Showing posts with label Reggie Jefferson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reggie Jefferson. Show all posts

Monday, August 16, 1999

Daubach, Sox Walkoff A's (8/16/99)

For eight innings it looked like the Oakland A's were going to pull in to a tie for the American League Wild Card slot. Brian Rose got rocked for 4 runs in just 2 1/3 innings although the Sox got some runs back courtesy of Reggie Jefferson and John Valentin. The A's got a run off Rich Garces to take a 5-3 into the bottom of the ninth. Things looked bleak when John Valentin struck out for the second out but A's manager Art Howe made a boo-boo. He brought in Tim Worrell to face the AL Player of The Week Brian Daubach. Daubach continued his hot streak with a bases clearing double to win the game. The Sox had stunned the A's 6-5 at Fenway Park.
                                                   Shireen Crutchfield approves of the win

Rose got the ball in the top of the first inning and Ryan Christenson grounded out to third to start. Randy Velarde grounded out to first and Jason Giambi struck out swinging to end the inning. Omar Olivares got the ball to start the bottom of the first and Jose Offerman grounded a single up the middle. John Valentin grounded into a double play and Brian Daubach flied out to the left field wall  to end the inning.

John Jaha grounded out to short to start the top of the second before old friend Matt Stairs grounded out to second. Ben Grieve grounded out to second to end the inning. Nomar Garciaparra popped up to first in foul territory to start the bottom of the second. Reggie Jefferson singled to center but Jason Varitek forced Jefferson at second to end the inning.

The A's struck first in the top of the third as Miguel Tejada walked to start. Eric Chavez singled to right and AJ Hinch hit a home run all the way to Yellowstone to put the A's on top. Christenson walked and Velarde singled to center, but Giambi took strike three. Jaha ripped a base hit to center to score Christenson to chase the incompetent Rose. He allowed 4 runs in 2 2/3 innings on 4 hits and 2 walks. Mark Guthrie came in to pitch and Stairs moved the runners over with a grounder to first. Grieve flied out to left to end the inning with the A's up 4-0.
                                                              Rose gets hammered

Donnie Sadler grounded out to short to start the bottom of the third before Trot Nixon flied out to center. Offerman grounded out to short to end the inning.

Tejada walked to start the top of the fourth but Chavez struck out swinging. Hinch forced Tejada at second and promptly stole second. Christenson grounded out to short to end the inning. The Sox struck back in the bottom of the fourth as Valentin grounded out to short to start. Daubach walked and Nomar was hit with a pitch, but O'Leary lined out to third. Jefferson lined a ball off the Monster for a single to score Daubach. Varitek grounded back to the mound to end the inning with the Sox down 4-1.
                                                            Daubach scores a run

Guthrie returned for the top of the fifth and the Sox broadcast team was chosen by their first round pick in the 1999 draft Rick Asadoorian. Hope he makes it some day. Velarde struck out swinging, Giambi flied out to left and Jaha struck out swinging to end the inning.
                                                            Asadoorian in the house

The Sox struck back with Olmedo Saenz in for Giambi to start the bottom of the fifth. Sadler grounded out to short but Nixon stroked a seeing eye single in to right. Offerman moved Nixon to second with a grounder to first and Valentin ripped a base hit to right. Nixon scored to cut the lead in half but Daubach struck out swinging to end the inning with the Sox down 4-2.
                                                             Sox inch closer

Stairs struck out swinging to open the top of the sixth but Grieve lined out short. That was it for Guthrie as Rich Garces came in to pitch to Tejeda. Miguel lined out to third to end the inning. Garciaparra reached on an error to start the bottom of the sixth but O'Leary could only move Nomar to second with a fly ball to right. Jefferson grounded out to second to move Nomar to third but Varitek grounded out to second to end the inning.

The A's struck in the top of the seventh as Chavez lined out to center to start. Hinch struck out swinging but Christenson singled to right. Christenson stole second and Velarde singled to to center, the ball getting booted by Sadler for an error to score Christenson. Saenz lined out to center to end the inning with the A's ahead 5-2.

The Sox fought back in the bottom of the seventh as Sadler beat out a grounder to Tejeda to start. A passed ball moved Sadler to second and Nixon moved Donnie to third with a grounder to second. Offerman singled in the hole at short to score Sadler to cut the lead and chase Olivares. Greg McMichael came in to pitch and Valentin struck out swinging and Daubach flied out to right to end the inning with the Sox down 5-3.
                                                            Sadler scores a run

Jaha took strike three to start the top of the eighth before Stairs grounded out to second. Grieve got a base hit to right and Jason McDonald ran for him. Tejada struck out swinging to end the inning. Garciaparra grounded out to third to start the bottom of the eighth and Buddy Groom came in to pitch to O'Leary. Troy grounded back to the mound and that was it for Groom. Doug Jones came in to pitch and Mike Stanley pinch hit for Jefferson. Stanley grounded out to short to end the inning.

Derek Lowe came in to pitch the top of the ninth and Chavez struck out swinging to start. Hinch grounded out to short and Christenson took strike three to end the inning. The Sox refused to go quietly in the bottom of the ninth as Varitek dumped a base hit to right to start. Butch Huskey pinch hit for Sadler and hit a line drive base hit to center to put the tying run on. Darren Lewis pinch ran for Huskey but Nixon flied out to left. Offerman drilled a base hit to right to load the bases but Valentin struck out swinging. A's manager Art Howe brought in Tim Worrell to face Daubach and one strike away from defeat, Daubach launched a ball off the Monster. Varitek and Lewis scored easily and the throw came home to get Huskey....OFFLINE....RED SOX WIN!!!
                                                                   Sox win


Hero of The Night is Brian Daubach. He got the bases clearing doubled to win the game.
                                                     Nomar hugs our hero



The Good:

Jose Offerman was 3 for 5 with an rbi and a run scored.

Reggie Jefferson was 2 for 3 with an rbi.

Darren Lewis scored a run as a pinch runner.

Donnie Sadler was 1 for 3 with a run scored.

Butch Huskey singled and scored as a pinch hitter.

Mark Guthrie tossed 3 1/3 scoreless innings.

Derek Lowe got the win with a scoreless ninth inning.



The Bad:

Troy O'Leary was 0 for 4.

Mike Stanley was 0 for 1 at the plate.

Brian Rose allowed 4 runs in just 2 1/3 innings.



The Ugly:

John Valentin was just 1 for 5 with 2 strikeouts but drove in a run.

Nomar Garciaparra was 0 for 3 but was hit with a pitch.

Jason Varitek was just 1 for 4.

Trot Nixon was just 1 for 4 but scored a run.

Rich Garces allowed a run in 2 1/3 innings.




Final Thoughts:

What a week for Daubach and what a come from behind win for the Red Sox. The Sox have a legitimate chance to repeat as Wild Card champions or overtake the Yankees if they can go on a run. Wins like this can launch a team with the proper momentum. Things are clicking and hopefully the Sox can keep this going. The only drawback is Brian Rose continues to pitch like trash. The Sox are going to need starting pitching if they're going to beat the Yankees and just Pedro Martinez and Bret Saberhagen isn't going to cut it. The win improved the Sox to 66-52, 6.5 games behind the New York Yankees for first place in the AL East. The Sox look to make it two in a row against Oakland tomorrow night when Bret Saberhagen (9-4) takes on Gil Heredia of Oakland. The game begins at 7:05 PM at Fenway Park.

Sunday, August 1, 1999

Saberhagen, Sox Drop Yankees (8/1/99)

The Boston Red Sox sent a statement that this year is much different to the New York Yankees. After splitting the first two games of this series, the Sox sent the Yankees out of Boston with 2 losses in 3 games. Bret Saberhagen (7-4, 3.21 ERA) tossed a gutty game to hold the Yankees to just 2 runs in 7 strong innings. Trailing 2-1, Brian Daubach hit a home run off Yankees starter Orlando Hernandez to tie the game in the fourth. In the sixth, Nomar Garciaparra drove in the go-ahead run and Troy O'Leary hit a two run bomb off "El Duque". The Yankees rallied for two runs against Tim Wakefield in the top of the eighth, but Tim stranded the tying run at third when he slammed the door in the ninth. The Sox had taken 2 out of 3 from New York with a 5-4 victory at Fenway Park.
                                                   Jennifer Rovero approves of the win

The Yankees wasted no time getting to Saberhagen in the top of the first as Chuck Knoblauch grounded out to first to start. Derek Jeter was frozen for strike three but Paul O'Neill doubled to left. Bernie Williams tripled to the centerfield wall to put the Yankees on top. Tino Martinez popped up to second to end the inning with the Yankees up 1-0.
                                                              Triple for Williams

Hernandez got the ball in the bottom of the first and Jose Offerman walked to start. John Valentin struck out swinging but Brian Daubach flied out to center. Nomar Garciaparra was retired on a squibber in front of the plate to end the inning.

Chili Davis struck out swinging to start the top of the second before Jorge Posada hit a comebacker back to Saberhagen. Shane Spencer flied out to center to end the inning. Troy O'Leary walked to start the bottom of the second but Reggie Jefferson grounded into a double play. Jason Varitek hit a broken bat grounder to Knoblauch to end the inning.

The Yankees struck again in the top of the third as Scott Brosius ripped a base hit to right to start. Knoblauch singled to left but Jeter popped up to short. O'Neill got a base hit to left to load the bases and Williams hit a sac fly to center to score Brosius. Martinez popped up to third to end the inning with the Yankees up 2-0.
                                                             Yankees get another run

The Sox struck back in the top of the third as Damon Buford doubled down the third base line and Trot Nixon ripped a base hit to left to score him to cut the lead. Offerman grounded into a double play and Valentin popped up to center to end the inning with the Sox down 2-1.
                                                              Buford scores a run

Davis was frozen for strike three to start the top of the fourth before Posada popped up to third in foul territory. Spencer flied out to right to end the inning. The Sox struck again in the bottom of the fourth as Daubach clobbered his 13th home run of the season to tie the game. Nomar popped up to center and O'Leary flied out to right but Jefferson drew a walk. Williams robbed Varitek with a hell of a catch to end the inning with the game tied 2-2.
                                                       Daubach ties it up

Saberhagen cruised in the top of the fifth as Brosius flied out to right to start. Knoblauch grounded out to second and Jeter flied out to right to start. The Monster robbed Buford of a home run high off the wall so he had to settle for a leadoff double in the bottom of the fifth. Nixon popped up to Jeter and Offerman grounded out to second to move Buford to third. Valentin lined out to left to end the inning.

O'Neill grounded out to first to start the top of the sixth and Williams popped up to O'Leary. Martinez popped up to second to end the inning. The Sox rallied in the bottom of the sixth as Daubach doubled into the right field corner to start. Nomar singled into centerfield to score Daubach and O'Leary crushed his 20th home run of the season to put Boston on top. Jefferson singled to right and that was it for Hernandez. Allen Watson came in to pitch and Varitek grounded out to second to move Jefferson to second. Buford grounded out to third and Nixon popped up to Posada to end the inning with the Sox up 5-2.
                                                        Home run O'Leary

Saberhagen returned for one last inning in the top of the seventh and Davis grounded out to first to start. Posada grounded out to first as well and Spencer grounded out to short to end the inning. Saberhagen retired 14 in a row in 7 strong innings allowing just 5 hits.
                                                            Saberhagen was outstanding

Offerman walked to start the bottom of the seventh to chase Watson. Ramiro Mendoza came in to pitch and Valentin singled to right to move Offerman to third. Daubach struck out swinging and Garciaparra grounded into a double play to end the inning.

Tim Wakefield came in to pitch the top of the eighth and Brosius struck out swinging to start. Knoblauch walked, stole second and stole third on the Jeter swinging strikeout. O'Neill singled to right to score Knoblauch and Williams tripled off the centerfield door to score Paul. Martinez flied out to left to end the inning with the Yankees down 5-4.
                                                           Yankees inch closer

O'Leary grounded out to second to start the bottom of the eighth and Jefferson lined out to left. Varitek grounded back to the mound to end the inning.

Wakefield returned to finish off the stop of the ninth and Davis doubled to center to put the tying run on to start. Chad Curtis pinch ran for Davis but Posada grounded back to the mound. Spencer flied out to the left field warning track but Brosius walked. Knoblauch singled in the hole at short but Davis remained at third to load the bases. With the game on the line, Jeter forced Knoblauch at second to end the game. The Sox had won it 5-4.
                                                             Sox win


Hero of The Night is Bret Saberhagen. He held the Yankees to just two runs in 7 strong innings to earn the win. He gave up 5 hits while striking out 3.
                                                        Hero Saberhagen



The Good:

Jose Offerman walked twice in four plate appearances.

Brian Daubach was 2 for 4 with a 2 run home run and 2 runs scored.

Troy O'Leary was 1 for 3 with a walk and a 2 run home run.

Reggie Jefferson was 1 for 3 with a walk.

Damon Buford was 2 for 3 with a run scored.

Trot Nixon was 1 for 3 with an rbi.



The Bad:

Jason Varitek was 0 for 4.



The Ugly:

John Valentin was just 1 for 4 with a strikeout.

Nomar Garciaparra was just 1 for 4 but drove in a run and scored a run.

Tim Wakefield got the save but allowed 2 runs in 2 innings.




Final Thoughts:

Nothing like starting the stretch by taking 2 out of 3 from the Yankees. Saberhagen is the key to the season because last year proved you need more than just Pedro Martinez to win in the playoffs. Saberhagen dominated the Yankees after the third inning and that's the kind of start the Sox need from Bret moving forward. Daubach just may be one of the greatest scrap heap pickups of all time if he keeps up this pace for the rest of the season. If he hits 10-12 home runs he might put himself in the AL MVP race let alone AL Rookie of The Year. Still, as long as Pedro and Bret stay healthy the Sox have a chance down the stretch. The win improved the Sox to 57-47, 5.5 games behind the Yankees for first place in the AL East. The Sox now have to face the AL Central leading Cleveland Indians coming to town. Pat Rapp goes for the Sox against Dwight Gooden for Cleveland. The game begins tomorrow night at 7:05 PM at Fenway Park.

Saturday, June 6, 1998

Jones, Mets Blank Sox (6/6/98)

So much for revenge of the 1986 World Series. After the Mets emphatically beat down Boston Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez, today they took the offense out of the game and blanked the home town team. Bobby Jones tossed a 3 hit shutout through 8 innings while the Sox bats did absolutely nothing. Meanwhile Tim Wakefield (6-3, 4.27 ERA) tossed one of his best games of the season allowing one run on just 1 hit and a walk.....and lost. Butch Huskey scored the only run of the game on a damn balk to put the Mets up in the sixth inning. The Sox got the tying run on base in the eighth and ninth innings but couldn't deliver the punch they needed. The Mets had beaten the Sox 1-0 at Fenway Park. How many runs did the Sox score Dean Wormer?

Wakefield got the ball in the top of the first and Brian McRae grounded out to second to start. Bernard Gilkey popped up to Darren Lewis and John Olerud flied out to left to end the inning. Jones got the ball in the bottom of the first as Darren Lewis dumped a base hit to left to start. Reggie Jefferson got a seeing eye single into right but Nomar Garciaparra hit into a 5-3 double play to put Jefferson at second. Mo Vaughn popped up to center to end the inning.

Butch Huskey led off the top of the second by flying out to the centerfield warning track before Carlos Baerga grounded out to second. Edgardo Alfonso singled to left but Matt Franco struck out swinging to end the inning. Troy O'Leary led off the bottom of the second with a single off the leg of Rey Ordonez but John Valentin just missed a home run off Pesky's Pole by 5 feet. John popped up to second, Scott Hatteberg forced O'Leary at second and Mike Benjamin grounded back to the mound to end the inning.

Ordonez flied out to center to begin the top of the third before Alberto Castillo flied out to center. McRae popped up to short to end the inning. Darren Bragg led off the bottom of the third by grounding out to second and Lewis lined out to left. Jefferson grounded out to first to end the inning.

Gilkey flied out to center to start the top of the fourth but Vaughn went OLE! on a grounder by Olerud for an error. Huskey flied out to the left field warning track and Baerga popped up to third to end the inning. Garciaparra grounded out to third to start the bottom of the fourth before Vaughn drew a walk. O'Leary grounded into a double play to end the inning.

Alfonso grounded out to short to start the top of the fifth before Franco popped up to Vaughn. Benjamin booted a ball from Ordonez for an error but Castillo forced Rey at second to end the inning. Valentin took strike three to start the bottom of the fifth before Hatteberg grounded out to second. Benjamin walked but Bragg struck out swinging to end the inning.

The Mets struck first in the top of the sixth as McRae walked to start. Gilkey struck out swinging but McRae swiped second. Olerud grounded out to second to move McRae to third and he scored on a balk of all things. Sox manager Jimy Williams ran out of the dugout for an explanation to no avail. Huskey grounded out to short to end the inning with the Mets up 1-0.
                                                  "That's a balk and you know it!"

The Sox failed to respond in the bottom of the sixth as Lewis flied out to center to start. Jefferson grounded out to first and Garciaparra lined out to right to end the inning.

Baerga popped up to Vaughn in foul territory to start the top of the seventh before Alfonso grounded back to the mound. Franco popped up to short to end the inning. Vaughn lined out to left to start the bottom of the seventh before O'Leary grounded out to second. Valentin grounded out to third to end the inning.

Ordonez flied out to center to begin the top of the eighth and Benjamin made a great play to rob Castillo of a hit. Franco popped up to short to end the inning. That was it for Wakefield who allowed just 1 hit and a walk in 8 strong innings, allowing just the balked in run. 
                                                     Wakefield deserved better

Hatteberg led off the bottom of the eighth by striking out swinging and Midre Cummings pinch hit for Benjamin. Cummings struck out swinging but Bragg walked to put the tying run on. Lewis forced Bragg at second to end the inning.

Lou Merloni came in to play second in the top of the ninth with Tom Gordon now on the mound. Gilkey grounded out to short to start but Olerud singled off the Monster. Huskey grounded into a double play to end the inning. John Franco came in to close out the bottom of the ninth as Damon Buford pinch hit for Jefferson to start. Buford grounded out to third and Garciaparra took a full count strike three on the inside corner for strike three. Vaughn ripped a base hit to center and Jimy Williams sent Steve Avery the pitcher to run for Vaughn. O'Leary struck out swinging to end the game. The Mets had won it 1-0.
                                                                 Mets win


Jackass of the Night is Nomar Garciaparra. He was 0 for 4 with a strikeout while hitting into a huge double play in the first, plus taking strike three in the ninth.
                                                         Nomar the Jackass



The Good:

Reggie Jefferson was 1 for 3.

Mo Vaughn was 1 for 3 with a walk.

One of the rare times the losing pitcher ends up on the good list but Tim Wakefield pitched his best game of the season, allowing just 1 run on 1 hit and a walk in 8 innings of work.



The Bad:

Damon Buford was 0 for 1 as a pinch hitter.

John Valentin was 0 for 3 with a strikeout.



The Ugly:

Darren Lewis was just 1 for 4.

Troy O'Leary was just 1 for 4 with a strikeout.

Scott Hatteberg was 0 for 3 with a strikeout.

Mike Benjamin was 0 for 1 with an error but walked.

Midre Cummings struck out as a pinch hitter.

Darren Bragg was 0 for 2 with a strikeout but walked.



Honorable Mention:

Lou Merloni played second base in the final two innings.

Steve Avery pinch ran for Vaughn in the ninth inning.




Final Thoughts:

You can't lose a game worse than that, especially after Wakefield utterly dominated that game. John Valentin missed what would have been the game winning home run by five feet and the Sox bats just couldn't get a clutch hit when it counted. Wakefield allowed 1 hit in 8 innings and still lost, that's absolutely disgusting. The Sox quite frankly are a light hitting team after Mo Vaughn and losing a game like this is disheartening. The New York Yankees continue to win and losing two straight to the New York Mets at home is a recipe for disaster. The loss dropped the Sox to 34-25, 10.5 games behind the Yankees for first place in the AL East. The Sox look to avoid the sweep tomorrow when today's pinch runner Steve Avery (2-1) takes on Masato Yoshii of the Mets. The game begins at 8:05 PM at Fenway Park.

Wednesday, April 1, 1998

Martinez Dazzles on Opening Day (4/1/98)

So that's what an ace is like? After the Boston Red Sox let Roger Clemens walk at the end of 1996, they didn't get an ace pitcher for the 1997 season. Their 78-84 record on the season last year showed how well that went. After Sox GM traded for the National League's best pitcher in Pedro Martinez (1-0, 0.00 ERA), the Sox now have a legitimate ace again. Martinez was outstanding, tossing 7 shutout innings while striking out 11 Oakand A's. The Sox bats were silenced by Oakland starter Tom Candiotti but they managed to scratch out two runs. A sac fly by Darren Bragg put the Sox on top and a sac fly by John Valentin were all the runs the Sox would score. Dennis Eckersley made his return to Boston after 14 years with a scoreless eighth and new closer Tom Gordon slammed the door in the bottom of the ninth. The 1998 Red Sox started the season on the right foot with a 2-0 win over the A's at the Oakland Coliseum.
                                              Marliece Andrada approves of the win

Candiotti got the ball in the top of the first and AL Rookie of the Year Nomar Garciaparra led off by lining back to the mound. John Valentin struck out swinging on a knuckleball down and away but Mo Vaughn lined a single to right for the season's first hit. Reggie Jefferson flied out to deep center to end the inning. Martinez made his Red Sox debut in the bottom of the first and Rickey Henderson led off with a fly out to left. Dave Magadan struck out looking and shook his head walking back to the dugout before Ben Grieve grounded out to second to end the inning.

Troy O'Leary opened the top of the second inning by trying to pull the ball, ending up grounding out to second. Scott Hatteberg popped up to second and Darren Lewis made his Red Sox debut by popping up to first in foul territory to end the inning. Old pal Matt Stairs struck out swinging to open the bottom of the second before Jason Giambi also went down hacking. Scott Spiezio lined out to right to end the inning.

Darren Bragg went down hacking to begin the top of the third and 22 year old rookie Donnie Sadler made his major league debut by grounding out to third. Nomar flied out to center to end the inning. AJ Hinch grounded out to third to begin the bottom of the third before Jason McDonald struck out swinging. Rafael Bournigal flied out to left to end the inning.

The Sox threatened in the top of the fourth as Valentin flied out to center to start. Vaughn and Jefferson stroked back to back singles and Mo moved to third on the O'Leary liner to right. Jefferson took second on a passed ball but Hatteberg grounded out to first to end the inning. Henderson grounded out to second to start the bottom of the fourth and Magadan also grounded out to second. Grieve singled to right and Stairs walked, but Giambi whiffed to end the inning.

The Sox struck first in the top of the fifth as Lewis reached on an error by Spiezio to begin. A wild pitch moved Lewis to third and he scored on the Bragg sac fly. Sadler flied out to center and Nomar grounded out to short to end the inning but it was 1-0 Sox.
                                                         Bragg drives in a run

More than enough cushion for Martinez as he turned up the heat to freeze Spiezio to start the bottom of the fifth. Hinch and McDonald both went down swinging to end the inning.

Boston threatened again in the top of the sixth as Valentin singled to left to begin. Vaughn took strike three but Jefferson flied out to left. O'Leary singled Valentin to third but Hatteberg grounded out to second to end the inning. Bournigal flied out to right to start the bottom of the sixth but Henderson walked. Magadan flied out to center and Grieve struck out swinging to end the inning.

The Sox struck again in the top of the seventh as Lewis beat out an infield single to short and Bragg doubled him to third. Sadler was plunked to load the bases but Lewis was thrown out at home on a force by Nomar. Valentin scored Bragg with a sac fly to increase the lead but Vaughn grounded out to second to end the inning with the Sox ahead 2-0.
                                                             Valentin drives in a run

The A's mounted a threat in the bottom of the seventh as Stairs and Giambi stroked back to back singles to start. Spiezio dropped down a bunt to move both runners over but Martinez struck out Hinch swinging on a nasty curveball. McDonald took strike three to end the inning. That was it for Martinez who was great in his first start, tossing 7 shutout innings while striking out 11 batters.
                                                       Amazing debut for Martinez

Mike Mohler came in to pitch the top of the eighth and Jim Leyritz pinch hit for Jefferson to start. Leyritz struck out swinging and O'Leary went down hacking as well. Hatteberg grounded out to short to end the inning. Dennis Eckersley made his first appearance for the Sox in 14 years in the bottom of the eighth and old buddy Shane Mack pinch hit for Bournigal. Mack flied out to left but Henderson singled to left. Henderson stole second and moved to third on the grounder by Magadan. Sox manager Jimy Williams took no chances and brought in new closer Tom Gordon for the four out save. Grieve grounded out to second to end the inning.
                                                   Welcome back Eck

Jason Wood took over at short with TJ Mathews now on the mound for the top of the ninth. Lewis flied out to center, Bragg struck out swinging and Sadler flied out to center to end the inning. Gordon got Stairs to ground out to short to start the bottom of the ninth and Giambi grounded out to third. Spiezio whiffed to end the game. The Sox had won Opening Day 2-0.
                                                     Sox win


Hero of the Night is Pedro Martinez. He earned his first win of the season by tossing 7 shutout innings while striking out 11 batters.
                                                             Martinez is the Hero


The Good:

John Valentin was 1 for 3 with an rbi.

Mo Vaughn was 2 for 4.

Reggie Jefferson was 1 for 3.

Darren Bragg was 1 for 3 with an rbi and a run scored.

Dennis Eckersley tossed 2/3 of a scoreless inning.

Tom Gordon earned his first save of the season with 1 1/3 scoreless innings.



The Bad:

Nomar Garciaparra was 0 for 4.

Jim Leyritz struck out as a pinch hitter.

Scott Hatteberg was 0 for 4.



The Ugly:

Troy O'Leary was just 1 for 4 with a strikeout.

Darren Lewis was just 1 for 4 but scored a run.

Donnie Sadler was 0 for 3 but was hit with a pitch in his ML debut.




Final Thoughts:

I think the Sox have found their new ace. After losing Roger Clemens in 1996, the Sox were desperate for a new ace and they may have found one in Martinez. Pedro was outstanding today and this is the guy they need if they hope to be good again. The offense was nothing to write home about on Opening Day but with Pedro on the mound, the little that they did was just enough. It was good to see Donnie Sadler make his ML debut and get on base even if it wasn't conventionally. Gordon didn't look good as a starter last year but he looked great in relief today. If he can turn into a dependable relief pitcher, that's a big shot in the arm for this team. Its always good to win on Opening Day to start the season off on a positive note and the Sox look to continue their winning ways tomorrow afternoon against the A's. Tim Wakefield makes his season debut for the Sox up against A's ace Kenny Rogers at 3:15 PM Eastern time at Oakland Coliseum.

Saturday, August 16, 1997

Sox Pound Twins at Fenway (8/16/97)

What a power surge by the Boston Red Sox. Not much has gone right this season on the pitching side but the offense has been the only thing worth watching this season. Tonight the Sox laid waste to the Minnesota Twins by pounding out 12 hits and 12 runs. 6 different batters drove in runs while Tim Wakefield (7-14, 4.33 ERA) tossed 5 1/3 gutty innings before the bullpen slammed the door. When the dust settled the Sox had won the game 12-4 at Fenway Park.
                                                      Curtis Martin approves of the win

Wakefield took the ball in the bottom of the first inning and Chuck Knoblauch went down swinging to start. Rich Becker lined out to first but the strike three ball to Paul Molitor got away, allowing Paul to reach first on the passed ball. Molitor swiped second but Matt Lawton grounded out to first to end the inning. The Sox struck first against Shane Bowers in the bottom of the first inning as Nomar Garciaparra flied out to center to start. John Valentin popped up to short but Mo Vaughn was hit with a pitch. Reggie Jefferson doubled home Mo to put the Sox on top. Wil Cordero flied out to center to end the inning with the Sox ahead 1-0.
                                                         Jefferson drives in a run

The Twins fought right back in the top of the second as Scott Stahoviak was hit with a pitch to start. Ron Coomer got a base hit but Brent Brede popped up to short. Damien Miller hit a routine grounder back to the mound but Wakefield tripped on the ball and went head over heels for an error that scored Stahoviak. A passed ball moved Miller to second and Danny Hocking singled home both runners to give the Twins the lead. Knoblauch banged into a double play to end the inning but the Twins were up 3-1.
                                                          Hocking puts the Twins on top

The Sox failed to respond in the bottom of the second as Troy O'Leary grounded out to first to start. Bill Haselman singled to left but Darren Bragg flied out to center. Jeff Frye also flied out to center to end the inning.

Wakefield recovered in the top of the third as Becker grounded out to first to start. Molitor beat out an infield single and advanced to second on the fly out to deep center by Lawton. Stahoviak whiffed to end the inning. The Sox poured it on in the bottom of the third as Nomar walked to start. Valentin singled to center and Vaughn walked to load the bases with nobody out. Jefferson beat out a double play ball to score Nomar and Cordero cleared the bases with a triple to give the Sox the lead and chase Bowers. Rich Robertson came in and O'Leary popped up to third. Haselman doubled home Cordero to increase the lead before Bragg grounded out to third to end the inning with the Sox ahead 5-3.
                                                       Cordero puts the Sox on top

Wakefield got in trouble in the top of the fourth inning although Coomer grounded out to short to start. Brede whiffed but Miller and Hocking stroked back to back singles. Knoblauch popped up to second to end the inning. Frye singled to center to start the bottom of the fourth but was forced at second by Nomar. Valentin flied out to left but Nomar swiped second. Vaughn whiffed to end the inning.
                                                               Swing and a miss

The Twins got a run back in the top of the fifth although Becker and Molitor both flied out to right to begin. Lawton hit a routine grounder to Vaughn but he threw his glove at the ball and screamed at it for an error. Stahoviak walked and Coomer singled home Lawton for an unearned run. Brede flied out to left to end the inning with the Sox still ahead 5-4.
                                                              Nice defense Mo

The Sox went quietly in the bottom of the fifth as Jefferson grounded out to first to start. Cordro flied out to right and O'Leary flied out to center to end the inning.

Wakefield returned briefly for the top of the sixth as Miller grounded out to short to start. Hocking and Knoblauch stroked back to back singles and that was it for Wakefield. He allowed 4 runs but only 1 earned in 5 1/3 innings of work. John Wasdin came in and got Becker to pop up to third and Molitor to fly out to center to end the inning.
                                                      Wakefield did what he could

Nothing happened in the bottom of the sixth as Haselman grounded out to short to start. Bragg whiffed but Frye singled to left. Nomar flied out to center to end the inning.

Wasdin returned for the top of the seventh and struck out Lawson swinging to start. Stahoviak popped up to short and Coomer grounded out to third to end the inning. The Sox iced the game in the bottom of the seventh with a huge rally. Valentin doubled off the Monster to start then Ritchie threw away a double play ball by Vaughn to keep things going. Vaughn moved to second on the grounder by Jefferson and Cordero was intentionally walked to load the bases but also set up the double play. O'Leary made the Twins pay with a double to center to score Valentin and Vaughn. Haselman flied out to left but Cordero scored and O'Leary moved to third. Bragg hit a routine grounder to first but that ball was booted to score O'Leary and chase Robertson. Todd Ritchie poured gas on the fire as Frye singled Bragg to third and a wild pitch scored Darren plus moved Jeff to second. Nomar doubled home Frye and Valentin single home Nomar. Vaughn walked to chase the incompetent Ritchie Eddie Guardado came in to get Jefferson to ground into a force to end the inning but the Sox scored 7 runs to put the game away.
                                                         O'Leary and Nomar add to the lead

With the game now well in hand, Joe Hudson came in for the top of the eighth inning. Brede greeted him with a base hit to left but Miller flied out to right. Hocking banged into a double play to end the inning. The Sox went quietly in the bottom of the eighth as Cordero flied out to center to start. O'Leary also flied out to center and Haselman flied out to right to end the inning.

Hudson returned to finish off the Twins in the top of the ninth as the Sox made some weird defensive moves. Reggie Jefferson left the DH spot to play first, replacing Vaughn. Mike Benjamin took over at short for Nomar and Jose Malave took over for Cordero in left. Knoblauch groundd out to second to start but Becker got a base hit to right. Molitor walked but Lawton banged into a double play to end the game. The Sox had won the game 12-4
                                                 Hudson closes it out


Hero of The Night is a tough one with so much offense. I gotta go with Troy O'Leary. They walked Cordero to get to him and he responded with a big "screw you" with a 2 run double.
                                                          O'Leary the Hero



The Good:

Mo Vaughn walked twice, got hit with a pitch and scored two runs.

John Valentin was 3 for 5 with an rbi and 2 runs scored.

Bill Haselman was 2 for 4 with 2 rbis.

Jeff Frye was 3 for 4 with a run scored.

John Wasdin tossed 1 2/3 scoreless innings.

Joe Hudson tossed 2 scoreless innings.



The Bad:

None



The Ugly:

Nomar Garciaparra was just 1 for 4 but walked, stole a base, drove in a run and scored twice.

Reggie Jefferson was just 1 for 5 but drove in a run and scored.

Wil Cordero was just 1 for 4 but walked, drove in 2 runs and scored twice.

Darren Bragg was 0 for 4 but scored a run.

Time Wakefield got the win by allowing 4 runs in 5 1/3 innings but only one run was earned.



Honorable Mention:

Mike Benjamin played shortstop in the top of the ninth.

Jose Malave played left field in the top of the ninth.




Final Thoughts:

Don't look now but the Sox are inching closer to .500. Considering they have one of the worst pitching staffs in baseball, this should be classified as a miracle. If only Sox general manager Dan Duquette got an actual ace after letting Roger Clemens walk rather than Steve F'n Avery. Wakefield didn't really pitch well but was hampered by errors. I wish the Sox has this kind of offense next year if the Sox go get a few pitchers they desperately need. Nomar looks like he'll win Rookie of The Year if he keeps up this pace. The win improved the Sox to 61-63, nowhere near a playoff spot. Tomorrow afternoon the Sox look to make it 4 wins in a row and a sweep over the Twins when they sent Aaron Sele (11-9) to the mound up against Concord, NH native Bob Tewksbury at 1:05 PM at Fenway Park.