Meltdown month continues for Red Sox
http://espn.go.com/blog/sweetspot/post/_/id/16725/meltdown-month-continues-for-red-sox
The Boston Red Sox have had months like this before. They went 9-21 in August
of 2006. They went 8-21 in June of 1965 and followed that up with a 9-21 mark
in July. That was a rough year: the Sox lost 100 games. September of 1952 was
difficult, as they stumbled to a 7-20 finish. You probably don’t remember
May of 1932: Boston went 4-21, but that team was pretty execrable: It
finished 43-111, went 3-19 on one 22-game road trip, finished 64 games out of
first place and drew just 182,150 fans for the season.
But none of those months compare to this one. No way. Not when one of the
biggest collapses in baseball history is at stake, not when a team of MVP
candidates and All-Stars and a payroll approximately four times that of the
team it’s trying to fend off is on the verge of a complete disaster.
If you were like me on Monday, you were flipping back and forth between the
Red Sox-Orioles and the Yankees-Rays games. I was checking Twitter, emailing
my fellow baseball fanatic friends, taking notes and soaking in this crazy
sport we love. I was moving around more than a Tim Wakefield knuckleball. One
second, I’m watching an Orioles left fielder named Matt Angle make the worst
throw I’ve seen all season, allowing the Red Sox to score a second-inning
run. The next second, I see Tampa Bay’s hopes sink when Robinson Cano
singles in a run for the Yankees.
But in baseball, things change quickly. The Rays take a 3-2 lead, only to
blow a potential big inning when Johnny Damon and Evan Longoria are both
caught stealing -- Damon at second, Longoria at home -- on the worst executed
double steal we’ve probably seen since those ’32 Sox.
The Orioles tie it when Chris Davis lines a Josh Beckett changeup into center
for an RBI hit, but miss a golden opportunity when Beckett gets a popout and
strikeout with the bases loaded. In Tampa, James Shields settles down and Red
Sox fans are cursing a Yankees lineup that doesn’t include Mark Teixeira or
Nick Swisher.
But the Red Sox can’t get the big hit on this night. Tommy Hunter allows
seven hits, including a Jed Lowrie home run, plus three walks in five
innings, but the Sox score only two runs; they’ll leave 12 runners on base
by game’s end. Sox fans may or may not remember that, but they’ll certainly
remember the bottom of the sixth if their luck doesn’t turn the next two
days: With Beckett tiring, Davis doubled to right with two outs to give the
Orioles a 3-2 lead. Then came the play: Robert Andino drilled an 0-1 pitch to
deep center field. Jacoby Ellsbury tracked it, appeared to catch it, but
crashed into the wall. The ball fell out of his glove and Andino raced around
the bases for an inside-the-park home run. How many emotions on that one play?
That’s what baseball does to you. One night you’re cheering Ellsbury and
screaming at your TV and jumping off your couch late on a Sunday night when
he hits a 14th-inning home run; the next night, you’re sick to your stomach.
Well, unless you’re a Rays fan or a champion of the underdog or just rooting
for more games that matter and maybe a one-game playoff in which the Rays
could conceivably start rookie sensation Matt Moore, he of the one career
major league start (but, oh, what a start).
The Red Sox are 6-19 this month. They’re 2-19 when they don’t score at
least 12 runs (four of their wins: 12-7, 14-0, 18-6, 18-9). They’re 1-3 in
games that Beckett has started this month and 1-4 in games that Jon Lester
starts.
The Rays are 15-10 in September. They’re now tied for the wild card. With 21
games left in the season, they trailed the Red Sox by eight games. They’ve
scratched and clawed and scraped across just enough runs to back up the great
pitching from Shields and David Price and Jeremy Hellickson. It’s been a
thrilling, miraculous comeback.
But let’s not fool anyone: This storyline will be remembered for what the
Red Sox do over the next two (or three) days. That’s the pressure that comes
with the expectations of victory and a payroll the size of the Hancock Tower.
Sorry, Boston, but nobody outside of Red Sox Nation is going to feel bad for
you; you are, after all, just like the Yankees, the team everybody else wants
to see lose.
Two games. The Red Sox are so discombobulated there were rumors they were
looking to make a trade for a starter for the final game, so they won’t have
to use Lester on three days’ rest. If Lester does start that game, they’ll
likely have to start Wakefield (5.12 ERA) or John Lackey (6.41 ERA) on three
days’ rest in the potential tiebreaker.
Man, $161 million just doesn’t buy you the joy it used to, does it?
--
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