Edes Just Globin’ It Up

By , 9/8/2006 8:11 am

I always kind of liked Gordon Edes and thought he had managed to steer clear of the herd, report with an honest pen, refrain from potshots and generally keep it professional.  This morning, however, he comes with another in a series of articles that suggest the oderous hallways of the Globe Sports section may be exacting a toll.  In a piece that essentially recaps how awesome every Red Sox ever discarded by Theo Epstein is, Edes offers up two gems – one cheap shot and one piece of non-sensical sloppiness that I still can’t figure out how to translate.  First the cheap shot…

…but a host of other questions guaranteed to keep a club executive awake at night.

You know, like what might have been had Manny Ramírez tried to play through his knee pain when the Sox were still in contention?

Huh?  Jason Varitek, Tim Wakefield, Trot Nixon, etc.?  Nary a mention.  Only Manny’s injuries are able to be played through, you know?  Then there’s this:

Epstein, like most of his peers, have long argued that one must take the long view of any trade. A sensible policy, of course. But this is one week where if you were standing on the “T” and Theo offered to trade places, you might first want check what’s under his seat.

If anyone has any idea what this means, please, chime in.

Couple Things

By , 9/7/2006 7:40 am

1) If Pythag somtimes does not jibe with how you think about baseball, consider this past series with the White Sox for a little microcosm of how the thinking goes.  Chicago outscored the Sox by five runs in three games but only came away with one win.  So who would you say the better team is?  The one that won the series, or the one that put more runs on the board?

2) Tough morning to be in the basement of 4 Yawkey…check out some of the performances around the league.  First check out Anibal Sanchez, then go ahead and look at D-Lowe and then for good measure peep in on Cla Meredith.

Red Sox 1, White Sox 0 (and other stuff)

By , 9/6/2006 7:37 am

Hey hey, lookey here!  Kason Gabbard allowed a double, two singles and two walks while striking out six in seven innings in a performance that sort of made you wonder why he was demoted after his start in Seattle anyway.  The Red Sox plated just one run, but it was enough to get a second consecutive exciting win.

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Out on the west coast, the Padres pulled within one game of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League West race and opened up a two-game edge in the Wild Card.  I don’t want to rub salt in any wounds here but the Doug Mirabelli trade is really turning out to be one hell of an epic fleecing.  Josh Bard is hitting .325/.404/.510 with the Padres while Cla Meredith has not allowed a run in 24 appearances.  Doug Mirabelli, on the other hand, has played way too much and is hitting .182/.248/.350 on the year.   

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Johan Santana won his 17th game against the D-Rays with another command performance last night, and is well on his way to what should be his third consecutive Cy Young.  Unfortunately, it will just be his second in three years.  Santana is turning in another ho-hum, K-per-inning, 5-1 K/BB, sub-1 WHIP, sub-3.00 ERA season.  He is just 27, and has established himself as a rare and special talent.  Tracking his greatness in the coming years should be a lot of fun.

Red Sox 3, White Sox 2

By , 9/5/2006 8:29 am

With the Red Sox nine games back in the American League East and 6.5 games back of a playoff spot of any sort, a lethargic (if not despondent) crowd poured into Fenway for the opener of a three-game set with the White Sox. The weather was impeccable and there are many worse ways to kill three hours than at Fenway Park but the crowd had little reason for optimism as the Pale Hose were sending Jon Garland to the hill and the beleaguered Red Sox were countering with Julian Tavarez. Garland has been one of baseball’s best starters now for the better part of two months and quietly has cobbled together 16 wins in 2006 while Tavarez has, well…Julian Tavarez has been Julian Tavarez.

A few funny things happened, however. First, prior to the announcement of the starting lineups, Curt Schilling and his family were honored for Schill’s 3,000th strikeout and their collective efforts towards finding a cure for ALS. A large banner was unfurled on the Green Monster that listed all of the pitchers with 3,000 strikeouts. It’s short, and most impressive. Charles Steinberg then presented Schilling with a check for Curt’s Pitch for ALS. A crowd of about 25,000 or so – the early arrivers – showered applause on the Schillings.

Next, Trot Nixon came scampering out of the dugout to do his pre-game wind-sprints in shallow right field. Now would be as good a time as any to mention that we were fortunate to have seats just three rows behind the tarp on the first base side – in other words in shallow right field where Nixon and his mates were loosening up. The sight of Nixon sent the crowd in and around our section into a frenzy. There he was, hat still dirty (he didn’t have time to clean it?), sprinting hard and even stopping over to sign some autographs before it was time to take the field.

After the sprinters cleared right field, the buzz died down but not for long. Flanked by Julian Tavarez on his right and Dave Wallace on his left, Jason Varitek emerged from the bullpen and was walking through right field on his way to the dugout. Again, the crowd roared as the Captain – shit, their Captain – strolled with all of his gear on except his mask in his hand and his skull cap turned forwards. He was back – in all of his armor no less – ready to do battle.

It had been publicized that Nixon and Varitek would be making their returns for this contest and so while the site of the two generated genuine excitement and buzz, it was expected. What was not expected was that when they announced the starting lineups, there in his usual spots (left field and clean-up) would be Manny Ramirez. When Manny’s name was announced, it was almost too much. The crowd let out an almost cathartic round of applause with plenty of side chants and screams. Sure it would be another night until Papi would return but the Boston Red Sox as we know them were back and a beaten up fan base, having watched a team that was a mere shadow of the one we had hoped to cheer on to a post-season spot, could once again recognize its team. The game wasn’t going to mean much in the standings, but on a beautiful Labor Day evening baseball at its highest level with the players we love to cheer on so much had returned to the Hub.

The game did not disappoint either. Remarkably, Tavarez matched Garland for just about every frame. Both pitched tremendously with Garland going six before turning the ball over to Mike MacDougal while Tavarez lasted one out into the seventh. After six shutout innings and a Jermaine Dye ground out to start the seventh, Jim Thome got Tavarez for an impressive opposite field solo shot to tie the game up. Paul Konerko followed with a double to left field, after which Terry Francona took the ball and called upon Manny DelCarmen. The crowd cheered wildly for the battered Tavarez – who has endured a lot this season. I have to believe that when he hangs ‘em up, Tavarez will look back upon the outing and ovation as a standout highlight – a sort of temporary rediscovery of younger days that older players experience from time to time and are always fun for everyone involved. Unfortunately, after inducing a ground out to A.J. Pierzynski, DelCarmen yielded a bloop single to Joe Crede with two outs that plated Konerko with the go-ahead run.

By now, I can’t imagine readers do not know what happened next. The score remained 2-1 into the bottom of the ninth, when Manny worked a walk to lead off, advanced to second on a ground out by Trot and then Mike Lowell doubled off of White Sox closer Bobby Jenks to score Ramirez and tie the game. In the bottom of the tenth, the game ended in the most improbable yet appropriate manner possible.

The hero would be Carlos Pena, a local boy, a lifelong Red Sox fan whose career could liberally be described as a sort of microcosm of the 2006 Boston Red Sox season. He was highly touted, started off pretty good and then had his career seemingly crash and burn. Claimed off of waivers by his hometown team, he had been playing in Pawtucket for some time now. After September 1, Pena was called up and when Kevin Youkilis was hit by a pitch in the eighth last night and Coco Crisp came on to run for Youk, Pena was called upon to play first base in the ninth.

Now, to lead off the tenth in a tie ballgame, with a previously down-and-out crowd enthusiastic about their ballclub for the first time in weeks, the local boy came to the plate. And wouldn’t you know it; the kid knocked it out of the park to win the ballgame. Jubilation ensued, and a region was reminded of what the joys of baseball can feel like with or without the backdrop of a pennant race. Even if your club has fallen out of the race, the competition still goes on, and each and every ballgame still offers the possibility of the sort of mini-drama the Fenway crowd was treated to last evening. Sad though it may be, and I am as guilty as anyone as evidenced by my lack of posting of late, we forgot that over the last few weeks here. Expectations have become such that we now tend to root for this powerful entity to succeed rather than root for a baseball team to win individual games. But the games themselves, the competition, the drama, the ballpark – they don’t go anywhere until the season ends; no matter how far back your team may find itself. So now we have our guys back and the Boston Red Sox are once again recognizable and perhaps even formidable.

Let’s all try and enjoy the last few weeks of baseball around these parts.

Um, Yeah

By , 8/31/2006 8:00 am

There just isn’t much to say these days, is there?  The goalposts keep moving.  From division title hopes, to the wild card, to staying healthy, to staying freakin’ alive in the case of David Ortiz and Jon Lester. 

Anyway, one bright happening would be if the Sox can really swing George Kottaras for six starts from a 43 year-old. 

After a post-mortem of sorts on the Sox season, I’ll get focusing on MLB as a whole in the coming days.  Baseball fans People get all provincial around here and tend to forget that there are 29 teams that play home games west of Worcester but I for one am going to enjoy the remainder of what should be an exciting Major League Baseball season.

Swept out of the Emerald City

By , 8/28/2006 7:33 am

The Red Sox lost once again yesterday, capping off their most hapless weekend of baseball yet in 2006.  Six runs on 14 hits in three days of baseaball.  The self-entitlement crowd will kick and scream and bitch and talk about how the Sox are
“ruinin’ his/her summah” but take a look at who they had this weekend.  Better yet, take a look at who they did not have.  Manny Ramirez, Wily Mo Pena and Trot Nixon all missed time in the outfield, Alex Gonzalez and Jason Varitek in the infield.  The Sox went it without Matt Clement and Tim Wakefield in the rotation.  You look at those names, and that’s a pretty decent foundation with which to start a team.  Removing them from any one team unsurprisingly has had a decimating effect.

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Reasons not to despair too much.

Michael Bowden

Clay Buchholz

Jeff Corsaletti

Bryce Cox

Jed Lowrie (check out the August numbers)

Jacoby Ellsbury

Jay Johnson

Edgar Martinez

Brandon Moss

David Murphy

Not Looking Good

By , 8/25/2006 11:00 pm

I am heading to bed in a moment, but I defy someone to tell me a worse 5-9 than Lowell, Kapler, Mirabelli, Pedroia and Cora.  Go ‘head, include the NL.

Oh and Mark Loretta is starting at 1B. 

Injuries suck.

Red Sox 2, Angels 1

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Game story, box score.

I didn’t make it through the whole game but Josh Beckett sure was good.  Mixed his pitches, threw strikes, had a low strikeout total but an impressive result.  The only bad news was that he had to leave the game with a cut on his finger.  Hopefully his finger is a temporary health hiccup and his performance last night a sign of things to come.

This offense really plods along with Manny out, but in fairness to Jered Weaver, they faced a darn good starter last night. 

I don’t have a whole lot to offer here since I missed the game.  The Yanks lost, and the Sox are now 5.5 games back. 

At the end of action on August 24, 1978 the Red Sox enjoyed a 7.5 game lead over the Yanks.  Just sayin’…

Sox Win!

By , 8/24/2006 8:17 am

I was mad at Shaughnessy et al yesterday.  Today I am just kinda laughing at the guy.  It is our God-given right, as Boston Red Sox fans, to cheer on and support a 95-win playoff team every season. 

Remember what Theo Epstein told us Sunday night as he stood on the Fenway lawn before Game 4 of the Carnage by Lansdowne Street: “We’re not going to change our approach and all of a sudden try to build an uberteam and all of a sudden win now at the expense of the future.”

There you have it. Let’s not win now. This should help you enjoy the remaining 36 games of 2006. Just relax and check out Dustin Pedroia’s footwork around second base. It’s not about 2006 anymore. It’s about the future.

Bruce Allen puts it best…

Dan Shaughnessy treats one and all to another sarcastic and embarrassing column written prior to last night’s game. Hope the red wine from the hotel bar was good last night Dan, after all, you are in California.

Angels 4, Red Sox 3

By , 8/23/2006 6:35 am

Hate to say it but if there were ever a team Terry Francona were ill suited to manage, it’s this Sox team with its thin bullpen.  I understand that Earl Weaver and Ozzie Guillen’s hypothetical love child himself couldn’t will this Sox bullpen into a useful one but I bet that volatile little fella could at least optimize.  The blueprint should be scrapped, stomped on and burned.  The Red Sox no longer have the luxury of using a closer.  They just need pitchers – pitchers capable of getting outs and pitchers capable of doing so without yielding exorbitant amounts of runs. 

Last night the Sox lost a game by one run in which Jonathan Papelbon did not pitch but Kason Gabbard did.  Papelbon saw all of two innings in the Sox weekend sweep at the hands of the Yanks. There is no excuse for not using Papelbon at all when he is rested in these types of contests.  He needs to be leaned upon down the stretch, as he is one of very few reliable pitchers that the Red Sox employ. 

Of course check out the local writers these days or flip on sports radio and guess who public enemy #1 is?  You guessed it, Manny Ramirez.  Ramirez, who is hitting .329/.445/.635 this season and is more responsible for what success the Sox have experienced this season than any of his teammates is again being called out because he disagreed with an official scorer over the weekend on a call, according to Sean McAdam.  Somehow writers are taking liberties now and assuming that his hamstring is not in fact sore but that he is just pouting.  Whatever.  Since I do not know what happened with this situation and I certainly do not know that Ramirez is not hurting, I refuse to speculate.

What I do know is that, unlike the racist, bloviating Boston mainstream press I am not going to pin the current Red Sox plight on the one guy that had the balls to show up over the weekend against the Bombers.  Ramirez hit .727/.850/1.455 against New York over the five games and was more or less the only reason Boston had even a crack at any of the games.  Oh an by the way, he ranks among MLB’s top 20 in games played over the last five seasons. 

Manny Ramirez is having one of the best seasons a Red Sox slugger has ever enjoyed and yet he has to endure this shit.  Meanwhile, media darlings Jason Varitek and Trot Nixon, when not on the disabled list, underperform, putz and stumble through 2006, each as responsible for Boston’s diappointments this season as Ramirez is the squad’s successes.  But there’s a difference between those two and Ramirez, isn’t there?  

What Has Gone So Wrong?

By , 8/22/2006 7:37 am

The short version is that, since the All-Star Game, they have had two outstanding players (Manny Ortez), a good player (Jonathan Papelbon) and a couple of average ones (Curt Schilling & Mark Loretta).  The Red Sox have stunk for more than a month now, with the pitching being off-the-charts disgusting and the hitting looking better than it is thanks to the two demi-gods hitting in the middle of the order.

The more interesting question, and it’s one I think is worth looking into, is “how did we get here?”  I haven’t done the work yet so I am not prepared to answer this but I think a good, long look at some of the moves the Sox have made in assembling this team is in order.

I will be resuming brief game recaps this week and I will mix in a review of Sox moves – what was a defensible move at the time, what was avoidable and what just falls into the “shit happens” category.  Also, if the Sox slide further out of this thing, we’ll shift focus a bit to the “Beyond” portion of our “The Sox & Beyond” sub-title.  This season is shaping into an awfully interesting one and we like to pride ourselves on being baseball fans first and Sox fans second.  As such, while it won’t be as much fun without Boston involved, we won’t be going anywhere.

But we ain’t giving up yet.  The Red Sox kick off a nine-game west-coaster in Anaheim tonight.  No time like the present to turn this bitch around.

At What Point?

By , 8/15/2006 12:04 am

When is it fair to ask your stud 25-year old to simply step up?  He throws 97, has a hook that, say, 90% of MLB’s pitchers would kill for but what does he have to show for it?

I don’t really have any answers here and I am inclined to assume he is trying his best but man, is it so much to ask for a quality start from time to time?

I find it really hard to get overly angry when a guy the Sox were right in thinking they could depend on for quality pitching turns out to let them down time and again. 

Josh Beckett has sucked and the Sox have paid dearly.  And I guess that just sucks.

Red Sox 11, Orioles 9

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By , 8/14/2006 7:09 am

A win is a win but sheesh, talk about a game that left your head spinning. On the one hand, Jon Lester was horrible again – an ominous longer-term sign. On the other, Mike Lowell and Kevin Youkilis showed flashes of their early-season form – something that will not be a luxury but a necessity if Sox hurlers are going to stink up the joint three out of every five nights. To see those two hitting with pop again sure was encouraging but then the bullpen once again looked shaky and I think it might officially be time to downgrade Jonathan Papelbon from “dominant on an historic level” to merely “very good.” Still, the offense managed 11 runs with zero combined hits from David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez – another positive indicator. And so it went yesterday. I have no idea what to make of this club but for better or worse, whether you want to believe or not, here we are again – neck and neck with the Yankees and a month-and-a-half of baseball to go.

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A couple of interesting items from yesterday’s action. One, Angels rookie Jered Weaver leveraged his “average stuff” (just ask Keith Law and Kevin Goldstein) and shut the Yankees down over six innings yesterday, allowing three runs and three walks while striking out eight. Two, the White Sox polished off the Detroit Tigers for the sweep and in the process pulled to within 5.5 games of first place in the AL Central. This bit of news should be of interest to Red Sox fans for a few reasons. One, the White Sox sit atop the AL Wild Card standings. Two, if they continue to gain ground on Detroit, all of a sudden the Tigers become Boston and New York’s competition for the Wild Card as well – which brings us to the series set to kick off tonight at Fenway.

It was going to be important no matter what. These days, they’re all critical. But now, with five (nine?) teams competing for four playoff slots, any contest pitting two such teams takes on added importance. I won’t attempt to tell the incredible story of the Tigers turnaround- Rany Jazayerli knocked that one out of the park last week – but I will say they come intp Boston limping a bit as they’ve lost five straight. Whether that means they are vulnerable or extra hungary remains to be seen.

Nate Robertson and Josh Beckett tonight.

Red Sox 9, Orioles 2

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By , 8/12/2006 7:08 am

So I try and stand strong and put on a happy face but I would be lying if I didn’t concede that sometimes I have serious doubts about this team. The same irrational panic mode that others tend to enter into can afflict me as well. So yes, I was one of the few million or so New Enlanders you could hear simultaneously breathing a sigh of relief last night.

“These guys really can still put up some runs. They really can get some quality starting pitching from someone not named Curt Schilling. And, get this, they can do it in the same game!”

The beatdown is a staple of quality teams. About once a week, a good team overwhelms its opposition. They will get to a starter early, tear through mediocre middle relievers, and all the while simply ask a dependable starter to throw strikes and protect a wide margin. In the first half of the year, the Red Sox would do this on a regular basis. Since the All-Star Break, not so much. There was the 7-0 win at home against Oakland, the only win of a 3-1 series loss, and a 13-5 victory the following week at McAfee Stadium but really that has been about it.

Last night’s 9-2 pummeling of Baltimore was particularly encouraging for two reasons. One, it wasn’t David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez carrying the offense. Both contributed, but it was a balanced attack that led to the nine runs. Two, David Wells was very good. His stuff was not overpowering, as he only had four strikeouts and he did yield nine hits, but his trademark pinpoint accuracy allowed him to get out of innings quickly. If ever Wells were suited to pitch in front of a Boston Red Sox team, it’s this one because of its excellent defensive play. An accurate pitcher without Hall-of-Fame stuff willing to pound the zone can easily succeed in front of this Sox defense. Wells has allowed a number of hits over his last two starts, 17 in 13 innings to be exact, but he has also just walked two. More importantly, he has been better in each successive start since coming off of the DL.

Through the five game losing streak I tried to encourage people not to bail on these guys. They’re good, and had (are still in the midst of?) a rough stretch. By the same token, I am not even close to ready to declare this team back after one win against the Orioles. They are sending Jason Johnson to the hill today, the Orioles will start a resurgent Daniel Cabrera tomorrow, and then after Baltimore leaves tomorrow evening, the two best baseball teams in the world swing through town for eight games. A lot can still go wrong, but it’s nice to know the Sox still have it in them to lay one on a team the way they did last night.

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It’s scoreboard watching season, so be sure to be stopping over to Bronx Banter, Yanks Fan v. Sox Fan, Exile in Wrigleyville, etc. The Yanks lost last night, Jose Contreras was excellent in a White Sox win over Detroit and A.J. Burnett had his way with the Twins as rookie phenom Matt Garza struggled in his debut.

Some Items To Take Solace In

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By , 8/11/2006 7:49 am

1) Precedent

The Red Sox have made the playoffs in three consecutive seasons, and here is how things looked after the August 10th close of business in each of the last three years.

2003: The Red Sox were 68-49, 3 games back of the Yankees and leading the Wild Card by a game.

End Result: Aaron Boone Grady Little

2004: 61-50, 9.5 games back of New York and tied for the Wild Card lead.

End Result: World Series Champions

2005: 66-47, 5.5 game lead over the Yanks.

End Result: A tiebreaker loss to the Yanks for the division and a three-game sweep at the hands of the eventual champion Chicago White Sox

2006: 65-48, 3 games back of the Yankees and 2 games back of the White Sox for the Wild Card.

End Result: Who knows?

The point here of course is that there is no reason whatsoever to panic. Things look grim at the moment, with injuries and crappy performance killing Boston while the Yanks and White Sox appear to be hitting their stride. But the Sox are still very much in this thing, and I for one do not believe that the team that just stumbled through a 1-5 stretch against the dregs of the American League is the one we will see for the remainder of the season. Remember, Boston is two Jonathan Papelbon pitches away from being a game out in the AL East and tied for the Wild Card.

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2) Luck Turning for Other Teams?

Francisco Liriano is out indefinitely, Jered Weaver has been human of late and Ervin Santana had to leave last night’s game after being hit with a line drive. Despite coming back strong last night, Johnny Damon has been hampered by nagging injuries and had to leave Wednesday’s game. The Red Sox are experiencing a low-point for sure, but that does not mean that their competition will not experience woes of their own. But time is of the essence, and the Sox need to be putting some wins up.

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3) Pitching Coming Around?

David Wells and Jason Johnson have each looked ok in their last few outings. Curt Schilling has been solid, and even Rudy Seanez and Kyle Snyder have been contributing. The Red Sox’ worst pitchers of late have been, in fact, some of their very most talented pitchers. Jonathan Papelbon, Jon Lester, Craig Hansen, Manny Delcarmen, Josh Beckett and Mike Timlin are all guys that we can count on being better over the remainder of the year than they have been over the last few weeks. If Boomer and Jason Johnson’s respective mini-resurgences are for real, then I think that we can reasonably hope for the rest of the staff to fall into place – particularly with Tim Wakefield’s return on the horizon.

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4) The Schedule

Yup, after Baltimore leaves town this weekend, the Sox have a brutal stretch. Three at home against Detroit, five at home against the Bombers, followed by three in Anaheim, Seattle and Oakland, respectively. But then the Sox then finish the season with 18 of their final 29 at home. Yes there are some challenging teams on the upcoming schedule, but in total the Red Sox play 29 of their final 49 games at Fenway Park, where they are 35-17 this season. They also have nine head-to-head tilts with New York remaining. This thing is very doable, and for the taking should the Sox be up to the task.

Royals 5, Red Sox 4

By , 8/10/2006 7:16 am

No real need to update yesterday’s post.

Sigh.

Royals 6, Red Sox 4

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By , 8/9/2006 6:39 am

When you don’t have a dependable starter to speak of in your rotation, your bullpen routinely squanders leads and only three or four guys in your lineup can hit, you can no longer hope to be seeking refuge in places like Tampa Bay and Kansas City. You’re better off heading to Montgomery or Wichita to try your hand against the Biscuits or the Wranglers.

The good news, of course, is that the Red Sox are going to snap out of this. The Red Sox are not going to play .375 ball over the remainder of the season the way they have over their last 16 games. Boston has a good team, and before long, will play accordingly.

Recap from Joy of Sox and box score.

Also, here is a good summary of the Yanks/White Sox match-up last night by Vince Galloro over at Exile in Wrigleyville. The Pale Hose won a thriller.

Devil Rays 7, Red Sox 6

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By , 8/7/2006 7:27 am

You are going to want to check out Chadd Finn today.

Red Sox 3, Rays 2

By , 8/5/2006 1:01 am

See this is how they have to win – with their horses pulling more than their weight. Basically, two Red Sox won the game tonight for their 23 other mates. Curt Schilling got it done and David Ortiz blasted two solo shots to pace the Sox to a narrow win over a mediocre club. Such is life these days. I have a pal, and he will read this, who will insist that this is merely a psychological mechanism on my part but I mean this; I am going to enjoy the hell out of rooting for a Sox team out of which I do not expect much.

My buddy insists that I am just setting expectations low so as to alleviate the pain of an inevitable let down. I can’t get inside my head well enough to deny that charge but I am more excited about pulling for these Red Sox than any other club in recent years because I want to root like hell for a team that I think has no business in the post-season.

These Red Sox are clearly New York’s inferiors. Same thing with Chicago and Minnesota in my opinion. But this is different than any other year since 2002 for me. See I have been burned, rather publicly at times, in stating that the Red Sox were better than their competition in past seasons. But I have no delusions of grandeur down the stretch in 2006. The Red Sox just aren’t as good as they have been in past years but who cares? Let’s just root like hell and hope the Sox can beat these other clubs over a two-month stretch. Far crazier things have happened. So check your anger at the gate, get behind these guys and let’s see what they can do.

Boomer’s on the hill today…

Indians 7, Red Sox 6

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By , 8/4/2006 7:45 am

When your team is hampered by injuries and you are facing an uphill battle, you need your best to step to the fore and bear some more responsibility in order to cover up some roster deficiencies. As such, Josh Beckett failed miserably last night.

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