“DIARY OF A WINNER”

THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
David Price and Xander Bogaerts lead the Sox

#1

March 30, 2018 ... David Price had been talking all spring about how he was ready for the year and ready to prove to Boston what kind of pitcher he really is. e was absurdly good in his first start of the year, showing off impeccable command to go with otherworldly efficiency.

The offense didn’t match up with the pitching performance, though, to be fair, Blake Snell was phenomenal for Tampa Bay. One guy who continued to hit for the Red Sox was Xander Bogaerts, and that was enough for today at least.

Price was flat-out sick, which was easily the takeaway from this game. The Red Sox lefty is looking to prove he can be the 1A to Chris Sale’s 1-status in the rotation, and on he picked up right where Sale left off. Going up against his former team, Price had all three of his pitches working and he was painting the corner of the zone all day long with each of his offerings. This is Price at his best, not really showing off a big breaking ball but painting the corners with his two-seam and just destroying opponents with that late-breaking cutter. The Rays saw first-hand in this one how demoralizing that kind of mix can be.

There really weren’t many instances early on in which Price even had to break a sweat. In fact, the southpaw retired the first ten batters he faced in a run that included two strikeouts and just one ball leaving the infield. The first hit of the game came from Kevin Kiermaier, and even this wasn’t very impressive. The Rays outfielder hit a little chopper up the middle that Xander Bogaerts was able to get to but the Red Sox shortstop never had a chance to get the speedy runner. Price would allow another batter to reach on a more legitimate single later in the inning, but got out of the mild trouble without allowing a run.

From there, it was just more cruising as that fourth inning was the most the Red Sox starter had to work in this game. He tossed an easy fifth that did include a single but was quickly followed by a double play and then came back out for the sixth with a 1-2-3 frame that included a pair of strikeouts. The seventh wasn’t much more difficult. It did include a single from Wilson Ramos, but that was it.

As was the case with Sale on Thursday, the Red Sox were easing Price into the season. It was questionable to lift him after just 72 pitches with the bottom of Tampa’s order coming up, but Alex Cora had a plan and he was sticking to it.

Unfortunately, Snell was able to match Price for pretty much his entire outing. In fact, the two starters’ nights were close mirrors of each other. While Price was perfect through his first ten batters, Snell got through eleven before allowing his first base runner. The Rays starter had markedly improved command from earlier in his career and the stuff was straight-up filthy for most of this outing. The Red Sox did manage a couple of baserunners in the top of the fourth on a Hanley Ramirez single and a J.D. Martinez walk, but they’d be left stranded.

Snell came back after that and got through an easy fifth before getting into a little more trouble in the sixth. After a quick first out, Mookie Betts drew a walk and then during Ramirez’ two-out at bat, Betts applied some pressure with his mere presence on the bases. Ramirez worked through a tough at bat and eventually singled to put runners on the corners with two outs. It was a chance for J.D. Martinez to come through in a big spot for his new team in a scoreless game. Kevin Cash wanted no part of Martinez against a lefty, despite Snell having thrown only 84 pitches and looking great throughout the start, and he called upon Chaz Roe. The Rays right-handed reliever got the job done, though, getting Martinez to strike out in a long, frustrating at bat with an inconsistent strike zone (for what it’s worth I thought the ultimate strike three call was correct) to end the rally.

The sixth went better for the Red Sox, and as was the case for their scoring chances on Opening Day it started with Bogaerts. The shortstop had another big swing and smashed a double into the left field corner to start the inning, giving him three doubles on the year already.

The Red Sox didn’t wait around to capitalize on the chance this time, with Rafael Devers coming through with an RBI single despite the Rays going back to the bullpen to bring in their lefty specialist. Just like that, the Red Sox were on the board and had a 1-0 lead. Eduardo Nuńez followed that up with an infield single but the Red Sox couldn’t capitalize from there. Jackie Bradley Jr. had a big part in killing this momentum, grounding into a double play to continue a rough start to his 2018 that includes a rough spring training.

So, it was up to the Red Sox bullpen to come through in a big spot and avenge their performance on Opening Day. It was Matt Barnes who got the eighth inning. Things weren’t completely stress-free for Barnes this time around, but he did the job. The Rays got one baserunner when Denard Span drew a one-out walk, but that was it. Joey Wendle looked like he may have had a big swing when he smoked a line drive in the next at bat, but fortunately for the Red Sox it was hit directly at Devers.

The Red Sox looked like they’d be able to get some insurance in the ninth when Bogaerts hit yet another double, his fourth of the year! But that was squandered by a Devers ground out and Nuńez strikeout. The latter involved a ball that got by the catcher and to the backstop, but Nuńez was just barely thrown out on a play that was challenged but upheld. Had the call been reversed, at least, despite the review taking approximately one half of one second, Bogaerts would have scored and given Boston a 2-0 lead.

Instead, the one-run lead held up and the Red Sox called upon Craig Kimbrel to save the lead in his first opportunity of 2018. Things got off to a great start with Kiermaier going down by way of the K to start the ninth. The good times kept rolling when Carlos Gomez came up as he also succumbed to a Kimbrel fastball. C.J. Cron couldn’t put the ball in play, either, and with three straight strikeouts this one was over. Cora’s first win is in the books, and the Red Sox will not go 0-162 in 2018.

 

GAME RECAP

 

at Tropicana Field (Tampa) ...

R

H

E

BOSTON RED SOX

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

 

1

7

0

TAMPA BAY RAYS

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

 

0

4

0

W-David Price (1-0)
S-Craig Kimbrel (1)
L-Chaz Roe (0-1)
A
ttendance – 19,203

2B-Bogaerts (Bost)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Mookie Betts rf 3 0 0 .143  

 

Andrew Benintendi lf 4 0 0 .000  

 

Hanley Ramirez 1b 4 0 2 .286  

 

Mitch Moreland 1b 0 0 0 .000  

 

J.D. Martinez dh 3 0 0 .222  

 

Xander Bogaerts ss 4 1 2 .625  

 

Rafael Devers 3b 4 0 1 .250  

 

Eduardo Nunez 2b 4 0 1 .375  

 

Jackie Bradley Jr cf 3 0 0 .000  

 

Christian Vazquez c 3 0 1 .333  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  

 

David Price 7 4 0 0 5  

 

Matt Barnes 1 0 0 1 1  

 

Craig Kimbrel 1 0 0 0 3  

 

 

         

 

 

 

2018 A.L. EAST STANDINGS

 

 

New York Yankees 2 0 -

 

 

Baltimore Orioles 1 0 1/2

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX

1 1 1

 

 

Tampa Bay Rays 1 1 1

 

 

Toronto Blue Jays 0 2 2