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2005 Red Sox Notes (First Half) July 10, 2005 The Sox look very much like a team who needs a break. The Sox dropped three of four in Baltimore over the weekend and have now lost 8 of 13 as they head into the three day summer vacation period (at least for those not invited to the All Star Game). The Sox pitching has a been problem of late, but it was the offense that killed the Sox in Baltimore. Boston scored just a single run in each of their three losses. The Sox appear to be a team in disarray especially with Keith Foulke heading to the disabled list and Curt Schilling not strong enough to return to the rotation. The good news is that, despite the injuries and bullpen woes, the Sox have a two game lead in the East. Milestone: Manny Ramirez hit his 20th career grand slam in Texas this week. Manny now trails only Lou Gehrig for the most grand slams in Major League History. The Iron Horse hit 23 in his career. The only bright spot in Sunday's game was that Johnny Damon extended his hitting streak to 25 games with a ninth inning bunt single. Player of the Week: David Ortiz, who batted .360 this week (9 for 25) and was on base 15 of 31 times. He hit two homers and drove in seven runs (he was also robbed of a three-run homer). Papi also stole his first base in three years (a VERY ill-advised attempt). July 3, 2005 Sunday was a frustrating day to end a frustrating week for the Boston Red Sox. The Sox squandered repeated opportunities to put up crooked numbers against Roy Halladay and the Jays bullpen. In the first inning, the Sox scored once, then failed to score again despite having runners on first and third with no outs and Ramirez and Nixon coming up. In the fifth, they had men on first and second with no outs and did not score. In the sixth, the Sox had the bases loaded with no outs and failed to score. In the ninth, Boston scored one run then loaded the bases with one out, but did not score another run and lost 5-2. The Red Sox, who have won seven straight on the road, lost four of six at Fenway this week. They are 3-8 against the Blue Jays this season. The Red Sox have single-handedly kept the Jays in contention in the AL East. The Red Sox had a very nice comeback from a 4-0 deficit on Saturday night to win 6-4. David Wells was tossed out of the game by the second base umpire for arguing with the home plate umpire. It was ridiculous. The home plate umpire had every right to toss out Wells, who was complaining about balls and strikes. The rabbit-eared second base umpire completely overstepped his bounds in ejecting wells. Umpire arrogance appears to be on the rise once again. Meanwhile, the Yankees took two out of three against the Tigers in Detroit. New York scored four against Troy Percival in the ninth to win on Saturday and won 1-0 on Sunday. The Yankees picked up a game and a half this week. The Orioles gained only a half game on Boston during the week as they continued to play poorly. Johnny Damon extended his hitting streak to 19 games on Sunday. That is a career best for Damon who also had an 18 game hitting streak this season. Four Red Sox will start for the American League in the July 12th All Star Game. Jason Varitek, David Ortiz, Manny Ramirez and Johnny Damon were chosen by the fans. Matt Clement will not be an All Star despite his 9-2 record. This is mainly because of the rule that requires each team to have at least one representative in the All Star Game. Player of the Week: Johnny Damon, who was 10 for 26 (.385) this week with a homer and four runs scored. There wasn't much to choose from this week. June 29, 2005 One of the nice things about baseball is that when a game goes terribly wrong, you don't have much time to think about it because you are typically back on the field the next day with a chance for redemption. Tuesday night's loss to Cleveland was not only the most agonizing loss of the year but one of the most agonizing losses of the decade. Let's recap: Bellhorn drops Manny's throw to second base (this would have resulted in a two outs, bases empty situation); after Boone flies out, Peralta battles for a two out, two strike hit to right to tie the game and advances to second when Payton can't find the cutoff man; Sizemore walks; after an 0 and 2 count, the umpire calls four consecutive balls on borderline strikes to Casey Blake (the umpire's strike zone went from Oprah to Minime in the blink of an eye); Hafner gets a fat pitch on 0 and 2 for the grand slam to give Cleveland the 12-8 lead; the Sox are retired in the bottom of the ninth on three pitches (that's not a typo - three pitches). Thankfully, the Sox were back on the field about 14 hours later and played well enough to win 5-2 and prevent the series from being a total disaster. The Sox have been steadily improving this season. They were 12-11 in April, 16-12 in May and 17-9 in June. The Red Sox are currently 45-32. At this point last season, they were 42-35. In 2003, they were also 45-32 through 77 games. Player of the Month for June -- The candidates are:
And the winner is ... Manny Ramirez. I gave Manny the nod over Big Papi because of his defensive effort this month (talk about things I never thought I'd write). Ramirez is currently leading the majors in outfield assists with 10 (and nearly saved last night's game with #11) and has made just one error this season. Ramirez started the month off very cold. In his first eight games in June, he had no homers and just two RBIs. He's been on fire ever since. June 26, 2005 The Red Sox put up some huge offensive numbers this week. In six games, the Sox scored 51 runs on 75 hits and 15 homeruns. They outscored the Indians and Phillies 51-24 during the six game winning streak. Bronson Arroyo (7 IP, 1 R), Tim Wakefield (8 IP, 0 R, 2 hits) and Matt Clement (7 IP, 1 R) were the pitching stars this week. The offense stars were many. Manny Ramirez was 11 for 27 (.407) with 5 HR and 15 RBI. David Ortiz was 10 for 26 (.385) with 3 HR and 8 RBI. Bill Mueller was 9 for 24 (.375). Johnny Damon was 8 for 25 (.320) with 8 runs. It was quite a week. The week was even better given the horrendous play of the Orioles and Yankees. The Sox picked up 5 1/2 games on the Orioles who went 1-6 this week. The Yankees went 2-5, all at home. Only the Mets horrible bullpen saved the Yankees from a 1-6 week. The Yankees are now 38-37 and are exceptionally lucky to even have that many wins. The schedule plays to the Red Sox favor for the rest of the season. To date, Boston has played only 32 of its 74 games at Fenway. By contrast, the Yankees have played 42 of their 75 games at Yankee Stadium. This means that the Red Sox have 49 more games at home while the Yankees play only 39 more games in the Bronx. Moreover, seven of the ten remaining Yankee-Red Sox games will be played at Fenway. Baltimore has played roughly half of their games at home so far this season. Interleague play is normally been a nightmare for the Red Sox. Not so this season. They were 12-6. Keith Foulke has not allowed an earned run in nine of his last 10 appearances (10 2/3 innings). By contrast, Alan Embree has given up 20 earned runs in his last 13 innings of work. All Star Game update: Unless there is a dramatic change in the voting over the next two weeks, Jason Varitek, David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez will all be starting in the All Star Game on July 12th in Detroit. Johnny Damon is fourth in the voting for outfielder. At last check, he was trailing Vlad Guerrero by about 82,000 votes. Damon could be chosen as a reserve by Manager Terry Francona. With a record of 9-1 and an ERA of 3.33, Matt Clement appears to be a lock. Milestone: Manny Ramirez's 19th career grand slam on Sunday moved him into a tie for second place on the all-time list with Eddie Murray. Ramirez is now four slams behind the leader, Lou Gehrig. Player of the Week: Manny Ramirez, who batted .407 with 5 HR, 15 RBIs and 9 runs. June 22, 2005 Edgar Renteria drove in Jay Payton with the winning and series sweeping run as the Sox beat the Indians 5-4 on Wednesday night in Cleveland. The win gave the Sox their first three game road sweep of the year. The Red Sox had lost eight of ten three game series on the road this season. The Red Sox outscored the Tribe 24-15 in the series and banged out 36 hits. David Ortiz had a huge series for Boston (6 for 13, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 5 runs) as did Manny Ramirez (6 for 13, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 4 runs). The Sox have won nine of ten and are now just one game behind the Orioles in the AL East. With the Red Sox hitting the road to face a team that had won nine games in a row and the Yankees hosting the Devil Dogs, it was likely that the Sox would lose ground to the Yankees between Monday and Wednesday. Incredibly, the Red Sox gained two games in the standings. In fact, the Yankees needed to rally from a 10-2 deficit on Tuesday just to avoid losing three in a row to Tampa Bay. The two teams play again tomorrow night in the Bronx. Jay Payton is heating up. He's 10 for 25 with a pair of homers, a triple and three doubles in his last eight games (six starts).
June 19, 2005 The Red Sox had a good week just when they needed it. Boston swept Cincinnati then took two of three from Pittsburgh over the weekend. The Red Sox outscored their opponents 37-11 this week. Boston will begin a three game series with the red-hot Indians on Monday. The Tribe has won nine in a row. Manny Ramirez now leads the majors with nine outfield assists. He has Jason Varitek to thank for #9. Varitek made a textbook block of homeplate that saved a run and probably the game for the Red Sox on Friday night. Manny has not made an error this season. Player of the Week: Matt Clement, who started and ended the week with wins. Clement gave up just three runs in 15 innings of work this week. He surrendered nine hits and two walks while striking out 18. June 12, 2005 Just as they did in St. Louis, the Red Sox won the series finale in Chicago to avoid a three game sweep. On Sunday, Tim Wakefield gave the Red Sox a great start just when they needed it while Youkilis and Damon each had three hits and a homer. The Red Sox had 17 hits in Sunday's 8-1 win. The Cubs bombed the Sox 14-6 on Friday behind Greg Maddux. The Sox were blooped to death in a 7-6 loss on Saturday. The Red Sox lost four of six games this week. Fortunately, so did the Orioles and Yankees. This week, the Sox return to Fenway for three with the Reds followed by three with the Pirates. The Red Sox have won the series finale in six of the last seven series they have played. On the other side of the coin, the Sox have lost the first game of their last nine road series. Milestone: Johnny Damon scored his 1,000th career run on Sunday night in Chicago. Damon is one of three current Red Sox to have reached that milestone (Olerud and Ramirez are the others). Players of the Week: Big Papi, who was 7 for 21 this week (.333) with 3 HR and 4 RBI and David Wells, who gave up no runs and just four hits (and no walks) in eight innings in his 4-0 victory on Wednesday. June 8, 2005 The Red Sox salvaged one of three against the St. Louis Cardinals this week. After losing the first two games by a combined score 16-3, the Sox closed the series with an important 4-0 victory. David Wells pitched eight shutout innings on Wednesday just when the Sox needed it. Losing two of three is never a good thing, but the silver lining is the fact that the Orioles, Jays and Yankees also lost two of three against National League Central opponents this week so the standings did not change. In fact, the Sox lost two of three to the best team in the National League while the Yankees and Orioles lost to sub-.500 teams so in a sense I'd say that the Sox came out ahead. David Wells has had an interesting year so far. In his four victories, he has pitched 31 1/3 innings, giving up only two runs on 19 hits. That translates to an 0.57 ERA. In his four losses, Wells has pitched only 15 2/3 innings. In those starts he has given up a total of 23 earned runs and 36 hits for an ERA of 13.21. The Red Sox will play the Cubs on Friday afternoon for the first time since the 1918 World Series. The Red Sox won the first game of that series, 1-0. A young lefty named Babe Ruth picked up the win for the Red Sox. Boston won the series in six games. The Red Sox only batted .186 in that series and didn't hit a homerun. The pitching, however, was outstanding. The four Boston pitchers combined for an ERA of 1.70. Ruth and Carl Mays each won two games. The Red Sox had six of the first 57 picks in this year's amateur draft and by most accounts, had a very good day. Boston used its first pick (#23) to take Oregon State centerfielder Jacoby Ellsbury. Ellsbury is 21 years old and has great speed. Three picks later, the Sox selected St. John's pitcher Craig Hansen. Hansen is a 21 year old righthander who throws about 94 MPH. To read more on the draft, please click on the following link: June 5, 2005 The Sox completed a 4-3 homestand with a 6-3 victory over the Ana .. I mean Los Angeles Angels on Sunday. Mark Bellhorn drove in the winning run in the seventh inning with a sac fly. Kevin Millar was 2-for-3. Wade Miller's start was mediocre. He went 6 1/3 innings giving up three runs on nine hits and three walks. The bullpen followed a shameful Saturday performance with 2 2/3 innings of shutout, one hit relief. It's off to St. Louis on Monday then to Chicago to meet the Cubs on Friday. This will be the first meeting between the Cubs and Sox since the 1918 World Series. The "If the Playoffs Started Today" matchups are as follows: American League (3) Texas at (1) Chicago White Sox (WC) Minnesota at (2) Baltimore National League (3) Washington at (1) St. Louis (WC) Chicago Cubs at (2) San Diego I'm hardly surprised by the Cardinals, Padres, Cubs and Twins. The Orioles and Texas are a bit of a surprise and the White Sox are a surprise because of their record, not so much for the fact that they are in first place. Even at this early stage of the season, it is shocking to see the Nats in first place. Player of the Week: Kevin Millar, who batted .368 (7 for 19) with 2 HR, 4 RBI and 6 runs. June 3, 2005 The Sox beat the Angels 7-4 on Friday to improve their record to 30-24 at the one-third mark of the 2005 season. The Sox decided not to wait until the ninth inning to rally for the win, instead pushing across three runs in the seventh and three more in the eighth against the normally untouchable Los Angeles (it still feels weird to say that) bullpen. This win came on the heels of a 2-2 series split with the first place Orioles earlier in the week. That series was of course highlighted by the David Ortiz three-run walk off homer on Thursday afternoon. The Sox have now hit three walk off homers at Fenway in the last 25 days. The one-third mark is a good time to take stock of the season. Here are the good, the bad and the ugly through 54 games: THE GOOD
THE BAD
THE UGLY
Player of the Month for May -- The candidates were:
And the winner is ... Matt Clement, by a hair over David Ortiz. May 29, 2005 Just when it looked like the Red Sox were headed into the abyss, they played two of their best games of the season and left Yankee Stadium in second place, one half game ahead of New York in the standings. Friday night's game was frustrating beyond belief. Boston put 18 runners on base (13 against Randy Johnson) but could must only three runs thanks in large part to Mark Bellhorn and Johnny Damon being (easily) thrown out at the plate on back to back plays in the sixth inning. Had Bellhorn and Damon stopped at third, the Red Sox could have had a 4-1 lead with the bases loaded, one out and Manny Ramirez coming to the plate. Instead, the inning ended with Boston ahead only 3-1. With the momentum completely shifted in New York's favor, the Yankees scored five times in the bottom of the sixth and won 6-3. The Sox put on a hitting clinic on Saturday. Boston pounded Yankee pitching for 17 runs on 27 hits. According to ESPN, it was the most hits any team (including the Yankees) has ever had in Yankee Stadium. Matt Clement pitched six solid innings in the 17-1 win and raised his record to 6-0. Five Red Sox players had at least three hits. Damon and Ramirez had four apiece. Nixon and Renteria each drove in five runs. For Renteria, four of those came on a grand slam. The Red Sox put on another hitting clinic of a different sort on Sunday night. Boston's incredibly patient batters forced Mike Mussina to throw an astounding 83 pitches in just three innings. Moose left after three innings having given up five runs and seven hits including homers to Ortiz (twice) and Renteria. After giving up two runs in the first, David Wells pitched 7 1/3 innings of no run, three hit, no walk baseball (what a shot in the arm that is for the Red Sox and Wells). Renteria, Ortiz and Ramirez were a combined 11 for 15 in the game with three homers, six runs and six RBIs. The Yankee hurlers combined for 176 pitches. Boston's duo of Wells and Foulke threw only 100. Who's Hot: Manny Ramirez, who has raised his average from .224 to .253 over the past two days (7 for 9). Keith Foulke (2 2/3 innings, 0 runs, 0 hits, 0 walks this week). Matt Clement (6-0, 3.06 ERA this season). Player of the Week: Edgar Renteria, in a runaway. Renteria was 16 for 24 this week (.667) with a pair of homers, six runs and six RBIs. Edgar has raised his batting average from .239 to .295 since last Sunday night. He is 13 for 16 in his last four games (WOW!). May 26, 2005 The Red Sox were outscored 17-2 over the final 19 innings of their three game series in Toronto this week. This was the first time all season that the Sox were swept in a three game series. The Red Sox have now lost seven of their last nine road games and have fallen into fourth place in the AL East. Meanwhile, the Yankees swept the Tigers to move one half game ahead of the Red Sox. The Red Sox were 6 1/2 games ahead of the Yankees just 19 days ago and haven't gained ground on New York in any single day since then. I cannot believe that Terry Francona left Alan Embree in the game to face Reed Johnson in the ninth inning on Tuesday night. I could see the three-run homer coming and I'm sure that many other Sox fans could too. Matt Mantei hadn't given up a run in about a month and was available to face the righthanded hitting Johnson but Francona sat on his hands. Johnny Damon is 0 for 22 in his last six road games. In his last 12 games at Fenway, Damon is is 25 for 47 (.532) and has an on base percentage of .618. On Wednesday, Bronson Arroyo lost for the first time since August 15th of last season. During that time period, he was 9-0 in 18 starts. If there was a bright spot in the Toronto series, it was Edgar Renteria who was 6 for 12 in the series. He raised his average from .239 to .257 while in Canada. May 22, 2005 The Red Sox returned home from a dreadful roadtrip with a 2-4 record against teams with a combined record of 35-50. Truth be told, the Sox could have lost all six if not for a grand slam by Trot Nixon in the middle game in Seattle and a clutch eighth inning single by Edgar Renteria in the middle game in Oakland. Thankfully, there's no place like home. The Red Sox returned to Fenway this weekend and won two of three from the now 24-19 Braves. Ironically, the Sox beat Hudson and Smoltz over the weekend but lost to a pitcher making his major league debut (Kyle Davies). Davies did not give up a run in five innings on Saturday. Manny Ramirez came out of his funk on Sunday going 3 for 5 with a homer. As Jerry Remy pointed out Ramirez could have easily been 5 for 5. Johnny Damon was 0 for 11 in Oakland but reached base ten times in the Atlanta series (6 for 10, 4 walks). Player of the Week: Jason Varitek - 10 for 24 (.417), 5 runs, 2 RBI. May 15, 2005 If not for Trot Nixon, the Sox may be heading to Oakland with a three-game sweep hanging over their heads. Nixon's seventh inning grand slam on Saturday night gave the Sox a 6-3 triumph, their only victory in three games over the weekend in Seattle. The Mariners whipped the Sox by a football score of 14-7 on Friday night and won a close 5-4 contest on Sunday. Here a few notes from the weekend. Was it my imagination or were the Seattle pitchers consistently getting the Greg Maddux strike (six to nine inches off the outside corner) all weekend? Red Sox batters struck out 20 times in the three game series and I'd venture to guess that they were caught looking on at least 12 of those. Let's hope the M's pitchers continue to have that pitch called a strike when the Yankees arrive tomorrow. Why wouldn't Francona pinch hit Varitek for Mirabelli in the 8th inning of Sunday's game? Wakefield was not going to return in the bottom of the eighth and a righthander was on the mound. I guess he could have been saving Tek to pinch hit for Nixon in the ninth against Guardado, but at that point he could have used Payton. It's not the first time that Francona has failed to pinch hit Varitek for Mirabelli in a crucial situation. Johnny Damon's 18 game hitting came to an end on Saturday night. He bounced right back with two more hits on Sunday. He's batting .435 in his last 20 games. Since April 18th, Mike Timlin, Matt Mantei and Mike Myers have made 28 appearances covering 23 innings without allowing a single run. The trio has given up 13 hits and 8 walks over that time to go along with 21 strikeouts. Ten times this season, the Red Sox have trailed by one or two runs going into their last at bat. Six of those times they have come back to tie or take the lead in the ninth. Unfortunately, they lost three of those six games in the bottom of the ninth. Milestone: Manny Ramirez hit career homerun number 400 on Sunday. Ramirez became the 39th player to accomplish this feat. He also notched career RBI number 1,300 earlier in the week. He's one of 89 players on that list. That begs the question: how will Manny's numbers stack up at the end of his career? Manny is only 32 years old (he turns 33 in a couple of weeks) and there are no significant injury problems that would adversely impact his numbers in the near future. If Manny continues to average the same numbers that he has put up since 1998 (167 hits, 105 runs, 40 HR, 128 RBI per season) through the end of the guaranteed portion of his Red Sox contract (which expires in 2008), he would be 36 years old with numbers like these: Hits Runs HR RBI ----- ----- --- ----- 2,417 1,485 550 1,784 If he continued this pace through 2010 (he'd be 38), the totals would be as follows: Hits Runs HR RBI ----- ----- --- ----- 2,751 1,695 630 2,040 It is not unrealistic to think that he could be at or near these numbers if he stays healthy. Right now, 630 would be good for fifth place on the all-time list though Sammy Sosa (now at 574) could have something to say about that. Only three players (Aaron, Ruth and Cap Anson) are currently in the 2,000 RBI club. Bonds (157 away), Palmeiro (215) and Sosa (457) could wind up there. Ramirez would probably be in the top 25 in runs scored as well. Then again, who can predict what Manny will do? He may hit 50 homers and drive in 160 runs in 2008 then abruptly retire. He may play until he's 43 and break both the homerun and RBI record. Player of the Week: Trot Nixon, who was 9 for 17 (.529) with 3 HR and 10 RBI this week. He reached base 12 of 20 times (.600) and won Saturday's game with a grand slam. May 11, 2005 What a series for the Boston Red Sox. After a ho hum 13-5 victory on Monday, the Sox thrilled the Fenway crowd with "walk off" two-run homers on back to back days. In both cases, the Sox trailed by a run heading into the bottom of ninth. In both cases, it was A's closer Octavio Dotel on the mound. In both cases, Dotel walked David Ortiz to bring the winning run to the plate. In both cases, the game-winner scored with one out. The difference: Kevin Millar was the hero on Tuesday with a shot over the monster. On Wednesday, it was Jason Varitek who sent the crowd home happy with a shot into the rightfield seats. According to ESPN, this marked the first time since 1986 that a team won in back to back games on come from behind "walk off" homeruns. Johnny Damon was 6 for 11 in the series and reached base 9 of 14 times. Damon extended his hitting streak to 17 games on Wednesday. Damon now leads the American League in batting average (.383) and hits (54). Manny Ramirez hit his 398th career homer on Wednesday. The Red Sox starters continued to do a great job even without Schilling and Wells. During the past 12 games, no Red Sox starter has given up more than three runs in any start. The starters' ERA over that time is 2.75. Boston is 10-2 over that time. After beginning the season 2-5, the Red Sox have won their last five one run contests. May 8, 2005 The Red Sox split a doubleheader with Seattle on Sunday, winning the first game, 6-3, and losing the nightcap, 6-4. Kevin Millar drove in three runs in the first game to help Jeremi Gonzalez grab his first win with the Red Sox. Gonzalez gave up three runs (two earned) in 5 2/3 innings of work. Dreadful managing cost the Red Sox the second game. Inexplicably, Terry Francona decided that the seventh inning of a 2-2 tie with a runner in scoring position and the heart of the Mariners lineup coming up was a good time for Cla Meredith to make his major league debut. Meredith promptly gave up two walks and a grand slam to Richie Sexson. The Sox were one single away from tying the game in the bottom of the seventh, but Kevin Millar skied out to right to end the rally. Wade Miller gave up just two runs and three hits in five innings. David Ortiz was 3 for 4 with two doubles and a homer. On Friday, Matt Clement improved to 4-0 as the Sox beat Seattle 7-2. Clement went seven, giving up one run (unearned) on five hits. If you take away the 4 2/3 inning, seven earned run performance against Baltimore, Clement's numbers look like this: 4-0, 38 1/3 IP, 9 ER, 2.11 ERA. Milestone: David Ortiz had career RBI number 500 in Sunday's second game against Seattle. I was kind of hoping that Bill Mueller would play shortstop in the second game of today's doubleheader so we'd have a chance to see a Miller to Mueller to Millar double play. Over the past nine games, no Red Sox starter has given up more than three runs. The starters' ERA over that time is 2.91. Miscellaneous Stats: Johnny Damon extended his hitting streak to 14 games on Sunday. Damon is hitting .455 (30 for 66) during that stretch. Keith Foulke has saved five games in five chances in May. Matt Mantei has not given up a run in his last seven appearances (6 IP, 2 hits, 5 BB). Mike Timlin has not given up a run in his last nine appearances (10 1/3 IP, 7 hits, 3 BB). These numbers make it that much more bizarre that Cla Meredith was in today's game in a 2-2 tie in the seventh inning. Player of the Week: Bronson Arroyo, for his 8 IP, 3 hit, 1 ER win on Thursday in Detroit. Arroyo no hit the Tigers for 6 1/3 innings, retiring 19 of the first 20 batters he faced. He's now 9-0 in his last 15 starts. May 5, 2005 After the nightmarish 1-4/injury-plagued stretch against the Devil Rays and Orioles, the Red Sox bounced back with a nice 5-2 road trip through Texas and Detroit. Bronson Arroyo won twice on the trip (15 IP, 3 ER, 8 hits, 13 K) and is now 9-0 in his last 15 starts dating back to last season. Kevin Youklis played four times on trip. He's batting .467 with a .619 on base percentage. Not too shabby. The Sox are 1-1 in games missed by Schilling and Wells. On Monday, Jeremi Gonzalez left after five innings with the score tied, 3-3. The Sox lost, but Gonzalez gave them exactly what they needed. John Halama also pitched in with five innings on Tuesday. He was just a little better (2 runs, 4 hits) and picked up the victory. Gonzalez is expected to start on Saturday night against Seattle. Wade Miller will make his Sox debut on Sunday. The power outage continues for many Red Sox players. Johnny Damon, Bill Mueller, Kevin Millar and Mark Bellhorn have combined for only one homer (by Damon) in 378 at bats this season. Last year, the foursome combined for 67 homers. This is no surprise for Millar, who hit 13 of his 18 homers after the All Star break in 2004. The Yankees dropped to 11-18 after losing a third consecutive game to the Devil Rays this week. Not only did they lose, but the games really weren't that close (11-4, 11-8, 6-2). The Yankees are very lucky to have won 11 games. Johnny Damon nearly took Rivera deep for a possible game-winner in the second game of the season (which the Yanks won). The Yankees won the following weekend against Baltimore mainly because of a two-out popup double by Hideki Matsui that the Orioles botched. Then there was a game in Toronto where Tino Martinez made a diving ninth inning catch to prevent Mariano Rivera from blowing another save. And these are only the games that I have seen. The other thing to note is that the Yankees have played 17 of their 29 games at home while the Sox have played 18 of their 28 on the road. The Sox are six games ahead of the Yanks in the loss column and they have some home games in hand. The two teams next meet in Yankee Stadium on May 27th. I have sinking feeling that the Yankees will acquire Roger Clemens by the All Star break. Houston's ownership denies that they would consider trading Clemens but we all know better. The Yankees might not have the young talent to tempt Houston but I wouldn't be shocked if they tossed in a few million to make it happen. If Houston is in the hunt for a playoff spot, we won't have to worry. Either way, Steinbrenner will have his credit card ready as the All Star Game approaches, if not sooner. It was actually a good thing for the Red Sox that the Yankees were playing well at midseason last year. That meant that Big George had less incentive to make a big move. If the Yanks had been mediocre last June and July, they may have done more to acquire Randy Johnson and the Red Sox Championship run may never have happened. Carl Yaztrzemski's son, Michael, apparently stole his father's identity and ran up thousands of dollars in debt prior to the younger Yaz's death last year (LINK). What is it with the sons of former Red Sox greats? Ted Williams' son, John Henry, was famous in large part for taking his father's body to an Arizona cryonics lab for freezing but spent much of his life trying to mooch off his Ted's legacy. Like Michael Yaztrzemski, John Henry Williams died last year at a very young age. The parallels are eerie. It kind of makes me wonder if someone should keep a close eye on Carlton Fisk's son. May 1, 2005 After losing five of six games, the Red Sox bounced back with wins on Saturday and Sunday in Arlington, Texas. On Sunday, Matt Clement pitched six decent innings to raise his record to 3-0. Keith Foulke struggled yet again in the ninth but managed to grab his fourth save in five chances this season. David Ortiz had three hits while Trot Nixon added two hits and two RBIs. The Sox begin a four game series with the Tigers in Motown on Monday. Player of the Week: Johnny Damon (.435 avg, 10 hits, 1 HR, 7 RBI, 4 runs). April 30, 2005 The Red Sox concluded a very unchampionlike April with a 9-2 win over the Rangers in Arlington. Bronson Arroyo improved his record to 3-0 while Damon, Nixon and Varitek homered. The win gave the Sox a 12-11 April record. Here's the good news and the bad news as we enter May. The Good News:
The Bad News:
Red Sox Player of the Month - April No single player really jumped out as an obvious Player of the Month for April. The top candidates were Damon, Varitek, Ramirez, Arroyo and Wakefield. I decided to give my Player of the Month award to Jason Varitek. The newly-minted Captain is off to a great start offensively. Obviously, the new contract and promotion to Captain hasn't gone to his head. Manny's numbers (.274, 7 HR, 25 RBI) were more impressive but his production came in bunches (5 of his homers and 16 of his RBI came in just three games over the course of the month). April 27, 2005 Wednesday's rain in Boston shortened the Sox-Orioles series to just two games. This may have been a blessing for the Sox who lost to the O's on Monday and Tuesday by a combined score of 19-12. The hard-hitting Orioles banged out 33 hits in the two games. Johnny Damon was 5 for 8 in the series and reached base seven times in the series. Damon is now batting .360. Manny Ramirez had three hits and drove in five runs in Tuesday's game. Unfortunately, Keith Foulke blew his first save of the year. The Sox closer now has a record of 1-3 and an ERA of 7.20. Matt Clement gave up 7 earned runs and 12 hits in 4 2/3 innings in Tuesday's game. The injuries are piling up on the Sox. The team announced that Curt Schilling will miss at least two weeks with a bone bruise on his right ankle. Yes, that's the same ankle that was surgically repaired in the offseason. David Wells will be sidelined for four to six weeks with a sprained right foot. John Halama will start for the Red Sox on Monday in Detroit. Tuesday's starter remains a mystery. Wade Miller is not quite ready for Major League action so it won't be him. April 25, 2005 The Orioles extended their lead in the AL East to two games on Monday thanks to an 8-4 victory over the Sox at Fenway. The Orioles had 13 hits including a B.J. Surhoff homerun. For Boston, David Ortiz and Johnny Damon had three hits and Jason Varitek had two (a double and a homer). David Wells (3.2 IP, 8 hits, 6 ER) left the game in the fourth inning with a foot injury. Matt Mantei left the game in the seventh with an ankle injury. Needless to say, it was a terrible night for the Sox. Matt Clement and Rodrigo Lopez will duel on Tuesday. April 24, 2005 Despite outscoring the opposition 44-25 over the past seven days, the Red Sox finished the week with a 4-3 record thanks to three one run losses. The Sox took one of two from Toronto at Fenway earlier this week. The Sox blew a 3-1 lead heading into the eighth inning on Tuesday enabling the Blue Jays to split the short two game series. Manny Ramirez hit three homers and drove in six runs in the series. The Sox swept a short two game series in Baltimore on Wednesday and Thursday thanks to two shutouts (8-0 and 1-0). David Wells and Matt Clement each pitched eight scoreless innings during the series. Wells extended his scoreless innings streak to 15. On Friday, the Sox rallied from a 4-1 eighth inning deficit (and a 4-2 ninth inning deficit) to tie the Devil Rays 4-4 in the top of the ninth. Unfortunately, Eduardo Perez took Alan Embree deep for the game-winning homer to lead off the bottom of the ninth. Friday marked the fourth time in five opportunities that the Sox have rallied to tie or take the lead when faced a one or two run deficit heading into their last at bat. They have lost in the bottom of the ninth on three of those four occasions. The Sox lost another tough game on Saturday, 6-5, then blasted the Rays 11-3 on Sunday in a game filled with hit batsmen, ejections and bench clearing brawls. Sunday's win left the Sox one game behind Baltimore in the AL East. Player of the Week: Manny Ramirez (.364 avg, .500 OBP, 4 HR, 10 RBI, 8 runs). April 17, 2005 The Red Sox pulled off their first sweep of the 2005 season by trouncing the Devil Rays at Fenway over the weekend by a combined score of 19-3. Matt Clement and David Wells each won for the first time in a Red Sox uniform. On Saturday, Manny Ramirez finally hit his first (and second) homerun of the season. Manny drove in all six Boston runs in the 6-2 win. Milestones: Tim Wakefield passed Cy Young and moved into third place on the Red Sox all-time strikeout list behind Roger Clemens and Pedro Martinez. Wakefield has now whiffed 1,343 batters while wearing the Sox uniform. He trails Pedro by 253 strikeouts. Roger Clemens, with 2,590 Red Sox strikeouts, is 994 ahead of Pedro. On Saturday, Manny Ramirez's 18th career grand slam moved him into a third place tie on Major League Baseball's all-time list. Lou Gehrig holds the record with 23. Player of the Week: Tim Wakefield (2-0, 13 innings pitched, 1 ER, 9 hits). April 14, 2005 The Sox beat the Yankees 8-5 on Thursday night to take the rubber game of their first home series of the season. Jay Payton, Edgar Renteria and Jason Varitek each homered against Randy Johnson. The trio knocked in all eight of the Boston runs. Johnson left the game after seven innings with the score tied 5-5. Tom Gordon followed in the bottom of the eighth and promptly gave up three runs. Keith Foulke struggled, but pitched two scoreless innings for his first win of the season. Bronson Arroyo gave up five runs in 5 2/3 innings and struggled with his control. The win enabled the Sox to even the season series with New York at three games apiece and match New York's 4-5 record to begin the season. At 7-3, the Blue Jays are the early leaders in the AL East. It wouldn't be a Red Sox-Yankees series without some kind of incident. Tonight's incident occurred in the bottom of the eighth inning. As Gary Sheffield chased down Jason Varitek's triple in the rightfield corner, a fan swiped his hand along the wall and got a piece of Sheffield's face in the process. Sheffield grabbed the ball and then shoved the fan, even before throwing the ball back into the infield. It is unclear whether the fan was intentionally trying to whack Sheffield or simply imploring the fans next to him to not touch the ball, which was still in play. It appears that the fan was looking to his left and not in Sheffield's direction as he was moving his arm. Sheffield admitted that he didn't know if he was struck intentionally or not. Whether it was accidental or not didn't seem to matter to Sheffield at the time but to his credit he did not pull an "Artest." The fan was ejected for interfering with play but not arrested. The incident could have been worse if not for a quick response by a Fenway employee who jumped between Sheffield and the fan. Another odd moment occurred in the second inning when a fan in the first base stands made a great catch on a sharply hit foul ball. The fan, as it turned out, was Doug Flutie. When interviewed by NESN's Eric Frede, Flutie claimed to have caught a foul ball the past four times he's been at Fenway. Hmmm, I wonder if Drew Brees would have made the catch? Both Ron Jackson and Terry Francona were tossed out of the game for arguing balls and strikes. Red Sox pitchers simply couldn't get a break with home plate umpire Greg Gibson. A questionable ball four call on Gary Sheffield in the fourth led to four of the five New York runs. This led to Jackson's ejection. The umpiring wouldn't have been so upsetting if not for the fact that Randy Johnson was getting strike calls no matter where he threw the ball. Francona was ejected arguing a strike call on Bill Mueller. After an 0 for 10 start to his Red Sox career, Edgar Renteria is 9 for 26 (.346) with a homer and seven RBIs. I wonder what all those idiot sports radio callers who wanted to run Renteria out of town after two games are saying now. Jason Varitek's homerun on Thursday was the 100th of his career. The Red Sox lost the middle game of the three game series, 5-2. Jaret Wright was in trouble most of the night, but the Red Sox could not produce with runners in scoring position. The Yankee bullpen shut down the Sox (4 IP, 1 hit, 1 walk) once Wright left the game. Mariano Rivera finally notched a save against the Sox after four consecutive failures. For the Sox, Curt Schilling was excellent for four innings, but gave up two runs in the fifth and three more in the sixth. Terry Francona has a tendency to go too long with Curt Schilling and Wednesday was no exception. Schilling gave up only two runs through five innings but gave up three runs in the sixth. He threw 108 pitches which seemed like too many for a pitcher making his first start of the season and coming off of an injury. It is interesting to look at Schilling's performance by pitch count. In his first 75 pitches, opponents batted only .206 against Schilling last season. After 75 pitches, opponents batted .313 against Curt. This is a trend worth following this season. April 11, 2005 The Red Sox celebrated Opening Day/World Series Ring Day with an 8-1 victory over the Hated Ones. Doug Mirabelli's second inning two-run homer turned out to be the only offense the Sox would need thanks to a great performance by Tim Wakefield. Wake gave up just one run (an unearned run) and five hits in seven innings of work. Trot Nixon and Kevin Millar also chipped in with two RBIs each. The Red Sox received their World Series rings before the game as part of an extended Opening Day ceremony. The pre-game ceremony had many great moments including Johnny Pesky and Yaz raising the World Championship banner and Bill Russell, Bobby Orr, Tedy Bruschi and Richard Seymour throwing out the ceremonial first pitches. The most amusing moment came when Yankees closer Mariano Rivera (who has blown four consecutive save chances against the Sox) was cheered wildly by the crowd as he was introduced before the game. Even Rivera couldn't help but laugh. Most of the Yankees were lustily booed by the capacity (and then some) crowd. April 10, 2005 For the third time in five games, the Red Sox came from behind in the top of the 9th inning against the opponent's closer. Unfortunately, for the second time they lost the game in the bottom of the 9th. On Sunday, the Blue Jays beat the Sox 4-3 on Orlando Hudson's one out double off of Mike Timlin. The Sox had tied the game in the top of the inning on a two-run single by Edgar Renteria. Matt Clement gave up three earned runs in six innings for a no-decision. On Friday night, Keith Foulke gave up two runs in the bottom of the 9th but the Sox held on for a 6-5 victory. Nixon and Varitek each homered. Bronson Arroyo gave up just two runs on three hits in six innings for his first win of the season. On Saturday, David Wells surrendered back to back to back homers and the bullpen fell apart in the 9th inning as the Jays won 12-5.
Fri 4/8 - Sox 6 Jays 5 - Box Score I think most Red Sox fans would agree that the first week of the season was very disappointing. The Sox went 2-4 on the season's first road trip and lost twice in the bottom of the 9th inning. The good news is that three times the Sox trailed by a run or two going into the 9th inning and three times they came from behind to tie or take the lead against the opposition's closer. As was the case last season, the Sox do not know the meaning of the word "quit." The good news for week one: Jason Varitek (.368, 2 HR, 3 RBI), Tim Wakefield (0-0, 2.70 ERA) and Bronson Arroyo (1-0, 3.00 ERA). The bad news: Bill Mueller (.200), Trot Nixon (.188), Edgar Renteria (.167), David Wells (0-2, 8.44 ERA, 19 hits in 10 2/3 innings), the bullpen (8.10 ERA). Player of the Week: David Ortiz (.435 avg, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 5 runs). April 6, 2005 It is amazing how close the Red Sox came to losing Wednesday's game (and being swept by the Yankees to start the season). Boston had outhit New York 13 to 3 and had put 18 runners on base (as compared to New York's 8) when Manny Ramirez batted in the 9th, but if ARod has come up with the ground ball off of Manny's bat, the Sox probably would have lost, 3-2. This is exactly the type of game that Boston had been losing to New York for 86 years before Game 4 of last year's ALCS. Sox fans should never be happy losing two of three to the Yanks but in this case, I can't help but feel pretty good about the way things turned out. I feel this way mainly because the Red Sox are now firmly entrenched in the head of Mariano Rivera. Since 2001, Rivera has blown 12 of 31 save chances against the Red Sox (that's only a 61% conversion rate). He's converted more than 91% of his save chances against everyone else over that time. Yes, the ARod boot hurt him, but Rivera was awful. Also, let's not forget that Johnny Damon came within a few feet of beating him yesterday. I'm certainly not going to predict that Mariano is done. I'm sure he will have a solid year, but (a) the Sox have his number and (b) he's not the pitcher he once was. It was great to see Edgar Renteria finally come through for the Sox in the 9th inning. In his first ten at bats this year, Renteria was 0 for 10 and had made 14 outs (four double plays). I guess you could say that his average was -.400 (that's negative .400) at that time. Yes, Renteria single-handedly cost the Sox the game on Tuesday, but it's hard to believe that so many fans are on his case already. A lot was made of the Sox signing Renteria and not Cabrera in the offseason, but in the end the money was not all that different (four years, $40 mil vs four years, $32 million). If Hanley Ramirez comes along the way the Sox hope he does, Boston will have the option of trading Ramirez (and others) for a top pitcher (Ben Sheets maybe?) or promoting Ramirez and trading Renteria. Renteria should be very marketable given his age and the position he plays. I am glad that the Sox started the season on the road because I know some Fenway fans would have been booing Renteria by the end of the second game. Best wishes to Terry Francona for a speedy recovery. Hopefully, his health issues are not serious. In each of the past two games, I have longed for Dave Roberts as the Red Sox were seeking the tying or go-ahead run. Roberts was such an important weapon for this team. What's worse is that they really don't have anyone with speed on the bench. I can't believe that the Sox couldn't do enough to make Roberts happy. You would think that he could play in place of Ramirez and Damon once every two weeks or so and in place of Nixon two or three times every two weeks. Despite the two homers, Wakefield was probably the sharpest of any Red Sox or Yankees starter over the first three games. Johnson's performance on Sunday was a close second. I'd put Pavano third and Clement fourth. Wells and Mussina were both awful, but Mussina was able to pitch himself out of trouble thanks in large part to Edgar Renteria. What's with the bullpen meltdowns the past three days? Rivera's problems have been the most heralded but Trevor Hoffman blew a two-run with two outs in the 9th inning on Monday in Colorado, Braden Looper blew a two-run 9th inning lead on Monday in Cincinnati and today Bob Wickman and the Indians blew a three-run 9th inning lead in Chicago. Okay, I guess it isn't that surprising that it's happening to the Mets and Indians.
Sun 4/3 - Yankees 9 Sox 2 - Box Score April 4, 2005 The Red Sox streak of four straight against the Yankees ended on Sunday night. Boston scored the first and last runs of the game, but the Yankees scored nine in between on their way to a 9-2 rout over the World Champs in the Bronx. David Wells was anything but sharp in his Sox debut giving up four runs and ten hits in only 4 1/3 innings of work. Randy Johnson wasn't spectacular but was good enough to notch his first Yankee win. Jason Varitek was the lone bright spot for Boston. The new Captain went 3-for-4. Here are some game notes (in chronologial order).
April 2, 2005 (MLB Predictions)
American League As of today, the American League playoff pairings for 2005 are expected to be exactly the same as they were in 2004. The Yankees will win the division and play the Twins. The Angels will win the West with more victories than Minnesota and thus host the Wild Card Red Sox. Nothing is ever certain in sports, but the fact remains that there is a huge gap between the top four teams in the AL and the bottom ten. Having said that, you never know who among the bottom ten might be much better than expected or who among the top four might be decimated by injuries. That's why they play the games. American League East
American League Central
American League West
National League Unlike the American League, the playoff race in the National League is wide open. From what I can tell, ten teams are legitimate contenders for a playoff spot in 2005 (sorry, Nationals, Pirates, Brewers, Reds, D-backs and Rockies). At the same time, no team appears to be head and shoulders better than the rest of the pack. Here are my picks: National League East
National League Central
National League West
World Series
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