Month: July 2015

Red Sox Lose Game, Series to Yankees but Head into Break Winners of 10 of 15

Brian McCann takes Wade Miley deep. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Brian McCann takes Wade Miley deep. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

We’ve reached the unofficial halfway point of the season, and unfortunately the Sox will go into the All-Star break on a little bit sour note, dropping the rubber match of this series 8-6.

It started out promisingly: A-Rod didn’t go deep in the first inning.

But McCann went oppo for a two-run job in the bottom of the 2nd, putting the Red Sox in an early hole.

The Sox’ offense was up to the challenge and unleashed a squall of singles (5) in the third, grabbing a 3-2 lead.

The game turned in the top of the 5th when Miley surrendered the game-tying run on a questionable balk call by home plate umpire Angel Hernandez. Miley has one of the best pickoff moves in the game and, like all lefties with great moves, he flirts with a balk on every attempt (see: Pettite, Andy). On the pitch in question he might have stepped at an angle greater than 45°, and it looked like his body may have been moving towards the plate before he threw over but it wasn’t even clear on the replay; there’s no way Hernandez could clearly see it was a balk.

As we’ve seen in the past, Miley is a bit of a hothead, but he had every right to be upset here. The real issue is that Angel Hernandez made the call from behind the plate and would have no way of seeing the angle in question. Hernandez has shown time and again that he is both 1) awful and 2) way too eager to insert himself into the game story.

Miley would get touched for 3 runs in the 6th, and after a Shane Victorino RBI single in the bottom half of the frame the score stood at 6-4.

Alexi Ogando initially pitched well in relief, stranding inherited runners from Tommy Layne in the 7th, then tossing a 1-2-3 8th. But Farrell brought him back out in the 9th, which would prove to be costly. He gave up a leadoff walk, then Rob Refsnyder’s first major league homer, which expanded the Yankees’ lead to 8-4. The Red Sox pushed two runs across in the bottom of the 9th thanks to an awful defensive display by the Yankees, and would have tied the game at 6 had Ogando not given up that gopher ball.

Notes:

De Aza joined #TeamHighSocks.

-Although losing this series at home leaves a little bit of a bad taste in your mouth, winning 10 out of 15 heading into the break is good no matter how you slice it. Maybe this loss will make them hungrier. I think Andrew Miller of all people said it best:

“They’re never going to quit. They have expectations of winning a World Series just like we do over here. I’m not going to give up on them until there’s an X next to their name, or whatever they do when somebody’s out of the standings. They’re too good, there’s too many veteran players that have experienced too much. You’re not going to count them out ever. They’re a good team.”

A Little Housekeeping – Brian Johnson Called Up

brian johnson called up

Get ready to see a lot more of this face. (John Wilcox/Boston Herald)

Once again I journeyed into the black hole that is New Hampshire and once again I slacked on my blogging duties. There’s already been another game since Saturday’s Game 2 against the Yankees, and you’re probably already familiar with what happened, so this is going to be mostly housekeeping.

How great has it been to have Alejandro De Aza on this team? He’s a sparkplug, flat out, and okay, he occasionally takes a bad angle in the field, but he gives it his all on every play. It’s not just that – he’s hitting for average, and even though the power of a few weeks ago has abandoned him, he’s forcing Farrell to keep him in the lineup until his bat falters. In the 2nd inning on Saturday, he singled to lead off, stole second, advanced to third on a bad throw, and scored on a Hanigan groundout to tie the game. That’s good hustle! Maybe one day I’ll say that the trade was a mistake – maybe Joe Gunkel goes on to do great things (like he’s doing in AA with the Orioles’ Bowie Baysox), but for now, De Aza is one of the main reasons that the Red Sox are still in contention.

Eduardo Rodriguez continued to be his normal strong self. It seems unfair that his ERA is up above 3.50, considering that in all but two starts, he’s allowed 2 earned runs or less. It’s really been a remarkable and impressive run, and it’s a shame that those two bad games are haunting his stats. The two strikeouts he recorded on Saturday were a little disappointing, but it was probably just a fluke.

Hanley Ramirez hit another home run on Saturday, his 19th of the year.

If you told me at the beginning of the year that he was going to hit .275 with 30 home runs and 85 RBIs, I would have said jeez, we’re pretty bad at getting runners on base ahead of Hanley. Either that or historically terrible at hitting with RISP. But I also would have taken that line, because that’s a pretty good line. And who knows? Maybe it’ll even end up better than that.

Koji Uehara had one of his more hittable outings, giving up a Chris Young double off the Monster with 1 out and a Brian McCann 410-foot fly out to the center field triangle to end the game. Just something to keep your eye on. I love the guy, but he worries me sometimes.

Clay Buchholz was placed on the 15-day disabled list yesterday with “right forearm tightness,” so you can all breathe a temporary sigh of relief. The MRI found no structural damage, so we don’t even need to think about our old friend Tommy John. What it does mean is that Brian Johnson, Pawtucket’s golden boy, got the call-up. So all you believers, get ready to see at least a couple starts from the lefty after the All-Star Game.

And that’s all I got. Stay tuned for tomorrow morning’s recap of today’s final game before the break.

 

Righty Live Blogs Red Sox-Yankees from Fenway

Thus concludes my first live blog. Sox lose 5-1. Special shoutout to Fenway Park wifi for allowing me to get this done. I’ll update the blog with pictures and videos in the near future. Bon soir.

10:14 PM: Time of death.

10:08 PM: Sox have a man on to lead off the bottom of the 9th against ex-mate Andrew Miller.

10:00 PM: And the bakers gonna bake, bake, bake, bake, bake.

9:33 PM: Mookie strikes out after a long at bat to strand a runner on 3rd. 4-1 Yankees heading into the 8th. You Can Call Me Al plays between innings and takes the edge off.

9:12 PM: Robbie Ross Jr. has thrown 54 pitches in relief and is still going strong.

8:59 PM: Absolute gem turned in by Robbie Ross Jr. on a drag bunt attempt.

8:52 PM: Mookie leaves the yard. 4-1 Yankees.

8:48 PM: Buchholz left with elbow tightness. Son of a bitch.

8:40 PM: De Aza strikes out. Threat neutralized.

8:39 PM: Red Sox are threatening with 2 outs in the bottom of the 4th.

8:35PM: The fire alarm is going off on the 3rd base side. Fitting.

8:26 PM: One of the members of the ULA has pissed their pants. This is not a joke.

8:23 PM: Damnit Brock. Holt makes me look bad by booting a grounder, letting a run score, and letting the inning continue.

8:21 PM: Brock Holt is a true All-Star.

8:13 PM: Buchholz leaves with an injury. This is a disaster.

8:11 PM: Gregorius doubles putting runners on 2nd and 3rd with one out. Thank God the pitcher is up (aka Stephen Drew).

8:06 PM: Brock Holt is on #TeamHighSocks tonight.

7:55 PM: I’m going to murder the guy sitting next to me.

UPDATE: I’m going to have to post all updates above the fold instead of in chronological order because the WordPress mobile platform is some butt.

7:45 PM: Napoli gets plunked. Will Clay retaliate? Also bold isn’t working on the mobile dashboard.

Perfect night at Fenway. (Photo credit: Me)

Perfect night at Fenway. (Photo credit: Me)

7:36 PM: It is an absolutely perfect night at Fenway.

7:15 PM: There goes the shutout. A-Rod goes deep.

This is my first ever live blog so bear with me. I’m at Fenway with the ULA (that’s United Loads of America for the uniformed. My buddy Ben formed it high school to unite husky gentlemen. Apparently they’re heavily recruiting Pablo Sandoval). Buchholz vs. Pineda. Red Sox vs. Yankees. AL East up for grabs. Let’s go.

Rick Porcello Is Okay, Sox Win

Rick Porcello pitched and I guess he didn't completely screw it up. (Mark L. Baer/USA TODAY Sports Images)

I have so much going on right now that I feel like I’m going to explode, so this is going to be short and (thanks to the Sox) sweet.

First, on Rick Porcello. Put me down as unimpressed. Yes, it’s great and lovely that things do seem to turn out better when you don’t give up any home runs, especially when you’re almost always working with runners on base. But I’m not going to pretend that there was a massive improvement just because runners didn’t cross home plate. Porcello’s WHIP actually worsened in this one. He gave up 8 hits and a walk over 6 innings and frankly, he was lucky to give up only 2 runs. Of course, he’s been unlucky for certain stretches this season, but you should expect to be unlucky when you give up the amount of solid contact he does. His ground ball to fly ball ratio was an improvement over recent output, with 14 ground balls and 7 fly balls, but no matter how good you think you are at inducing double plays, putting runners on base will come back to bite you.

In the event of this game, though, okay. Two runs over six innings, hey, that’s a quality start, and I can’t seriously fault him. So let’s look at some bright spots.

Porcello put runners on first and second in both the 2nd and 3rd innings, but got out of both situations with ground outs, including this double play. In the bottom of the 3rd, the Sox took the lead with the help of Marlins pitcher Tom Koehler, who committed one of those pitcher errors that lets his ERA stay low. With runners on second and third, All-Star Brock Holt pulled a ground ball to the right side of the infield to score Ryan Hanigan. With two outs and a runner in scoring position, as he often does, Xander Bogaerts came through, tapping a ball out to the edge of the infield grass, giving shortstop Adeiny Hechavarria an impossible play and scoring Mookie Betts from third. Papi was up next and, well, he homered into the Green Monster like he sometimes does, and the Sox were up 4-0.

Porcello had a typical poor inning in the top of the 4th, giving up five consecutive singles and two runs along the way. The guy puts himself in position to fail. If he’d given up a home run or even a double with the bases loaded instead of two consecutive ground outs, I would be singing a different tune today, as would a few others.

Anyway, things mostly stayed to form for the rest of the game. Ortiz led off the 6th with a ground rule double into the triangle, and might have scored on Hanley Ramirez’s ensuing single if the situation called for more aggressive baserunning. In course of fact, he ended up scoring on Pablo Sandoval’s double play ball to Hechavarria, making the score 5-2, Red Sox.

Probably the best part of the game was Alejandro De Aza reaching on an error (again by the pitcher, but this time it was reliever Sam Dyson), advancing to second on a hit-and-run fielder’s choice, stealing third, and then scoring on the horrible throw down by catcher J.T. Realmuto to make it 6-2, Red Sox. The Marlins got one back in the 8th on a Michael Morse solo shot off Matt Barnes to center, but in my mind (this is clearly the thought process of a stupid fan) that just meant a save opportunity for Koji. He came through with three straight outs, including a swinging strikeout of Dee Gordon (still hitting .333!) on a high fastball to end it.