Showing posts with label 2003 ALCS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2003 ALCS. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The Sully - Erin Foley Interviews



 I interviewed comedian Erin Foley at my home. We were supposed to get a podcast recorded in 20 minutes.

We talked for over an hour.

I split our discussion into two different Sully Baseball Daily Podcasts.

The first one, which was first posted on May 13, 2013, discusses our fandom for the Red Sox and Yankees.





The second one, first posted on May 15, 2013, Erin talks about attending the Aaron Boone game while I remembered going to the Bloody Sock game.





Erin is a great comic. Check out her schedule, clips and links at her OFFICIAL SITE.

For the record Clayton Kershaw, Mitch Moreland, Neil Walker and Matt Moore owned baseball on May 14, 2013.

To see the up to date tally of "Who Owns Baseball?," click HERE.

Subscribe on iTunes HERE.


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Friday, August 13, 2010

My all time LEAST favorite Red Sox roster


I root for the Red Sox no matter whom they play and no matter what stiff they suit up in a uniform.

Sometimes it has been hard to root for some players in a Sox uniform... but I find a way to do it.

I couldn't stand J. D. Drew when he was with St. Louis, Atlanta and Los Angeles and I didn't want the Red Sox to sign him... but when he hit that grand slam in the 2007 ALCS, I became his biggest fan.

Sometimes I WANT to root hard for a player when he arrived in Boston, but they just flop. Tony Clark and John Smoltz come to mind there.

But there are some players I just never liked.
They wore the jersey and when they did something good, I cheered. But I dreaded seeing their name in the lineup or watching them warm up on the mound.

And when each of these players departed the Sox, I thought "Good."

So, being Sully Baseball, I decided to come up with a 25 man roster of players that I just couldn't get behind, even though they played for my team.

Now I will make my 2004 and 2007 notation here. I can never say a bad thing about a member of either of those teams. As I said before, you win a ring in a Red Sox uniform it makes you exempt from being on my bad side.

That's good news for Eric Gagne, B.K. Kim, Julio Lugo, Javier Lopez and Ramiro Mendoza who would all be locks for this roster if '04 or '07 fell short.

And I am not talking about the Ungraceful Exit Red Sox, players like Manny or Damon or Clemens whom I loved while they played with the Sox and left on not the best terms.

And you will note that I do NOT have Bill Buckner here. He was a great Red Sox player and should be thought as such.

These are the players I didn't like THEN and I don't reminisce about NOW!

And these are players that I personally had memories of. I was too young to have good or bad feelings about Rudy York or Dick Pole. (Although how can you NOT have feelings about someone named Dick Pole?)

As with all of my rosters, I have a starting 9 in the lineup... a 5 man rotation... a 5 man bullpen... a 5 man bench... and a 25th player who could be a position player or a pitcher.

Let's meet the players.


THE STARTING LINE UP

Starting CatcherMarc Sullivan

A Massachusetts born catcher named Sullivan was not embraced by ME? I, Sully, was living in Massachusetts when he played for the Sox. You'd think I'd be his biggest fan.

But Marc was the son of GM Heywood Sullivan and there was a sense that his dad was the only reason he had a job in the big leagues. And at the height of collusion, the Red Sox wouldn't resign their OTHER Massachusetts native catcher, All Star Rich Gedman. Instead the GM's son got the job. The career .186 hitter stunk and the Red Sox brought back Gedman, but his career never recovered from collusion.

THAT Sully was never embraced by THIS Sully.


Starting First BasemanJack Clark

Supposedly at Spring Training in 1991, someone was selling a T-Shirt that said "Will Rogers Never Met Jack Clark."

Another classic Yawkey era pick up... a white guy with right handed power and no ability to field, Clark joined the team as a DH/First Baseman before the 1991 season. And his signing made Red Sox legend Dwight Evans expendable. Dewey finished his career as an Oriole and the Red Sox got one OK season and one injury plagued terrible season before his career ended and his car payment piled up.


Starting Second BasemanJose Offerman

When Mo Vaughn skedaddled to Anaheim after the 1998 playoffs, Offerman came to Boston, I guess to replace Mo.

It never made sense then and didn't make sense now. Stunningly he made an All Star team as a member of the Sox, but by the second half of 1999, he was a liability. Always a poor defender, he became E-fferman. When his offense soured, he became O-For-Man. And by the end he was simply Awful-Man.

The Sox cut him and eventually he ended a member of the Bridgeport Bluefish where he was arrested for hitting an opposing pitcher with a bat. Good guy.


Starting ShortstopEdgar Renteria

Someday, someone will confirm why the Red Sox never resigned Orlando Cabrera. He fit perfectly in the Red Sox lineup and made the defense solid. But something happened (a rumor was he made advances on the daughter of a front office man) but the long and short of it was the Sox got Edgar Renteria in his place.

The number crunchers told us it was a good move. Stat heads said he was an improvement. People who actually interacted with him predicted he was too shy and reserved to handle Boston.

As usual, people who use their eyes and brains were right and people who used calculators were wrong. His defense was dreadful and his bat was inconsistent and he seemed to hate Boston from day one. The hatred was mutual.

He ended the 2005 playoffs with a grounder and was mercifully traded in the offseason.

Starting Third Baseman Scott Cooper

Scott Cooper was a two time All Star. Doesn't that look strange when you see it in print like that? Kirk Gibson was NEVER named to an All Star team and yet this guy made two teams.

He never batted .290. His OPS never reached .800. He never hit more than 13 homers. He never drove in more than 63 runs. He was always among the league leaders for errors by a third baseman.

Yet he made two All Star Teams.

Never once did he come to bat did I think "Oh good. Here's Cooper!"

Oh yeah, the Red Sox wanted to keep HIM instead of Jeff Bagwell when they made the Larry Andersen deal. Well why not? He was a two time All Star!


Starting Left Fielder Wil Cordero

A lot of these players were rotten on the field, but who knows what they were like as men?

Wil Cordero proved he was pretty much an a---hole off the field. The one time Montreal All Star came over to the Sox to be a second baseman... and he was so awful defensively that they stuck him in the outfield where he held his own in the dreadful 1997 season.

But he was arrested for beating his wife and when the lurid details of the abuse became public, Sox fans let him have it. After the season, despite being a productive hitter, the Sox cut him. There wasn't a single Red Sox fan that I heard of who said "Wait! Why?"


Starting Center Fielder Carl Everett

Like Offerman and Cooper, Everett actually made the All Star team as a member of the Red Sox. In fact his 2000 season was a solid all around season.

He just was insane. And while it was fun to have two insane outfielders for a while (remember he played with Manny in 2001), the act wore thin. It was funny to hear him deny the existence of dinosaurs and the moon landing.

It was less funny to see him get suspended for headbutting umpires. No player better symbolized the Red Sox's unpleasant 2001 season than Jurassic Carl.


Starting Right Fielder Bob Zupcic

For no fault of his own, I associate Zupcic with a moment of bigotry that I experienced back in 1993. I was visiting the home of my then girlfriend in Massachusetts when I struck up a conversation with one of her uncles about the Red Sox.

He said "Do you know what player I like on the Red Sox? Zupcic. He's a good player!"

At the time, Zupcic, then in his second and final full season in the bigs was a mediocre hitter with no power. The former first round pick was fizzling out as a dud.

The uncle continued. "I can't stand that Mo Vaughn. He's no good." At the time, Vaughn was practically the only good Red Sox hitter and was carrying the team. The guy kept talking about how Vaughn made mental lapses "which is the history of blacks in this country."

I told him he was full of crap and shortly afterward I was no longer dating his niece.

Sorry Bob... you were no Mo Vaughn.


Starting Designated Hitter Kevin Mitchell

I was going to put Jose Canseco here, but truth be told, I kind of liked Canseco when he was with the Red Sox. He was fun to root for.

Kevin Mitchell... not so much. It didn't help matters that he brought up memories of his 1986 World Series prolonging single in the 10th inning off of Schraldi and scoring on the Wild Pitch... But he gave the Red Sox NOTHING in his 1/2 season in Fenway. No power, no production and no consistency.

Not even a cool injury story, like the time he chipped his tooth biting on a stale donut.

THE STARTING ROTATION

Renko has the distinction of being the first Red Sox player who ever gave me an underwhelming sensation. I truly started following the Red Sox day by day in 1979, but I remember the players in 1978, if not the season. I remember Bill Lee and Luis Tiant as starting pitchers... and when they left after the 1978 Bucky Dent playoff, one of the pitchers brought in to replace them was Steve Renko.

He was a pitcher that just screamed "blah" even to a 7 year old Paul Sullivan. Not bad and not great. Just a boring guy who will win some, lose some and offer nothing resembling excitement. When I would ask "Who is pitching?" if the answer was "Steve Renko"my shoulders would slump.

It was my first step into a larger pessimistic world.


It never seemed right, did it? I mean he won some games with the Red Sox, but he seemed like he didn't want to be in Boston and we Sox fans weren't 100% comfortable with him pitching for us.

He was a great character and had more terrific seasons that you probably realize, but Wells was a Yankee in Red Sox clothing. And when he blew a lead in the 2005 playoffs, he cemented his legacy in Boston as a guy who was just marking time.


Matt Clement was an All Star with the Red Sox. Again, seeing stuff like that in writing is just surreal.

Let me address one misconception about Clement. There seems to be a thought that he was having a great year and then he was hit in the face by a pitch and everything fell apart. It's a nice story, but truth be told, his numbers were going south before he was clobbered in the face.

He was brought in to replace Derek Lowe in the rotation after the 2004 World Series and at first it looked great. He started the season 9-1 and was 10-2 at the break. He would win 3 games the rest of the year and his ERA jumped a run and a quarter. He started game 1 of the Division Series and let up 8 runs in 3 1/3 innings and sunk any hope of repeating.


Like his last name, Penny was a cheap flier that the Red Sox took a chance on in 2009, hoping to catch lightning in a bottle. The only thing Penny seemed to catch in a bottle was butter milk as he showed up out of shape and injury prone. He was a Cy Young candidate in 2007 and in 2009 got clobbered to a 5.61 ERA, including losing a 20-11 game to the Yankees.

He asked for his release.
He got it.


After the 1990 playoffs, the Red Sox signed Young to a 3 year $6 million contract (a big contract in 1990 and one I would gladly accept now) coming off an 18 loss season with the Mariners.

His ERA was good in Seattle and GM Lou Gorman said he felt that Young was about to make a turn.

He turned alright... right into the toilet. His two years in Boston were dreadful and injury plagued. He didn't win a game his second year, although he DID lose a game where he threw a complete game no hitter.

He was cut before the 3rd and final year of his deal.

THE BULLPEN


Kevin Kennedy almost never says a bad thing about anyone on his XM Radio show. But he admitted that he didn't want the Red Sox to trade for Heathcliff Clocumb before the 1996 season.

He was nothing special as a closer his first year, but his second year he was a horror show. His 5.79 ERA as a closer plus a WHIP of 1.971 made him a terrifyingly ineffective closer.

But in 1997, someone in Seattle saw SOMETHING positive. The Sox dealt him to the Mariners for 2 minor leaguers: Derek Lowe and Jason Varitek. It remains one of the most lopsided deals in recent baseball history.

Down the stretch in 2003, it seemed like each contending team wanted Pirates lefthander Sauerbeck to shore up their bullpen.

The Sox landed him, giving up on future batting champion Freddy Sanchez in the deal. The Sox bullpen did not get relief. Instead they got a lefty who got bombed for a 6.48 ERA with the Sox and made one token mop up role in the post season. Needless to say, Grady Little didn't think of using him in Game 7.

And I must give credit to omgreds.com for the Sauerbeck tongue picture.


Mark Clear

Mark Clear never had a chance to be loved by me. He came over from the Angels before the 1981 season. Now I don't remember if he was in the deal that sent Fred Lynn, Rick Burleson or Butch Hobson over to the Angels and I don't care. All I know is three of my favorite Red Sox were dealt and Clear was one of the guys we got back.

I remember watching Red Sox games with my dad and every time Clear would face a batter, my dad would just say "Ball One" before the first pitch. Inevitably he was right.



I almost didn't put Calvin on this list because I feel so bad for him. He was a talented pitcher who probably shouldn't have been a closer.

But he was. And no player that I ever watched looked more intimidated and more overwhelmed than this guy.

I'm talking Little League as well. I am talking Lupus level nerves.

Just think, if Gary Carter, Kevin Mitchell or Ray Knight had made an out, he would have been one of the great figures in Boston sports history.

When McNamara inexplicably brought him out in the 7th inning of a tied Game 7 of the World Series, everyone knew the game was over.

By 1987, Bob Lobel had turned his last name into a verb meaning "to homer."
"Don Baylor and Dave Henderson each Schraldied in tonight's game."

He seems like a nice guy. I just wasn't sad to see him go.


Dennis Lamp

Lamp was the definition of a roster filling middle reliever from the 1980s. Year in and year out he would go from team to team and be the guy brought in in the middle of games and have neither the stuff nor the stats to be moved into the rotation or the closer role. (In 1985, he did go 11-0 as a set up man for the Blue Jays.)

By the time he came to the Red Sox, he was an interchangable part that could have been named Steve Crawford.

In Game 1 of the 1990 ALCS, the Sox were down 2-1 in the top of the 9th to the mighty A's and had the heart of their order coming up in the bottom of the 9th inning. They had a shot to win if the bullpen could hold Oakland. The A's scored 7 runs that inning, 4 off of Lamp who finished the series with a 108.00 ERA.

Good relief work.


THE BENCH



Utility InfielderDamian Jackson

When Todd Walker was having a historically terrific for a second baseman post season in 2003 (5 homers, a 1.228 OPS in the Division Series and a 1.117 OPS in the ALCS) Grady Little would inexplicably remove him from the lineup in late innings in favor of Damian Jackson.

It would make sense if he was a slick fielding second baseman, but he was an average defender at best and certainly not worthing removing such a potent stick.

His lone defensive highlight in the 2003 playoffs was colliding with Johnny Damon in Game 5 of the Division Series, forcing Damon to lose games 1 and 2 of the ALCS. It's safe to say Todd Walker would not have crashed into Damon.


Utility InfielderMike Lansing

Lansing came over from Colorado midway through the 2000 season, just as the Red Sox were realizing how terrible Jose Offerman was. Lansing, who supplied some right handed pop from the second base position with Montreal and Colorado, seemed like a natural to hit in Fenway.

He batted .194 and slugged .223 with no homers the rest of the way, forcing Offerman BACK in the lineup.



Backup Outfielder Wily Mo Pena

I called up Dibble and Kennedy on XM Radio the second I heard the Red Sox had dealt Bronson Arroyo for Wily Mo Pena. I said the trade stunk then. It did.


The fact that Arroyo is still winning games in the Reds rotation and Pena is fighting for at bats with the Bridgeport Bluefish shows how awful this deal was.

Backup OutfielderJim Leyritz

The sight of David Wells with the Sox may have been odd, but he looked as fitting as Ted Williams in a Red Sox uniform compared to Jim Leyritz's quick trip through Fenway in 1998.

He had no position with the Red Sox and didn't exactly play poorly... it was just odd to see him there. And he didn't look like he was really enjoying himself in Fenway.

By the end of 1999 he was back in the Bronx where he belongs.


Reserve Catcher Javy Lopez

I didn't include the pitcher Javy Lopez because of the 2007 rule. But I'll include THIS Javy Lopez because of how badly he sucked with the 2006 Red Sox.

The Sox were decimated with injuries (sound familiar 2010 Red Sox?) and both Jason Varitek and Doug Mirabelli were on the DL. So the Sox dealt with the Orioles for former All Star and right handed slugger Lopez to fill in.

They might as well have had the pitcher Javy Lopez bat. He batted .190, had an OPS of .485 and didn't hit a homer. When Varitek came off the DL, Lopez was cut... and seeing that he never made another roster, that cut in 2006 ended a wonderful career.

It just wasn't that wonderful in Boston.

25th ManBob Stanley

What would this list be like without the Steamer?

It would be incomplete, I'm telling you. As they said in Curse of the Bambino, we all gasped when Stanley came out of the bullpen with 2 outs in the 10th inning of Game 6.

And with good reason. Steamer was a 2 time All Star before he signed a big contract to stay in Boston, and evidently spent most of his money at Baby Watson's Cheesecake in Quincy Market. He ballooned up as did his ERA and became a symbol for Red Sox ineptitude on the mound.

No player in Red Sox history made me grumble with disgust more than Steamer over the years.

If he got Mookie out, he would have been a God. Instead he's just a pudgy guy who drove us all batty.



So there you have it.
25 guys... all wore my team's uniform... all made me happy when they left.

And I am sure there will be many more entries to this list in the years to come.

If you think I missed anyone, write in the comments section or shoot me an e mail.
info@sullybaseball.com




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Thursday, May 27, 2010

Daisuke Matsuzaka is Japanese for Derek Lowe














One game Daisuke Matsusaka is coughing up 5 runs in the first to the Yankees… next thing you know he’s throwing a no hitter into the 8th inning in Philadelphia… next start he can’t get out of the 5th against the Royals.

Isn’t that a microcosm of the Dice-K era in Boston?
Every time you say “I think Dice-K is going to pitch like an ace now” he wets the bed.
Every time you say “Oh man, it was a huge mistake bringing him here” he throws a great game.

Sound familiar?

That was Derek Lowe to a T!

Remember how he blossomed and became a great reliever for one season in 2000? We all thought “Holy Cats! We’ve got a classic shut them down closer!”

Then the next year he was so bad he nearly torpedoed the season all by himself.

Then the next year, 2002, he threw a no hitter in April, became a 20 game winner and nearly won the Cy Young Award.

Then his ERA jumped nearly 2 runs the next year. Man you can’t rely on him in the big game.

But he came out of the bullpen and shut down the A’s in that amazing Division Series. He’s back!

Then he lost 2 starts against the Yankees in the ALCS. He’s done.

Then 2004 he was so awful that his ERA was over 5 and he wasn’t even in the post season rotation. He sucks. He’s a mop up man.





Then he won all three clinching games in the 2004 playoffs, including 6 innings of 1 hit ball in the Bronx to win the pennant and 7 shutout innings in St. Louis to win the World Series.

He left perfectly. He left with everyone remembering him as a playoff hero. He got the wild standing ovation during the ring ceremony in 2005 even though he had split for the Dodgers.

It’s like people remembering the Belushi/Chevy years of SNL. They only remember the good parts… not the many unwatchable episodes.

And so it is with Dice-K.

We’ve got the next great pitcher in baseball!

Oooo. He’s not that good. He might suck.

Oh my God! He clinched the pennant! And he got 2 RBI in the World Series and won his game!

Holy Cow he’s an 18 game winner and nearly threw a no hitter in the ALCS against the Rays!

Oh man, he blew his arm out pitching in that stupid World Baseball Classic.

He stinks, he let up 5 runs in the first.

Holy Crap! He’s throwing a no hitter! He’s awesome again! Who needs Beckett?

He’s walking the Royals with the bases loaded… why did we sign this guy?



Going up and down that fast will usually give a guy the bends!

Rooting for these guys was kind of like yelling “No Whammys!” while playing Press Your Luck. There’s no rhyme nor reason and you are either going to be thrilled or incensed.

Let’s hope Dice-K has another string of post season luck in him.
There’s only 14 more years left on his contract.


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Sunday, November 29, 2009

THE BEST POST SEASON GAMES OF THE 2000s


















This decade is going to be over in a few weeks, and still nobody can tell me what to call the last 10 years.

Is it the Two Thousands? Is it the Twenty O’s?
And no, it is NOT the Oughts.

But one thing you CAN call it was a great decade for Post Season Baseball.

Usually baseball is guilty of saying “The present stinks and the past was great.” And then in 20 years people will say “the present stinks and the past was great”… except the past they are praising was the present they said stunk.

Well let’s end that charade. The present has been great! This has been an amazing decade with wonderful games and images that will be iconic in baseball history.

Don’t believe me?

Well when the decade began, we had yet to experience…

- Jeter’s flip to get Jeremy Giambi out at home.
- The Yankees 9th inning comebacks in back to back games in 2001.
- The Diamondbacks rally off of Mariano Rivera.
- Grady Little leaving Pedro Martinez in too long.
- Aaron Boone’s home run
- Steve Bartman interfering with the foul pop.
- Dave Roberts stolen base.
- The bloody sock.
- A-Rod slapping the ball out of Arroyo’s glove.
- Pujols’ homer off of Lidge

There were absurd images…

- Clemens throwing the bat at Mike Piazza
- J. T. Snow picking up Dusty Baker’s 3 year old son as he ran into the field of play during Game 5 of the World Series.
- Don Zimmer and Pedro Martinez’s interesting confrontation.
- A. J. Pierzynski’s running to first base on the third strike and starting a game winning rally.
- Two Dodgers being thrown out at home plate on the same play.
- Joba Chamberlain covered in midges.
- Game 5 of the 2008 World Series being suspended in midgame.
- Matt Holliday dropping the final out of the game, setting up a game winning rally.

There were four series that ended with walk off homers… with Aaron Boone, David Ortiz, Chris Burke and Magglio Ordonez .

And one series ended with a bunt.

So before we start a new decade, let's pay homage to what was a terrific (if unclearly named) decade.

Not to quote Carly Simon, but these are the Good Old Days for post season baseball. Let's not wait 20 years to acknowledge that.

In true Sully Baseball fashion, we're going to list the best games. The staff at Sully Baseball has picked the best Games of each round of the playoff series.

The best Game 1 of the AL Division Series... the best Game 2... etc. Right up through the best Game 7 of the World Series.

There are two "Best Games" for each game in the Division Series because each league plays two Divison Series.

So let's take a look at

THE BEST PLAYOFF GAMES OF THE 2000s

For the Decade's BEST ONE GAME TIE BREAKERS click here

For the Decade's BEST GAMES OF
THE NATIONAL LEAGUE DIVISION SERIES click here

For the Decade's BEST GAMES OF
THE AMERICAN LEAGUE DIVISION SERIES click here

For the Decade's BEST GAMES OF
THE NATIONAL LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES click here

For the Decade's BEST GAMES OF
THE AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES click here

For the Decade's BEST GAMES OF
THE WORLD SERIES click here



Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Sully Baseball Presents THE BEST AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAMES OF THE 2000s


There was a period of time during the 1980s and 1990s where the drama of the NFC title game over shadowed the drama of the Super Bowl.

The same could be said to a degree about the ALCS this decade. While many years the World Series was a bit of an anti climax, the ALCS was reliable for some of the most thrilling and down to the wire games of the decade.

And yes, a lot of attention was put on the Yankee/Red Sox series. Well I am sorry, rest-of-the-country... but the Red Sox and Yankees played in back to back ALCS and they were two of the best ALCS in history! And not just because of an East Coast Bias. They were thrillers and each had a spectacular "I can't believe the rivalry is getting bigger!" conclusion.

This decade featured walk off homers, including two ALCS ending walk off shots. It featured coaches being thrown to the ground, balls being slapped out of gloves by superstars, a team blowing a late 7-0 lead, a remarkable come back started by a stolen base... and of course a bloody sock.

As started in the Best of 2000s Post Season Home Page, I am picking the best game for each game of the series... Best Game 1, Best Game 2... etc.

And when need be, I'll have some honorable mentions.




Best Game 1 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s

A year after the Twins were threatened with contraction, they found themselves with home field advantage in the ALCS.

Joe Mays took the mound for the Twins and was brilliant against a hard hitting Anaheim Angels squad.

He pitched 8 strong innings, letting up only a single unearned run. The Twins took the lead on Corey Koskie's 5th inning double and Eddie Guardado made it count with a shut out 9th inning.

The Twins wouldn't win another game in the series, but for one day it looked like Minnesota could give the ultimate middle finger to the powers that wanted to contract the team.


Honorable Mentions for Game 1 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s



After squeaking past Oakland, the Yankees faced the 116 win Mariners. Paul O'Neill's homer in the 4th gave the Yankees a 3-0 lead, putting Seattle on the defensive. The Mariners offense could not get going but still brought Edgar Martinez to the plate as the tying run in the bottom of the 9th. Mariano Rivera got him to ground out to end the game.


Daisuke Matsuzaka no hit the Rays for the first 6 innings but James Shields was also tough, holding the Red Sox to 1 run over 7 innings.

Dice-K wiggled out of trouble in the 7th but needed help from the bullpen in the 8th. With 2 on and 1 out, Justin Masterson got Evan Longoria to ground into a double play and end the threat.


Best Game 2 American League Championship Series for the 2000s

The White Sox did NOT want to go down 2-0 back to Anaheim and they would do anything to get a win in Chicago... even something sneaky.

The game was tied 1-1 in the bottom of the 9th thanks to a great 9 inning performance by Mark Buehrle and Angels reliever Kelvim Escobar. With 2 outs and nobody on, Escobar got White Sox catcher A. J. Pierzynski to strike out to end the inning.

Angels catcher Josh Paul casually went back to the dugout but Pierzynski saw he wasn't called out and sprinted to first base. Home plate umpire Doug Eddings claimed the ball hit the dirt before going into Paul's glove, making it a live ball and Pierzynski reached first. Replays showed it actually went into the glove.

Either way, another out would have made the point moot. But pinch runner Pablo Ozuna stole second and scored on Joe Crede's walk off double.

The Angels were fuming but the White Sox got the win... and they wouldn't lose again the entire post season.

Honorable Mentions for Game 2 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s

2007 - Indians 13 Red Sox 6 (11 innings)

The Red Sox stampeded through the Division Series and Game 1 of the ALCS. In Game 2, the Indians took an early lead off of Curt Schilling but Manny Ramirez and Mike Lowell hit back to back homers to briefly give the Red Sox the lead.

The Indians tied it up... and suddenly the scoring stopped.

In the bottom of the 9th, Kevin Youkilis fouled off a bunch of pitches before hitting a low line drive snared by Grady Sizemore, saving the game. In the 11th, Francona handed the ball to Eric Gagne who got rocked... before the 11th was over the Indians scored 7 runs, including a go ahead single by Trot Nixon and a homer by Franklin Gutierrez.

The Indians had new life and looked like they had life in the ALCS.

2008 – Rays 9 Red Sox 8 (11 innings)

The crisp pitchers duel of Game 1 gave way to a sluggish slug fest in Game 2. Jason Bay and Evan Longoria traded 2 run first inning homers. Pedroia would homer twice. Youkilis would add another one. Cliff Floyd and B. J. Upton homered for the Rays.

But Beckett couldn't hold onto a 6-5 lead and Tampa couldn't hold the lead with 2 outs in the 8th.

The Red Sox left runners in scoring position in the 9th and 11th and Tampa won the game on a sacrifice fly in the 11th by Upton. How could the series have been different had the Red Sox taken a 2-0 series lead?


2009 – Yankees 4 Angels 3 (13 innings)

The Angels needed to win Game 2 in order to realistically have a shot at going to the World Series... and somehow the Angels blew every conceivable chance to win it, even when the Yankees handed the game over on a silver platter.

Joe Saunders and Kevin Jepsen held the mighty Yankees to 2 runs over 9 innings... but A. J. Burnett of all people shut the Angels down as well. The Angels loaded the bases in the 5th and tied the game on a wild pitch... but left the bases loaded in the 7th and left runners in scoring position in the 8th.

In the pouring rain in the 11th, the Angels took the lead and sent closer Brian Fuentes to close out the 11th. He faced A-Rod and then a bunch of bench players... all he had to do was make sure A-Rod didn't homer in the downpour.

OF COURSE HE DID and the game was tied.

The Angels left runners in scoring position in the 12th and the Yankees left the bases loaded in the bottom of the frame. Vlad Guerrero once again left runners in scoring position in the 13th while the Yankees took advantage of sloppy defense to win it in the 13th.

Best Game 3 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s

Let's get the Don Zimmer/Pedro Martinez fight out of the way first.

Yeah there was a big fight. And yeah I thought Manny Ramirez was out of line yelling at Clemens because the pitch was nowhere near his head.

But anyone who saw it saw Don Zimmer, one of the great idiots in baseball history, running at Pedro Martinez... clearly not to chat.

Pedro tossed the old fool aside... maybe with a little too much relish.

But how it was covered in New York leapt far beyond absurd. Pedro did NOT attack Don Zimmer. One person talked on the radio about how "Zimmer was trying to make peace and Pedro attacked him."

That is as truthful as saying "Los Angeles is in Rhode Island."

What you might forget about that insane game was that it was actually a good GAME! Pedro and Roger... Sox taking an early lead... Jeter and Ramirez homering...

But the fact of the matter is the high pitches to Posada that started the insanity woke up the Yankees and gave them life as Pedro Martinez lost a playoff game for the first time.


Honorable Mention for Game 3 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s

2009 – Angels 5 Yankees 4 (11 innings)

The Yankees looked like they were ready to sweep away the Angels when they took a 3-0 lead in the 5th. But the Angels got off the matt, highlighted when Game 2 goat Vlad Guerrero launched a game tying homer off of Andy Pettitte. The Angels took the lead but Jorge Posada tied it with a homer in the 8th.

The game went into extras again... where once again Guerrero left the bases loaded. But this time the Angels were able to push a run across in extra innings when Jeff Mathis singled home Howie Kendrick and gave the Halos some hope.


Best Game 4 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s
Don't worry. I haven't forgotten the Dave Roberts game... just giving some love to the good folks in Detroit.

Just 3 years removed from a 119 loss season, the Tigers were on the verge of a pennant.

But the A's, fighting for their life, came out swinging. Milton Bradley and Eric Chavez hit RBI doubles in the first and Jay Payton added a solo shot to make it 3-0 Oakland. But the Tigers fought back, tying the game on a Magglio Ordonez homer in the 6th.

The A's blew a bases loaded chance in the 8th. In the 9th, with 2 outs and nobody on, the Tigers rallied. Finally Huston Street grooved one to Ordonez, whose second homer of the game, a 3 run shot, won the pennant for the Tigers.



Honorable Mentions for Game 4 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s



Mariners starter Paul Abbott had a no hitter going through 5 innings. The problem was he also let up 8 walks and wasn't exactly sharp.

Either way, it is harsh to lift a guy while throwing a post season no hitter!

Roger Clemens and Ramiro Mendoza combined for 2 hits over 8 innings. In fact going into the bottom of the 8th, the Mariners had a 1-0 lead and there were only 3 hits in the entire game.

Bret Boone's homer gave Seattle the lead, but Bernie Williams' homer tied the game in the bottom of the 8th.

In the bottom of the 9th Alfonso Soriano hit a walk off homer off of Kaz Sazaki, giving the Yankees a 3-1 win and a 3-1 series lead.

A lot of people made a big deal about the fact his homer took place at 9:11 PM in the wake of the September 11th attacks. I think it was a coincidence.


I know I will catch flack from Red Sox fans for not putting this game at the top.

Yes, I know it was the turning point of the rivalry. Yes I know it was the moment where the Red Sox stared into the abyss and found their character. I know it was the moment where the single most transcendent moment happened in Red Sox history and Dave Roberts stole that base and started a chain reaction that resulted in the Red Sox slaying their demons.

I know. I remember the game well.

I remember Papi's homer too.

I remember it all.

And guess what? The 2004 ALCS is going to get a lot of love on this page. And besides, when the game was over, I thought "Oh man... this is just prolonging the agony." It wasn't until the Game 5 victory that I began to think "wait a second! We can win this thing!"


Best Game 5 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s
Less than 24 hours after The Dave Roberts Game ended, the Red Sox and Yankees had to play another game.

As I said in Reverse the Curse of the Bambino, I was actually a little pissed when the euphoria ended at the end of Game 4. The Red Sox were still in a terrible hole, down 3 games to 1, and while it was fun to see the Sox squeeze out a win... the series was still over.

Game 5 just seemed cruel, especially when the Red Sox took an early 2-0 lead only to see it slip away on a 2 out 3 run double by Jeter on Pedro's 100th pitch.

Then Game 5 became surreal. Down 4-2 with Tom Gordon on the mound, David Ortiz homered to make it a 1 run game... and Kevin Millar walked again and Dave Roberts came in to run again.

And I sat back thinking "Oh man... so cruel. They'll bring in Rivera now."

But an unnerved Tom Gordon remained in the game long enough to let Trot Nixon execute a perfect hit and run putting the tying run on third with nobody out. Rivera came in but let up a game tying sacrifice fly.

Then Game 5 became insane...

Tony Clark hit a 2 out ground rule double that just skipped over the fence, taking a potential pennant winning run off of the board for the Yankees.

The Red Sox had 2 on and nobody out in the 11th and couldn't score.

David Ortiz tried to steal in the 12th. He was called out even though replays should he might have been safe.

The Red Sox had to bring in Tim Wakefield and use Jason Varitek as his catcher. The Lobster couldn't catch Wakefield's knuckler yet kept calling for it. In the bizarre 13th inning, Wakefield had two base runners and threw three passed balls... and yet didn't let up a run. Why Torre never set the runners in motion never made sense to me.

In the 14th, the Red Sox rallied against a surprising Esteban Loaiza with David Ortiz driving home the winning run with 2 outs, 2 strikes and a brown stain creating at bat.

After that game, Red Sox fans dared think "Hmm... I wonder if the Sox could win this."

There was no time to think. The next game was less than 24 hours away.


Honorable Mentions for Game 5 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s


Only the emotion of the 2004 series kept this from the top spot. One of the most mind boggling comebacks in post season history. The Rays took a 7-0 lead with 2 outs in the 7th at Fenway and were poised to blow the Red Sox out for the third straight game for the pennant.

The Red Sox cut the score to 7-4 and the next inning J. D. Drew brought the Red Sox to within 1 with a homer. Then Coco Crisp fouled off 4,391 pitches and singled home the tying run with 2 outs in the 8th.

After a double play killed a 9th inning Rays rally, the Sox took advantage of an error and a J. D. Drew double to win a game that just didn't seem to be really happening.


I will go on record in saying that Game 5 of the 2009 ALCS was one of the strangest playoff games I have ever seen. The Yankees were held scoreless in all but one inning. The Angels were held scoreless in all but 2 innings.

Most of the game was a tense pitching duel. But those three innings were so wild that it gave the game a sense that it was a crazy slugfest.

The Angels pounded A. J. Burnett and were up 4-0 before he recorded an out. Then the Angels bats went dead.

Then with 2 outs in the 7th and the bases loaded, Mike Scioscia took out John Lackey, who didn't seem happy about it. Turns out Lackey was right. The Yankees scored 6 runs with 2 outs and looked like they were lined up to win the pennant. But Girardi let A. J. Burnett start the bottom of the 7th and then the Yankee bullpen collapsed. Vlad Guerrero tied the game with a single and Kendry Morales gave the Angels the lead.

Brian Fuentes had 2 outs and nobody on... and managed to let the Yankees load the bases. But Nick Swisher popped up to end the game and force a Game 6.


Best Game 6 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s
First of all, let me say this right off the bat:

I was there.

It's not often you get to be in the stands during one of the classic playoff games of all time. But I was there, thanks to Jon Griggs getting me a ticket.

The game was an unnerving experience, waiting for that moment when the other shoe was going to drop and the Yankees would win in front of the home crowd.

First I thought the Yankees were going to bunt like crazy off of Schilling. I couldn't see the bleeding sock... but we all knew he had a crazy surgery just days before the game and nobody was sure if his foot was going to pop off of his ankle, let alone have him throw a shutout into the 7th.

And then came the A-Rod slap. From where I was sitting, it wasn't clear what happened. I just assumed Bronson Arroyo did something stupid and threw the ball away.

But when Yankee Stadium was going nuts, screaming 19-18 and Boston Sucks, I noticed the umpires huddling. Now heaven forbid they use replay to check the play... but they did get the call right. A-Rod slapped that ball away and was out... despite his protestations.

What people forget about that game was that the Yankees brought the pennant winning run to the plate in the bottom of the 9th. With 2 outs and 2 on, Tony Clark faced Keith Foulke... who could have been the post season MVP for the 2004 Red Sox.

All the while I was thinking "This is it... this is where the 2004 Red Sox end... Tony F---ing Clark."

But Foulke struck him out and one of the iconic games of the decade went to the Red Sox.

There was no time to rejoice... they would play again in less than 24 hours.

Honorable Mentions for Game 6 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s


Facing elimination, the Mariners jumped out to an early lead thanks to first inning RBIs by then Mariner A-Rod and Edgar Martinez.

Their 4-0 lead quickly became 4-3. Then in the 7th, David Justice launched a 3 run homer that game the Yankees the lead.

The Mariners would rally with an A-Rod homer in the 8th and had the tying run at the plate in the form of Yankee killer Edgar Martinez in the 9th. But Edgar grounded out to give the Yankees the pennant.




The tremendous 2003 ALCS looked like it was running out of gas with the Yankees pulling away. The Red Sox blew an early 4-1 lead and the Yankees took the lead partially on a Nomar Garciaparra error.

But Nomar made up for it by tripling in the 7th and scoring on Hideki Matsui's error, making it a 1 run game. In the same inning David Ortiz tied the game with a single and Johnny Damon's walk with the bases loaded gave the Red Sox the lead.

Trot Nixon's homer gave the Red Sox some wiggle room and the Yankees couldn't rally off of relievers Alan Embree, Mike Timlin and Scott Williamson... a fact forgotten by manager Grady Little 24 hours later.


The Angels were on the brink, trailing the series 3-2 and were down 3-1 in the 8th. But the Angels cut the lead to one on a Vlad Guerrero RBI single. The Angels just needed to play mistake free ball in the bottom of the 8th to give the team a shot in the 9th.

That didn't happen. The usually steady Angels made two errors in the bottom of the 8th and the Yankees pulled ahead and clinched the pennant with a 1-2-3 ninth inning.

Best Game 7 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s
Arguably the single greatest game of the decade.

The Red Sox seemed poised to finally slay their demons in the Bronx.

The Yankees were ready to maintain supremacy.

It was Pedro vs. Clemens just a few days after the Zimmer brawl.

The build up to the game was so intense that there was no way it could match up to the hype. Somehow it surpassed it.

If you are reading this blog, then you don't need a recap for Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS.

So here are some facts and thoughts about the last game of the curse:

- Aaron Boone didn't start the game. Enrique Wilson had a solid record against Pedro Martinez and started at third in his place. Boone didn't enter the game until he was a pinch runner in the dreaded 8th.

- The biggest hero of the game might have been Mike Mussina who came into the game in the 4th, Yankees down 4-0 with 2 on and nobody outs... Sox in danger of blowing the game open. He threw 3 scoreless innings and kept the Yankees in the game.

- Every single Red Sox fan knew that Pedro Martinez always fell apart after 100 pitches. When he struck out Alfonso Soriano with 2 on to end the 7th, I yelled what every other Red Sox fan yelled. "GREAT! TAKE HIM OUT!"

- When Pedro came out to start the 8th, I thought "OK, but take him out after he lets up a base runner."

- Alan Embree's ERA in the ALCS was 0.00... so was Mike Timlin's... and Scott Williamson had 3 saves. It's safe to say they could have cobbled together 5 outs. In fact Embree and Timlin DID get 5 outs... when it was too late.

- Anyone who said that Grady Little made the right decision with the lame excuse "Pedro was the best pitcher so he should have been there in the 8th" is insane. I would always say in return "So did Grady make the wrong decision taking Pedro out when the game was tied?"

- Little took David Ortiz out of the lineup in the 9th when he lifted him for a pinch runner. If the game went deep into extras, Gabe Kapler would have been protecting Manny Ramirez.

- If the Red Sox won this game and won the 2003 World Series, chances are the Yankees would pick up Curt Schilling in the off season and the Red Sox would have acquired Alex Rodriguez.

- That night almost hurt as much as 1986... the only thing that made it hurt less was that it was erased the very next year.

Honorable Mentions for Game 7 of the American League Championship Series for the 2000s


The closest 10-3 game in history. Even when the Red Sox were up 8-1, I couldn't relax. I kept thinking "Oh Christ... how will the Yankees come back?"

And it sure seemed like we were going to get our answer when Pedro Martinez came into the game in the 7th. The game went from 8-1 to 8-3... then Pedro reached back and struck out Olerud and got Cairo out... and Bellhorn homered in the top of the 8th.

Then I remember a very strange feeling take over my body... confidence.

And in one game the rivalry was changed forever. The Yankees can win in the future and they did this year... but the Red Sox finally had a highlight against the Yankees go THEIR way.

In some ways the World Series was an anticlimactic after thought. As Red Sox fans, what do you think about when 2004 is mentioned? Is it the Cardinals? Or beating the Yankees?


There is no way to look at the final score to know how tense this game was. The Indians were trying not to let a 3-1 ALCS lead completely slip away. The Red Sox were trying to complete yet another comeback and get back to the World Series.

And in the 7th inning, it looked like the Series was going to turn in the Indians favor. With the Red Sox up 3-2, Kenny Lofton reached when Julio Lugo let an easy fly ball drop. With the speedy Lofton on second, Franklin Gutierrez singled to left. Manny Ramirez loafed in and tossed it to second... and Kenny Lofton was standing on third base. Third base coach Joel Skinner held him from scoring the tying run. Historians for generations will study that tape and not have any clue why he was held at third. A double play in the next play ended the rally.

Dustin Pedroia homered to give the Sox some breathing room in the 7th, but the Indians put the tying run at the plate with nobody out in the 8th. Papelbon came in and got Hafner and Martinez out... then Garko hit a deep flyball that looked like it was going to tie the game or at least make it a 1 run game. But Jacoby Ellsbury tracked it down.

The Red Sox unloaded on the Indians bullpen in the 8th to make it a blow out... but make no mistake, this game could have gone either way.



The Red Sox looked like they were going to complete their third "Down by 3-1 in the ALCS" comeback in 5 seasons. Pedroia homered in the 1st and Jon Lester was on the hill... and the Rays were suddenly the Devil Rays again.

But Matt Garza didn't let up another hit until the 7th and the Rays managed to score 3 runs and take a 3-1 lead into the 8th... setting up one of the most heart stopping innings of the decade.

Alex Cora reached on an error, knocking Garza out of the game. Against the bullpen that blew the 7-0 Game 5 lead, the Red Sox loaded the bases and had playoff hero J. D. Drew come to the plate.

In came David Price, a year removed from Vanderbilt University. Drew chased a 1-2 pitch and the inning ended as a heart breaking goose egg (for me at least). Price worked around a walk in the 9th to be one of the most unlikely bullpen closers in playoff history.

He was so cool under pressure that he was enlisted to introduce Barack Obama at a rally in Florida.



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Thursday, October 29, 2009

What is it with folksy good ole boy managers and Pedro Martinez in Yankee Stadium?

I don't think there is a Phillies fan alive who wouldn't have taken 6 innings 2 runs by Pedro Martinez in his Game 2 outing. Especially with a completely rested bullpen to throw innings 7, 8 and 9.

So when Pedro came out to start the 7th, I was surprised.

This isn't a second guess. I sat on my couch in South Pasadena and said "I can't believe he's staying in... take him out if he let's up a batter."

Do you know when I said that exact same sentence regarding Pedro Martinez in Yankee Stadium?

Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS.

I remember when he came out to throw the 8th after an entire season of going 7 innings tops, I thought "Odd... they haven't hit Williamson, Timlin nor Embree all series... take him out the second he lets up a hit."

With 1 out Jeter doubled and I said "Take him out now!"

And we all know what happened.

Well tonight I said the same thing... and when Jerry Hairston Jr singled I said out loud "OK, go to the pen."

And another gray haired good ole boy manager let him in a hitter too long.

The Yankees eventually scored that insurance run that gave the Yankees breathing room they would need.

Imagine the 2 runners on base in the 8th for the Phillies with only a 1 run deficit.

Imagine Ryan Howard coming to the plate representing the tying run... or Matt Stairs coming up with Ibanez at second as the tying run.

Well it is too late now...

The Phillies got the split in New York but on Halloween, the pressure falls back on the Phillies shoulders. They can't fall behind 2-1 and face Sabathia.

I was going to declare this is the beginning of a great series... but 2006 began with a split. The Cardinals won game 1, the Tigers won game 2 and it looked like it might be a long series.

Nope done in 5.

Last year the Rays and the Phillies split and it looked like the series was going to go on for a while. It did, but that was because of the rain delays and suspended games!

But if the Yankees and Phillies exchange wins in Games 3 and 4... this might turn into a classic.

Just let's hope Charlie Manuel squashes the Grady Little within.



Friday, October 16, 2009

Somewhere Grady Little is laiughing his ass off

People are now screaming that Charlie Manuel took Pedro out TOO SOON!

Keep in mind this was 6 seasons after the 7th Game in 2003 when all logic pointed to him being lifted in the 8th.

And he's had, what, 3 potential career ending injuries since then.

Yeah I know he was under 90 pitches. He also gave the Phillies 7 shutout innings when everyone on the planet was wondering if he could go more than 5.

To author and friend of Sully Baseball Michael X Ferraro's credit, he said on the phone to me during the 8th that Pedro should stay in since he only threw 87 pitches.

Have Utley turn a double play and this conversation is moot.