellie is more concerned with a guy waving a towel and cheering for his team in his own ballpark. If Williams was a problem, Nelson could have easily alerted security. Initial reports are that Nelson kicked Williams. It is hard to believe that a grown man would use his feet in a fight, but baseball players are notorious wimps so who knows. 4 Manny Ramirez I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve been disgusted with Manny Ramirez over the past six weeks. From his ESPN interview where he proclaimed his desire to play for the Yankees, the sore throat that kept him from pinch hitting in the ninth inning of a crucial game, the showboating in the Oakland series (especially his 8th inning single in Game 4 where he seemed to care very little about what was going on in front of him despite the fact that he was the go-ahead run). Add to that his inane overreaction to Clemens high (and nowhere near inside) pitch on Saturday that caused the benches to clear. This is not the first time that Manny has shouted at a pitcher on a ball that wasn’t even close to him. Sox fans would be delighted if Ramirez showed half as much intensity running to first base as he did threatening Roger Clemens. 3 Pedro Martinez I’ve always said that there is a lot to like about Pedro on the mound and very little to like about Pedro off the mound. Pedro is an arrogant primadonna, a drama queen and one who is extremely preoccupied with his contract. He has been labeled as a headhunter in the past. The “head” part, I believe, has been unfair, but he’s definitely a hunter. He has drilled many a batter in the back in retaliation even when it was doubtful that the opposing pitcher hit the Sox batter on purpose. Pedro throws hard and he throws inside. That means that a lot of batters will be hit and players in this era whine whenever a pitch comes within two feet of them so thus the “headhunter” reputation. Many of those who defended Pedro on the same grounds will have a hard time making that argument in the future. Pedro deserves criticism for the pitch that almost hit Garcia (even Garcia knew it didn’t hit him). Was Pedro trying to hit Garcia? Probably. Was he trying to throw at his head? Probably not. Did he put his own frustration ahead of the team? Absolutely. My real disgust with Pedro occurred when he pointed to his head while screaming into the Yankees dugout. That act was disgraceful and was surely going to cause hysteria at some point. Martinez could have handled the Zimmer fiasco better as well, but it is very difficult to pin that one on Pedro (as most New Yorkers have done). For all Pedro knew, Zimmer could have been going after his pitching arm. Pedro had little time to react and his move on Zimmer, though more forceful than necessary, was defensive. 2 Karim Garcia During Game Four, FOX’s cellphone poll asked who was most to blame for Saturday’s events: Pedro, Manny, Zimmer or Clemens. As we all knew, Pedro received the most votes by a landslide (it was a stupid question). The funny part is that the biggest culprit was not even one of the choices. Karim Garcia, more than anyone, caused tensions to escalate on Saturday. Garcia had every right to bark at Pedro for throwing near his head. That is expected. The real problem occurred when Garcia ran past second base before sliding on a double play in an attempt to take out Todd Walker’s knees. If you tell me that this was a clean play, I think your brain is leaking. An argument ensued as the fat little pig oinked his way back to the dugout. Had Garcia’s dirty play on Walker not occurred tensions may have remained in check. At some point, a Sox batter would have received a retaliatory fastball in the back and that may have been the end of it. Garcia followed this up with a sprint to the bullpen to whack away at a Fenway groundskeeper who was already subdued by security. Garcia surely had no idea how it all started, but decided to go in swinging. I’m not sure about Nelson, but I hope Garcia is charged. 1 New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg On Sunday, Bloomberg claimed that Pedro Martinez should have been arrested for pushing a hard-charging Don Zimmer to the ground during the 4th inning melee. Bloomberg stated that “You just cannot assault people, even if it's on a baseball field.” Bloomberg apparently isn’t concerned with the fact that Zimmer was the aggressor and attempted to punch Pedro. I guess if I’m ever in New York City and an elderly man tries to punch me, I’m supposed to stand there and let him do it. Bloomberg makes it sound like Zim was walking along and minding his own business when Pedro jumped out from behind some bushes and attacked him. Though Zimmer and the players mentioned above cannot be excused for their actions, at least those things happened in the heat of battle. Bloomberg had a day to think about his words and still went on record with his insane comments. And people say that Arnold Schwarzenegger isn’t fit for politics. Surprisingly not on the list:
October 7, 2003
The Red Sox managed to win this series in spite of Grady Little. First, he put Damian Jackson in as a defensive replacement for Todd Walker in the 6th inning. THE SIXTH INNING! I don’t think I have ever seen a manager take a player out for defensive purposes in the sixth inning. Plus, it’s not like Damian Jackson is Roberto Alomar. He has more range than Walker, but scares me even more. This move set the stage for Damon’s injury. Not that I can directly blame Grady Little for a freak injury, but in a weird way his bad managing caused it. After making the right moves in the 8th inning, Little made the ultimate boneheaded move by removing Timlin from the game after pitching to only one batter in the 8th. Williamson has been pitching very well, but threw 28 pitches on Sunday and has a propensity for walking batters. Most of the offensive damage done by Oakland in the series was the result of walks. Timlin walks a batter about once every nine innings and had the fresher arm yet Grady took him out. It made no sense. In the ninth, Oakland had runners at second and third and one out with sinkerballer Derek Lowe on the mound. Clearly, the right move was to walk the bases loaded. The advantages: (1) With a force out at home plate the infield can play close to normal depth (2) It sets up the double play on a hard hit ground ball and (3) It sets up a play at home on a slow ground ball. The disadvantage: a walk will tie the game. The choice is clear, yet Grady pulled the infield in and pitched to the next batter even though a weak grounder through the drawn-in infield would have won the series for Oakland. Thankfully, Derek Lowe saved Grady’s tail with some of the nastiest pitches I have ever seen. I know he was the key reason why the Sox won the game last night but I really hope that Manny Ramirez is not in a Red Sox uniform next season. After his ground ball single in the 8th inning of Game 4 (his third hit in four games), Manny trotted to first base, pointing to his dugout, not paying any attention to what was going on in front of him despite the fact that he was the go-ahead run. Luckily, it all worked out thanks to David Ortiz. Last night, Manny obnoxiously stood at home plate admiring his three-run homer. It should be mentioned that the ball did not clear the wall by that much. Had it hit the wall, Manny would have had a 360-foot single. Throughout the series Manny has been all smiles in the dugout after each failure at the plate. This coming from the same guy that couldn’t pinch hit because of a sore throat and declared that it was his dream to play for the Yankees. Part of the fault goes to Red Sox upper management, Grady Little and the Red Sox veterans for not putting a stop to Ramirez’s antics. The Hypocrite of the Year Award goes to Miguel Tejada. The A’s shortstop was reportedly furious because of a gesture made by Derek Lowe after the final out in Game 5. Tejada claimed that the gesture was obscene and mentioned that the teams had families in the stands. Does Tejada not realize that he repeatedly screamed obscenities from the batter’s box and the dugout following his numerous strikeouts during the series? Lowe deserves criticism for that gesture, but it certainly shouldn’t come from Tejada. I also could not believe the comments made by A’s General Manager Billy Beane following the Game 5 loss. Beane told reporters that the A’s wouldn’t have lost the series if they had another $50 million to spend on payroll (the Sox payroll is $50 million higher than Oakland’s). I wholeheartedly agree with Beane. If payrolls were even close to balanced, Oakland would probably have two or three pennants over the past four years and New York would have one pennant in the past ten years, rather than five. Still, Beane is sending the wrong message to his team by making these comments. The A’s made several silly mistakes in Game 3. They had every chance to win and didn’t. The GM should not allow his team to fall back on excuses even if they are legitimate. It is also ironic that Beane would complain about payroll disparity since he had an opportunity to take the Red Sox job last winter. I wonder if Beane likes running the A’s because he will always be able to blame a low payroll when his team loses. If he had taken the Sox job, he would have opened himself up to criticism – and plenty of it. In the strange world of the Major League Baseball playoffs, nothing is stranger than the success of the Red Sox bullpen over the past four games. Between Game 2 and Game 5, the Sox bullpen pitched 11 2/3 innings, gave up 4 hits, 3 walks (all in the ninth inning of Game 5) and 0 runs. Mike Timlin retired all 13 batters he faced in the series. On the other hand, most of that success came from starters (Wake and Lowe), Timlin, Embree and Williamson. The Sox will need contributions from more than three members of the pen to beat the Yankees. This season has been strangely reminiscent of 1999. That year, the Yankees clinched the American League East in the final week of the season. The Red Sox found themselves down two games to none to Cleveland in the ALDS before surging back to win in five. In 1999, Pedro won Game 5 of the ALDS on the road, though he came out of the bullpen to do it that time. Ironically, the 1999 Sox came back in round one because of their bats while the 2003 offensively-potent Sox came back because of pitching. The 1999 American League Championship Series also began in New York and featured a Pedro-Clemens matchup in Game 3 at Fenway. The Yanks won that series in five thanks to the most amazing run of luck I have even seen in Games 1 and 2 and horrendous defense by the Sox in Games 4 and 5. Let’s hope history does not repeat itself in that respect. Two players in this year’s playoffs that Theo Epstein should be talking to over the winter are A’s closer Keith Foulke and Marlins second baseman Luis Castillo. Both are free agents after this season. Yes, Foulke blew the series save on Sunday, but to be fair the three hits he surrendered were all against MVP candidates. Foulke saved 43 of 48 games this year and had an ERA of 2.08. He has very good control (2 BB per 9 innings) and can pitch more than one inning. Castillo is a very good fielder and can run “wicked” fast. For some reason, he was caught stealing 19 of 40 times this season after stealing 48 in 63 tries in 2002. He batted .314 in 2003 and would be great in the Sox #2 spot in the lineup. The Sox are often criticized for losing in the World Series, but to be fair they have lost each of their last four World Series’ in seven games and each time they played a great team. In 1946, they played a Cardinals team that was 98-58 (the equivalent of a 102 win season in a 162-game schedule). In 1967, the Sox lost to a 101-60 Cardinals team that won three times in the Series with the unhittable Bob Gibson. In 1975, it was the 108-54 Cincinnati Big Red Machine. The 1986 Mets also won 108 games. Many would argue that the ’67 Cards with Gibson, the ’75 Reds and the ’86 Mets are three best National League Champs of the past 40 years. Though the Marlins and Cubs are good baseball teams, the Sox will not be forced to play one of history’s great teams in the Series should they beat the Yankees. PLAYOFF RANKINGS The following are my rankings of the eight Major League Baseball playoff teams in five distinct categories - hitting, starting rotation, bullpen, defense and intangibles. Hitting (MLB runs scored rank in parentheses)
Starting Rotation (starter's ERA in parentheses)
Bullpen (bullpen ERA in parentheses)
Defense (fielding percentage rank in parentheses)
Intangibles
The Totals (like in golf, the lower scores are the best) 1. New York: 17 2. Chicago: 21 3. Atlanta: 22 3. Florida: 22 3. Oakland: 22 3. Minnesota: 22 7. San Francisco: 24 8. Boston: 30As the numbers indicate, this is one of the most evenly-balanced playoffs in recent memory. The Yankees probably deserve the #1 spot given that they are the only team among the eight that has won a World Series in the past five years. The Cubs came in second mainly because of their great starting rotation. The Red Sox are a distant eighth and probably should be because pitching and defense wins championships and the other teams have a better combination of both. It is hard to slug your way through three rounds against tough competition. On the plus side, the Sox have the starting pitcher who is most capable of dominating the postseason. Game One of the best-of-five Division Series is always crucial, but this year that is especially true. The Red Sox will be in an almost impossible situation if Pedro loses Game One in Oakland. The Twins have lost 13 in a row to the Yankees and a 14th loss in Game One may irreparably damage their confidence. The young Marlins and Cubs will have a difficult time beating the Giants/Braves three times in four games so they could both use a win in Game One. If they can, it will be the Giants and Braves that will feel the most pressure going into Game Two. I truly believe that all eight of these teams are very capable of winning the World Series (though my mind cannot grasp a Red Sox championship). By the same token, all of these teams have weaknesses and could very well be swept in the first round. I'll go out on a limb and predict that the A's will defeat the Marlins in the World Series in six games. We'll call it Small Market Madness. August 28, 2003 There is a point in every baseball season where, as Red Sox fans, we are forced to come to the realization that “it is not our year.” The team’s misfortune, whether it be of their own doing of not, simply becomes too much to overcome. Sometimes the reality sets in before the All Star break. Usually it happens in late August or September. It can even happen in the tenth inning of Game Six of the World Series. For me, the reality set in last Tuesday after the Red Sox bullpen blew a late inning, two-run lead to the A’s for the second night in a row in the most important series of the year. On Monday, the Sox were cruising behind Derek Lowe’s best start of the year. But Lowe developed a blister that forced him to leave the game after six innings and only 78 pitches. Sauerbeck and Williamson were pressed into action early and couldn’t hold the lead. The A’s won the game 3-2 despite getting only three hits the whole night. On Tuesday, the Sox banged out 17 hits (and had 24 total baserunners), but lost 8-6 when Byung-Hyun Kim couldn’t hold a two-run eighth inning lead. Kim had been brilliant in the closer’s role since joining the Sox, but his magic disappeared when the Sox needed it most. The Sox gave up three hits on Monday - and lost. They had 17 hits on Tuesday – and lost. Only the Sox are capable of “accomplishing” something like that. Meanwhile, the Yankees (or as I like to call them the Luckees) continue to win by accident. On Saturday, the Yankees won because of a baserunning blunder by the Orioles in the ninth inning as Jack Cust stumbled a few feet away from an uncovered home plate (the would-be tying run). On Tuesday, the Royals bailed out a suddenly ultra-hittable Mariano Rivera in the ninth inning when Carlos Beltran wasn’t paying attention to the runner in front of him and was caught scrambling back to second base. The Yankees gave up 17 hits and won on the same night that the Red Sox had 17 hits and lost. Hollywood couldn’t dream up this stuff. I don’t have the supporting data, but I would be very surprised if the Sox have won two games because of ninth inning opponent baserunning mistakes in the last 85 years. It happened to the Yankees twice in four days. Though exciting and memorable, this season has also been extremely frustrating for Red Sox fans. The two games against Oakland were just the tip of the iceberg. There was the game against Florida where the Sox bullpen blew a seven-run lead in the eighth inning; the game against Philadelphia where the Sox bullpen managed to blow saves three times in the same game in an extra-inning loss; the game against New York where Soriano’s fingertip kept a Sox hit from reaching the outfield and bringing in the go-ahead run in the ninth. I could go on and on. In spite of all this anquish, the Sox are actually in good shape to make the playoffs. They are tied with Seattle in the Wild Card race (one game behind Oakland) and the Yankees are just four games ahead of the Sox with six games remaining between the two teams. For this reason, I will put aside my sense of impending doom and look at the American League race analytically. The Schedule: The Yankees have a slightly easier remaining schedule than the Red Sox mainly because of their three remaining games with the hopeless Tigers. New York also has four games left with Toronto, who the Sox will not play again. Meanwhile, the Red Sox have one game with the Phillies, three with Cleveland and will play one additional game against the White Sox (Boston plays them five more times, New York only four). The Mariners and A’s have schedules similar in difficulty to the Red Sox. Like the Sox and Yankees, they play each other six times. They each play Anaheim and Texas a total of 13 times and Baltimore and Tampa another ten times. The toughest part of Boston’s schedule is the next nine games as they play the Yankees six times, the White Sox twice and the Phillies once. At the same time, the M’s and A’s play Batimore and Tampa Bay. The next week and a half will be an opportunity for the West Coast teams to move ahead in the race. If they cannot, the advantage shifts back to the Red Sox. The Yankees: You won’t hear it on television or read about it on the radio, but the Yankees are simply not that good. They have the best top four pitchers in the American League, but two of those guys are 40 years old and one of them is fighting a bad back. Fifth starter Jeff Weaver has been bashed around all season and has now been replaced by Jose Contreras. The Yankee bullpen has been nearly as bad as Boston’s for most of the season. New York’s one giant advantage had been the closer spot but Mariano Rivera has been blowing saves on a regular basis and when he’s isn’t blowing saves, it’s because opponents are bailing him out with baserunning faux pas. New York’s lineup pales in comparison to Boston’s. The Sox team average is 24 points higher (.292 vs .268) and the Sox have scored 90 more runs than the so-called Bronx Bombers. The Sox even have a better fielding team than the Yanks (84 errors vs 91). Unfortunately, New York has the biggest advantage of all: a four game lead. The Sox will probably need to win at least 4 of 6 head-to-head with New York to have a chance to erase that margin. Winning the American League East is crucial even if the team that finishes second manages to grab the Wild Card because in that case the AL East winner would get the pleasure of home field against the winner of the American League Central (aka Comedy Central) while the Wild Card team would play the AL West winner (Seattle or Oakland) without home field advantage. The Athletics: It is hard to imagine that a team with such a scant payroll can keep winning 95 games per year. The Oakland organization has been so much better than New York’s the past five years that it’s scary. Unfortunately for A’s fans (all 15 of them), the payroll discrepancies have been too much to overcome. It appeared that this year might be different before Mark “Agent” Mulder went down with a stress fracture that could end his season. This is great news for the Sox, but you can’t help but feel bad for the A’s who have lost in the first round of the playoffs three years in a row. The Mariners: On paper, the Mariners appear to be the best all around team in the American League. Their hitting isn’t on par with the Red Sox, but it is as good as New York’s and significantly better than Oakland’s. Ichiro, Boone and Martinez are all hitters that no one wants to face with the game on the line and Olerud and Cameron can hurt you as well. Seattle’s starting rotation is not quite on the level with New York or Oakland, but if Freddy Garcia continues to pitch to his potential they aren’t far behind. With a healthy Kazuhiro Sasaki, the Seattle bullpen is easily the best among the four contenders, even with the ludicrous Nelson for Benitez trade. Seattle’s defense is also head and shoulders above the other contenders. It amazes me that with all their talent the Mariners have lost more than half of their games in the second half and have let the lead in the American League West slip away. Clearly, the Red Sox made a statement by winning 5 of 7 in their recent battles with the M’s. Observations from Seattle: I had the pleasure of visiting Seattle for the first time two weekends ago when the Red Sox were in town. Seattle is a great city and Safeco Field is the best new stadium I’ve been to. I was sitting 12 rows behind home plate for Pedro’s start on Saturday. It wasn’t vintage Pedro, but it was a great performance nonetheless. I was thoroughly impressed with the Seattle crowd as well. There wasn’t an empty seat in the house and the crowd was truly into the game. They seem to be very supportive of the team despite the organization’s marginal interest in winning (they cannot be excused for letting Randy Johnson, Ken Griffey Jr and Alex Rodriguez leave). I arrived at the game in time to see Red Sox batting practice and was amazed by the number of people in the ballpark a full 90 minutes before game time. I’d venture to say that there were more people in the stands at Safeco an hour before game time than there normally are at Dodger Stadium in the second inning. It is hard to believe that Seattle nearly lost its team to another city less than a decade ago. I have added Seattle to my review of ballparks that I have visited. Please click HERE to see my updated list. Speaking of ballparks, what is the deal with guys who take off their shirts at the ballgame? Note to knuckleheads: the ballpark is not the beach. Watching a baseball game is not shirts against skins basketball, nor is it a rap video. You are not Marky Mark and your friends are clearly not the Funky Bunch. Safeco Field is not your living room. I realize that there are chairs and televisions, but you idiots must realize that you are not in your house. At one point I may have made an exception for guys that paint their chests with large letters that combine to form a word (for example, five shirtless guys spelling out N-O-M-A-R) but even that was old and tired twenty years ago. Please do us all a favor and put your shirts back on. Third Quarter Grades: This is how I would grade the Sox regulars since the All Star break:
May 16, 2003
The Red Sox have now completed one quarter of the season and although there have been a few heartbreaking
losses and a couple of ominous signs, the Sox are in a decent position through 40 games. Boston's 26-14
record puts them only one game behind the Yankees, who looked unbeatable over the first two weeks of the
season. The Sox are on pace for 105 wins by season's end, though this mark should be taken with a grain
of salt because they have not yet played any games against the league's best three teams - New York,
Seattle and Oakland. Derek Lowe and the bullpen are a concern, but the offense has been potent despite
the fact that Johnny Damon, Nomar Garciaparra and Manny Ramirez have not hit to their capabilities as of
yet. Here is a breakdown of the good news and concerns through 40 games:
The Good News:
Casey Fossum and Shea HillenbrandTheo Epstein gained my respect early in his tenure by resisting the temptation to trade Fossum and Hillenbrand. During my 25 years as a Red Sox fan, the philosophy of Sox Upper Management has always been to trade away young talent for aging veterans that can provide immediate help. Though some of these moves have helped the Sox in the short run, the long term impact on the Boston farm system has been disastrous. Most new General Managers have the tendency to look for instant gratification by way of proven veterans. The pressure is on to win right away, but Epstein has kept his cool and now both Fossum and Hillenbrand are paying large dividends. Hillenbrand has 30 RBI's and is batting .341 with runners in scoring position. He is also improving defensively. Shea has committed just two errors this season (he booted 23 last year). Casey Fossum is 4-1 and the Red Sox have won 7 of the 8 times he has taken the mound in 2003.
Patience at the PlateThough I don't have opponent pitch statistics, it appears that the Sox have been a more patient team at the plate this season. Shea Hillenbrand is learning to be more selective, Nomar has been nearly impossible to strike out and Kevin Millar, needless to say, is a monumental improvement over the frustrating Jose Offerman. Bill Mueller has been a pleasure to watch as has often battled opposing hurlers for ten or more pitches, many times ending up with a base-hit. The increased discipline is helping the Red Sox "manufacture" more runs than they did last season.
Winning Close GamesFor as long as I can remember, the Red Sox have been the foremost authority on losing one-run games. At one point last season, the Red Sox were 5-21 in one-run contests. By season's end, they were 13-23 in one-run affairs yet still managed to win 93 games. Had they been .500 in those games, they would have won 98 games and taken the Wild Card instead of Anaheim and the Monkey never would have rallied. Despite a shaky bullpen, the Sox are 10-3 in one-run contests this year, which is one of the main reasons why they are just one game behind New York.
The Runnin' Red SoxI never thought I would see the day that the Red Sox would rank third in the American League in stolen bases. In fact, to see the Sox anywhere but last in the league in steals is a shock. Johnny Damon continues to steal at a solid pace and Damian Jackson has given the Red Sox their first legitimate pinch-running stolen base threat in ages. Even Manny has a stolen base to his credit.
The Double FactoryThe Sox haven't shown the kind of homerun power that the Yankees and Rangers possess, but they have been doubling opposing pitchers to death this season. Mueller and Hillenbrand each have 15 doubles and Damon, Garciaparra and Ramirez are all in double-figures in two-baggers as well. In most cases, two doubles in a game will get you more runs that one homer. The Concerns:
Derek LoweI don't think anyone expected Derek Lowe to repeat his near Cy Young performance of last season, but we also didn't expect the big righthander to struggle as much as he has in the early going. Strangely, Lowe has been spectacular at Fenway (2-0 with an 0.95 ERA) but can't get anyone out on the road (1-3, 11.57 ERA). At least part of the reason for Lowe's failures on the road has been that the sinker ball specialist has pitched three times on artificial turf. Still, there is no excuse for an 11.57 ERA away from home. Lowe was great in 2000 and 2002, but had some problems in 2001. Let's hope that this isn't some kind of odd-numbered year curse.
The BullpenAfter a horrendous start, the Sox bullpen has been very effective the past couple of weeks. The addition of veteran Robert Person should help stabilize the pen. Brandon Lyon has been excellent as the closer, but I'm not sure that the Red Sox will feel comfortable with a 23-year-old who has only pitched 144 career innings closing games in September and October. There is also good news in the fact that Alan Embree seems to be regaining his velocity. The Sox cannot win without a bona fide lefty out of the bullpen and Embree is the only option right now.
First BaseDavid Ortiz and Jason Giambi have failed to live up to even Brian Daubach expectations at first base. The Red Sox offense isn't in bad shape but first base is a power position and you hate to stick with a combo that is batting in the low .200's with five homers. David Ortiz, who has hit a combined 38 homeruns in 715 at bats over the past two seasons has only one round-tripper this year. When the season started, I wondered if the Royals might part with 29-year-old Mike Sweeney by midseason, figuring that they would be about 50 games out of first place by then. Now that the Royals appear to be a contender, acquiring Sweeney is very unlikely. The Notes:
The Trot Nixon EnigmaFor years, Sox fans have been waiting for Trot Nixon to have the breakout season that everyone has been expecting since he was drafted 7th overall by the Sox in 1993. In 2001 and 2002, Trot bulked up his production, averaging 26 homers and 91 RBIs. Unfortunately, his average fell to .256 last season after a .239 second half. Of course, he drove in 57 runs after the All Star Game. This year, Trot has rattled off a .321 average, but has only 3 homers and 11 extra base hits. It always seems like you get batting average or power from Trot, never both at the same time. Moreover, Trot continues to struggle against lefthanders as he is batting only .160 in limited at bats against southpaws. Nixon is a .212 career hitter against lefthanders.
Green Monster SeatsI love the Green Monster seats. Unlike the hideous coke bottles, the Monster seats seem to fit in well with the character of the ballpark. If the team can earn some extra money in the process, that's even better. It amuses me that so many observers complained about the seats. I can appreciate that people are interested in maintaining the historical character of the park, but mourning the passing of a giant net is just plain silly.
The EckI love Dennis Eckersley's commentary on the NESN Red Sox postgame show, but someone needs to convince the Eck to get a new look. Hey Dennis, The Eck from 1978 called and he wants his hairstyle back.
The YankeesFor the other top teams in the American League, finishing ahead of the Yankees in the regular season will be a tall order mainly because of New York's 4th and 5th starters. The top three starters for each of the potential American League playoff teams can stand toe to toe with the Yankees, but with starters 4/5 the Yankees have a distinct advantage. The Yankees can follow Mussina, Clemens and Petitte with David Wells and Jeff Weaver. The other teams counter with John Burkett and Casey Fossum (Red Sox), Ryan Franklin and Gil Meche (Mariners), John Halama and Ted Lilly (A's), John Lackey and Aaron Sele (Angels) and Kenny Rogers and Kyle Lohse (Twins). The good news is that in postseason play the rotations can shrink to three starters and New York's advantage disappears. The rest of the league is also happy to see that Jeff Weaver is still struggling. Nothing personal, Jeff.
Crazy Carl EverettCan we please stop with the "Carl Everett is misunderstood / Carl Everett is a great guy" nonsense. We heard this when Carl was with the Mets, with Houston and with Boston. There is a reason why a guy with talents as great as Everett continues to be traded for players of lesser value. Texas may be happy now, but it is only a matter of time before Carl once again turns into baseball's version of the Incredible Hulk.
The Luxury TaxIt is far too early to make judgements about the impact of the new luxury tax / increased revenue sharing system on major league baseball, but here is what I expect:
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