Category: Game Recap

Wait, What? The Sox Win a Series?

Wade delivering another shutdown pitch. Classic Wade. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

For the first time in the month of May 2015, the Red Sox have won a series. It wasn’t exactly a magical performance, but 2 out of 3 is 2 out of 3. That’s just basic math.

The listed highlights on MLB.com for this one are mostly A’s videos, even though they put up zero runs against Wade Miley and the 1-2 combination of Tazawa and Uehara. In fact, out of 14 videos, there are as many Red Sox highlights (5) as there are Coco Crisp highlights. I guess what I’m saying is COCO IS BACK BABY.

From a certain perspective, Miley had a terrible start. He let people on base because he liked the cut of their jib, including the first two batters of the game on eight straight balls after a strike to start things off. In the first six innings he pitched, Miley allowed at least one runner into scoring position 5 separate times (the 5th inning being the only exception), each time with less than 2 outs. In each of the first three innings, Miley allowed a runner to reach third but no farther, including Marcus Semien, who led off the 3rd inning with a triple over Mookie Betts‘ head. Mookie misplayed it pretty badly – possibly losing it in the sun? – by running pretty nonchalantly in its general direction until he realized it was going over his head, turning on the afterburners a little too late to catch up.

But as in every other inning, Miley found a way out of the jam. He wasn’t doing it with nasty stuff: he only had one strikeout on the day. He wasn’t necessarily doing it with the sinker: he actually got the A’s to fly out (10) more than ground out (9). He wasn’t getting bailed out by his defense: most of the plays made by the Sox were fairly routine (excepting this outstanding pick by Sandoval that kept the game-tying run at second base). The best you could say for ol’ Wade was that he induced weak contact, serving up pitches that looked hittable but never resulted in anything better than a triple over the center fielder’s head that Jackie Bradley, Jr. would’ve caught with his eyes closed.

So is inducing weak contact a thing? So far this year for Miley, it is, according to Fangraphs. He’s giving up less line drives and less hard-hit balls. As the statheads say though, things always regress to the mean, and Miley hasn’t been good even with these possible anomalies.

On a day when five Red Sox went 0-4, including Brock Holt, who’s now below .300 for the first time since he went 0-1 on April 9, and the team as a whole only managed to draw one walk, they still managed to plate two runs. How? Righty’s blog title from yesterday’s game comes to mind – the ugly way, with a struggling Daniel Nava as the key cog.

Sonny Gray pitched seven innings, with five 1-2-3 appearances. But where the Athletics struggled to plate runners in scoring position, Boston managed to bring home its only runner to reach second base against Gray in the second inning. After a leadoff single by Hanley, the next two batters struck out, but the pitch got away from Oakland catcher Phegley (that is one ugly last name) and Ramirez trotted as slowly as possible to second. Then, according to MLB.com, “Nava flare[d] a run-scoring single to left,” which is probably the kindest possible description of what happened. Make no mistake, this was a pop-up. But it was one of those pop-ups that immediately looked uncatchable, and so it was, bouncing easily in front of Crisp to score Ramirez from second easily, as he’d obviously been running on contact. Better lucky than good.

After a much cleaner single by Nava to lead off the eighth and a botched bunt by Jackie Bradley, Sandy León managed to get plunked by a curveball, pushing Nava into scoring position, just the second runner to touch second base for the Sox all afternoon. And after a disappointing full count strikeout by Mookie, Marcus Semien (currently tied for the league lead in errors with Ian Desmond, with 11) airmailed a would-be inning-ending ground ball by Pedroia over Canha’s head at first, allowing Nava to score. For what it’s worth, the scorer gave Pedey an infield single and awarded the Sox’ baserunners another base on Semien’s throwing error. Again – better lucky than good. This is one of those games that drive stat guys crazy, a game that, by the numbers, the Red Sox should not have been in position to win…and yet they did. The 2015 Red Sox, everybody!

P.S. Forgot to mention, Tazawa was lights out over 1.1 and Uehara was near enough to lights out to make no difference. I love those guys.

U-G-L-Y

Pitching is hard. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

Pitching is hard. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

Whenever my buddies Zack and Sal do something they’re not proud of and they’re called on it, their response is invariably “Theah’s not much ta say.” (They’re from the South Shore.) I think that sums this one up nicely.

Justin Masterson was roughed up to the tune of 6 runs, all earned, on 6 hits, while surrendering 2 home runs in just 2.1 innings. The cries for him to be moved to the bullpen will now reach a deafening roar, and I can’t say I think it’d be a bad move. He certainly is the most logical candidate of the starting staff to be moved given his prior experience in the ‘pen, and he has looked lost as a starter for more than a full season now. Moving him to the bullpen may also allow him to get his fastball back up in the 90s. His fastball velocity was down to start the season, and has now dropped even further, sitting in the mid-80s. This is allowing opponents to key in on his sinker, and they’re hitting .319 against that pitch.

Steven Wright again saved the bullpen, pitching the rest of the way after Masterson was lifted. Being able to go 5.2 innings in relief is always a huge service to your team, especially with the quick turnaround (Sox play this afternoon).

Though the offense managed just 2 runs on 4 hits (two by Pedroia) they actually looked pretty good. They squared up a lot of balls, but the A’s played uncharacteristically great defense. The A’s lead the majors in errors, but made play, after play, after play, and the Red Sox just couldn’t get anything going.

Final: 9-2 Oakland.

Notes:

-I wouldn’t be surprised to see more roster changes coming. I’d love to see Eduardo Rodriguez get a start sometime soon. The lefty is sporting a sub-3 ERA and a WHIP under 1 thus far in Pawtucket.

-The Sox are back at it this afternoon at 3:35, as Wade Miley takes the bump against Sonny Gray. That’s a tough draw for Wade as he tries to build on his last start.

-In non-Red Sox news, Giancarlo Stanton hit a ball to the moon. No, really. Watch this clip.

That ball might be in orbit.

I’m tired again. Don’t make me make a real title.

The most elegant of slides (Ben Margot/AP)

You guys are very lucky that you have the intrepid reporters of Lefty and Righty covering this West Coast trip. You don’t have to stay up late, and you get all the in-depth analysis that you’d expect from someone who watched the game live, like:

Porcello was okay. He certainly wasn’t lights out, but with a WHIP of 2.00 over 5 innings, you might expect to see more runs on the board for the A’s. So there was clearly some half-decent situational pitching going on. It was, I will say, pretty tough to watch him just give two consecutive leads right back to Oakland after the offense worked to tie the game up. He was a little too hittable last night, and that’s just going to naturally happen once in a while with a sinker-based repertoire.

The offense was good. They clearly weren’t blowing the doors off Scott Kazmir (who looked pretty good, by the way), but they battled back three separate times after losing the lead. Farrell had them playing some aggressive baseball to drum up runs, with multiple hit-and-runs being put on, including the Sox’ first run of the game on an Ortiz single with Pedroia running from first. The other hit-and-run came as part of three consecutive singles in the top of the 7th, with Swihart scooting one through the right side of the infield to move Bogaerts to third. Betts would then knock in Bogaerts to tie the game for the third time with his second hit of the night and send Blake to third, from where Swihart would score the go-ahead run on a would-be inning-ending double play ball by Pedroia.

Ramirez still looks hurt. I don’t really have much more to say, but he’s jogging around like he’s still hurt and making some questionable decisions at the plate.

Victorino wasn’t good. Contributed a big fat nothing at the plate (two pop-outs, two fly outs) and didn’t come close to running down or cutting off a few balls in the gap. He was lifted for Bradley, Jr. after regulation (Bradley walked in his only plate appearance, but got thrown out on a baserunning error moments later to end the inning. The Red Sox right fielders, everyone!).

The defense was good…for both teams. After Alexi Ogando put runners on 2nd and 3rd with two outs, Mike Napoli completely saved his bacon by snaring a liner to end the inning. What goes around comes around, though: in the top of the 10th, Napoli hit a sharp one himself in the top of the 10th with Pedroia on 2nd, but the second replacement first baseman of the night for Oakland, Mark Canha, kept the game going (for one more inning, anyway).

Panda. 0-4 before this.

Notes:

  • Matt Barnes was solid as the Sox’ second-to-last resort (Steven Wright was the last arm in the pen), and got the win for his trouble.
  • Ortiz hit a double with no outs in the top of the 6th, down one, with Hanley due up. Unfortunately, he was picked off second base pretty quickly. Bad call or no (it was), it wasn’t Papi’s finest baserunning moment.
  • The return of Edward Mujica! He must’ve felt pretty good, setting down Ramirez, Napoli (by strikeout!), and Sandoval in order in the 8th. But we got the win. Suckaaaa.

Red Sox Win One! Homers and Buchholz Get the Job Done

"Having less hair makes it easier to throw!" (Peter Power(/The Canadian Press via AP)

“Having less hair makes it easier to throw!” (Peter Power(/The Canadian Press via AP)

The Red Sox won. God that feels good to type. I’m going to be typing a lot of words and phrases pertaining to this game that I haven’t in a while. Seems like it’s been almost a month. I hope I don’t pull a muscle…

The Red Sox’ bats got off to a hot start (… and I’m already sore). Mookie Betts tripled to right-center on what was almost the catch of the month by Kevin Pillar, but he wasn’t able to hang on. Pedey grounded out on the next pitch, and voilà! The Sox had the lead.

But they weren’t done yet. Papi walked, Hanley grounded into a fielder’s choice, Panda doubled, and Napoli swatted a R.A. Dickey knuckleball like it was a fly that stayed on his kitchen counter for a second too long. Maybe if the fly wasn’t hot dogging it next to your food (pun!), you could try and escort it out the window. But when they taunt you like that, you have no choice but to show them who’s boss and squash them. (The last two sentences weren’t an extended analogy for the homer, just a little life lesson from your pal Righty.)

Even better than the homerun itself was the fact that Nap kept his front shoulder closed on this one, and really drove the ball with authority to left-centerfield. He’s had a couple of extra base hits recently, but his front side still looked like it was flying open which made him hit pitches that were middle/in to the opposite field. That definitely wasn’t the case here. Sox lead 4-0 in the first.

Now finally staked with a lead, a Red Sox starter can go out there, throw strikes, and have some quick innings. Except it didn’t happen that way because Clay Buchholz doesn’t play by your rules. “Why get a normal haircut when I can look like this?”

“Why set down the side ‘in order’ when I can do it in whatever order I damn well please?” He walked the first batter he faced, induced a double play, walked the next two batters he faced, then got a groundout to end the inning. But when it was all said and done, Clay would turn in a quality start en route to his second win of the season (and only the second win for the team in games Clay has started). The first was opening day.

Boston IP H R ER BB SO HR ERA
Buchholz (W, 2-4) 6.1 7 3 3 3 3 0 5.73

He was hardly dominant, but thanks to the offense looking more like itself (or what we all hope it ends up looking like), he didn’t have to be. Sandoval would leave the yard with a man on in the fifth giving the Sox pitching staff 6 whole runs to work with! Taz and Uehara combined for 2.2 innings of scoreless relief, and just like that the Red Sox are back in the win column.

Notes:

-Pedey did this in the field. We should never take these kinds of plays for granted, even though we know he does it night in and night out. Yes, I used the majestic plural because in this case I know what’s best for you so you should listen to me.

Jackie Bradley Jr. returned to the lineup and picked up right where he left off, going 0 for 4 with a strikeout.

-It’s going to be a tall task to keep the momentum of this win going; the Sox now head out on a West Coast trip to face the A’s and Mariners. This should also be interesting for me and Lefty, since we struggle to get the blogs out on time when the games end at 10:10PM.