Monday, October 29

Champions Again!

Our 2004 World Series apparel is not yet even tattered or faded, but their replacements are flooding department stores all over New England. Your Boston Red Sox are once again kings of the baseball world. Asking a sports fan to compare championships is like asking a parent to compare children. It can't be done. They are each special in their own way but one thing is certain.

You cherish them all.

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Friday, October 26

Show Me The Money

Red Sox Nation is rolling to the Rockies and most of the fan base is expecting them to return to Boston with their second World Series championship in the past four years. The Rox came in on a roll, riding a magic carpet ride through what increasingly is looking like a vaporous National League Playoffs.

On the field, this appears to be a mismatch. There is little mystery about why that is the case. Just look at the team's payrolls.

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Thursday, October 25

A look forward.

With one victory firmly in hand, Sox fans around the world can start to breathe a little easier regarding the Olde Towne Team's chances in the 2007 World Series. As the old saying goes, however, momentum is only as good as the next day's starter; no one should know this better than the Colorado Rockies, who have now won 21 of their last 23 games and find themselves down one game to none in the Series.

So will the scrappy upstarts from the senior circuit be able to get on a hot streak before next Wednesday, or will your Boston Red Sox be able to close the door and establish the American League dominance that has become painfully obvious to the rest of the country?

Let's look at what will be the deciding factors for both sides.

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Monday, October 22

Pennant Fever!

Well they did it. And they did it impressively. 30-5 in the three elimination games and 23-4 in the final two in Boston. Despite the lopsided scores, the games were tight and the Sox stepped up. Another flag, the fifth in my lifetime and a second trip to the World Series in the past four years. It doesn't get better than that.

So as we wait for Game 1, we have a couple of days to bask in the afterglow. The tension that we have been living through since the Sox fell behind 3-1 last Tuesday has been temporarily lifted. We are the American League Champions of 2007!

Ok, that's enough. Now on to the Rockies to seal the deal.

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Sunday, October 21

Here we are.

Well, they took it one game at a time, and won them both. Now we find ourselves in a familiar position - Game 7. Momentum now resides with the Olde Towne Team, but we are left to wonder if that will be enough to punch their ticket to the World Series.

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Friday, October 19

It's the Pitching, Stupid

And so we live for another day. The Dead Sox are alive. So what is the difference between the listless team that sleepwalked through two dreadful losses in Games 3 and 4 and the vibrant ball club that bounced back with season saving 7-1 win last night? No surprise. The pitching of Josh Beckett

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Wednesday, October 17

It is what it is.

However frustrating these past playoff games have been, I have found it very difficult to be too upset when the final outs have been tallied. The fact of the matter is none of this should be terribly suprising to anyone that watched this team all year. This team is this good, for better or for worse.

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Monday, October 15

Time for Drastic Measures

I started writing this after watching the non-Ortiz-Ramirez-Lowell portion of the lineup dribble into three feeble outs on 10 pitches in the top of the fifth. Down only 2-0 at the time, it felt like 20-0 since the once again ice-cold Sox lineup was making Jake "6-9, 4.32 ERA" Westbrook look like the white Bob Gibson. When Dice K imploded for another pair of runs as he continued his now seven month "adjustment" to Major League baseball it was obvious this one was over and the Sox were about to go down 2-1.

It's clearly time for a major shakeup if there is any hope of saving the postseason.

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Sunday, October 14

Can't win them all.

Baseball is a game of probabilities, and Cleveland manager Eric Wedge went out of his way to minimize his opportunities as much as he could on Saturday night by green-lighting a series of questionable strategies in Game 2 of the ALCS.

Unfortunately, he couldn't screw up enough decisions to cost the Tribe the game.

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Friday, October 12

Another Opening, Another Show

As they say on Wall Street, past performance is no guarantee of future returns, but one thing is certain: last night's "contest" was a coolly efficient surgical vivisection of a very good Cleveland Indians team by your Boston Red Sox.

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Wednesday, October 10

The 3-Man Rotation

For whatever reason, Major League Baseball has added many extra rest days to the post-season this year, allowing teams with short benches or shallow rotations to hide their flaws on the game's biggest stage. The Boston Red Sox must capitalize on this break from tradition and use only their three best starters in the quest for the club's twelfth American League pennant.

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Tuesday, October 9

Be Careful What You Wish For

On Sunday night, after the Sox swept away the Angels, WBZ-TV ran a poll to see who Sox fans preferred to see in the ALCS. More than 75% chose the Indians over the hated Yankees. Count me in that overwhelming majority. There is just one problem. The Indians were the much better team.

So make no mistake. Eric Wedge's crew will prove to be a handful for the Sox.

Also remember that this series will ultimately decide the World Series winner. While the Four A Expansion Championship takes place in Phoenix and Denver, the two best major league teams will be fighting the cold and each other to determine who will go out west and beat their brains in.

As an aside, for those of you old enough to remember, this set up is reminiscent of the late 60's when the NHL doubled the size of their league. They went from the Original Six team to 12 teams and instead of integrating the new teams with the old, they set up a Western Division made up exclusively of expansion teams. That guaranteed that at least one of these newbies would play in the Stanley Cup finals and have the honor of getting swept by one of the Original Six every season. The Bruins took full advantage in 1970 by sweeping the St. Louis Blues 4-0. (See Orr,Bobby, Flying Through Air).

But I digress. Back to Cleveland /Boston.

The Sox and Indians have met four times in the post season. The first time was in 1948 when the two clubs tied for first place - both winning 96 games ironically - and had to play a one game playoff. Sox skipper Joe McCarthy sent out journeyman Denny Galehouse to pitch the key game. As with all things Red Sox, there was controversy surrounding the decision. Many felt Mel Parnell, who was 15-8 on the year, should have been given the ball even though he would have been pitching on three days rest. To put it in modern terms, this would be like starting Julian Tavarez instead of Josh Beckett on three days rest with the pennant on the line.

The results were predictable. Galehouse turned in a Wang-like performance, failing to get out of the fourth inning as the Sox were smoked 8-3 and the Indians captured the AL flag.

It would be 47 years before they met again in the 1995 ALDS. Kevin Kennedy's Sox might as well have stayed home. They lost the first game 5-4 in 13 innings at the Jake when former Sox Tony Pena hit a home run on a 3-0 pitch. The Indians blanked them 4-0 in Game two and polished them off in Fenway in Game 3 by a score of 8-2. The series was most known for the futility of Mo Vaughn and Jose Canseco, that year's version of Manny and Papi. The pair combined to go 0-27 in the series.

In 1998, they met again in the ALDS and the results weren't much better. The Tribe took the series 3-1. The Sox started off much better as Vaughn tried to make up for 95 by blasting a pair of homers while Nomar added one and Pedro held down Manny Ramirez and the rest of the Indian lineup in an 11-3 win. That would be it for the Sox as the Indians swept the final three games, 9-5, 4-3 and 2-1, the last two at Fenway.

The two teams staged a rematch a year later and the Sox finally broke through. It looked like more of the same for Jimy Williams' Sox when the Indians swept the first two games at the Jake 3-2 and 11-1. But returning to Fenway, the Sox exploded for 9-3 and 23-7 wins in Games 3 & 4 setting up a dramatic Game 5 in Cleveland.

The defining moment in that game and the series was the dramatic appearance of Pedro Martinez in relief. Suffering a back strain, Pedro was not expected to play. But after three innings the wild game was tied 8-8 and Petey came in on his white horse in the bottom of the fourth. He proceeded to pitch six innings of no hit ball allowing only four walks (one to Manny) and shutting down the powerful Indian lineup. Troy O'Leary blasted a three run homer in the seventh to give the Sox the lead and they added another in the ninth. Pedro closed out the 12-8 win by striking out Omar Vizquel for the final out. The Sox would go on to lose the ALCS 4-1 to the Yanks.

There are plenty of subplots in this series with ties between the team. The Indians have Eric Wedge, Trot Nixon and Kelly Shoppach as former Sox. The Sox have former Tribesmen Manny, Coco and Julian Tavarez. John Farrell is a former Indian as is Terry Francona who played in Cleveland in 1988. And the senior Francona, the original Tito, played for the Indians from 1959-1964.

So enough of the preliminaries. It's prediction time.

For those of you keeping track at home, I was 3 out of 4 in the Division Series. The only one I missed was the red hot Rockies over the Phils.

Arizona over Colorado in 6.
Everyone loves the Rockies, who have become the trendy pick. I still think they will hit the wall at some point and I believe this is it. Besides I still have my heart set on a trip to Arizona for the World Series.

Sox over Indians in 7
This should be a great series. My feeling is that Beckett/Schilling and Sabbathia/Carmona will cancel each other out and it will be Matsusaka/Wakefield and Westbrook/Byrd that decides this one. I like the Sox in that matchup. Plus Papelbon over Borowski is a HUGE advantage for the Sox in a short series. The Indians probably have the edge in middle relief, but the OBP Sox have to work the starters and get Betancourt and Perez into games early and often. This one should go down to the wire, but ultimately, I believe the Sox are headed for another World Series.

Friday can't come soon enough.

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Saturday, October 6

Built to win.

I know we've only seen these Sox in two playoff games this year, but it is already crystal clear that the team was constructed exclusively to succeed in the postseason crapshoot.

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Thursday, October 4

We're 9% There

Judging from the reaction to last night's impressive victory by the inane "fans" on the street and the gushing prattle of the bobble heads on the local news anchor desk, you would have expected to pick up the morning paper and read the following headline: "SOX WIN WORLD SERIES IN ONE GAME!"


Calm down people. It was the perfect way to start the postseason, but it was what it was: just one game.

In reality, though, it was a must win for the Sox and to their credit they won it. If they had ever come out last night in front of a roaring home crowd (although you couldn't here it on TBS since they were apparently using soup cans for microphones) with their ace going against a pitcher in John Lackey that they absolutely own in Fenway and lost, it would have been a monumental disaster. They did what they had to do.

Beckett's brilliance hid some disturbing signs, however. The Sox offense punched out after the third inning letting Lackey off the hook after having him on the ropes. It would have been nice to knock him out of the game and gotten into the bullpen by the fifth inning but they took their foot off the accelerator. The bottom of the order reverted to FeebleTown as Crisp, Drew and Tek all grounded into double plays killing potential big innings.

Crisp, although he made a run saving catch early, was particularly inept at the plate going 0-3 and seeing a total of SIX pitches. The popgun offense is sufficient when your Ace is twirling a four hit, complete game shutout, but that is not going to happen very often.

Which brings us to Friday night. The Sox have started off on the right foot, but as someone once said, momentum in baseball is only as good as the next day's starter. And Josh Beckett will not be walking through that door again.

No, in Game Two, the ball will be in the hands of the enigmatic Dice K Matsusaka, the human box of crackerjacks. When we open him up Friday night, will we get popcorn, peanuts and a prize or a bad case of indigestion?

Remember, the Angels only need one game here and the frightening thought is that we are one 30 pitch, three walk, 4 run classic Dice K meltdown inning away from going to LA 1-1, giving up the homefield advantage and putting this series in real jeopardy.

But we know that the Dice man loves the big stage. Had you heard that he won the big high school tournament in Japan? So that being the case, I suggest that anyone going to the game Friday night wear their letter jackets and bring their pom poms to get Dice K into the mood.

Of course this is not the Yankees he will be facing. Thankfully, the Angels, with the exception of Reggie Willits, have all graduated from The Manny Sanguillen School of Hitting. For you youngins out there, Sanguillen was a Pirate catcher in the 70's who makes Vlad Guerrero look like Kevin Youkilis in terms of plate discipline. These Halos come out swinging from the on deck circle, so hopefully that will keep Dice K from his normal wild streak. We can only hope.

One down, ten to go..

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Wednesday, October 3

The endgame begins.

With the playoffs starting tonight, let's lay out a few predictions...

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Tuesday, October 2

Finally...The Postseason!

After the long, stressful regular season, which drags on like a Bobby Abreu at bat, the postseason is finally here. The slate is clean. Everyone starts even and the possibilities are endless for each team.

So without further adieu, here are ten reasons why I love the postseason and my first round predictions

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