“DIARY OF A WINNER”

THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
Brian Johnson has a solid outing

#58

July 3, 2018 ... The Red Sox showed of their power with big three-run homers from Xander Bogaerts and Eduardo Núñez. They showed an ability to sustain a rally with a whole lot of singles before Bogaerts’ homer. They got good pitching from Brian Johnson and the bullpen.

The Red Sox were able to get one big swing to give them an early lead and they looked for that to hold up as the Nationals began chipping away. For the second straight night said offense came from an unexpected source. This rally, like the one on Monday, came in the second following a 1-2-3 first. It started with back-to-back singles from Mitch Moreland and Xander Bogaerts, and after a groundout Eduardo Núñez would come to the plate with two on and one out. The Red Sox infielder got a fastball belt-high and a bit off the inside corner and he got good wood on it, sending it over the wall in left-center field for a three-run homer. Just like that, the Sox had a 3-0 lead.

That was all of the offense the Red Sox would get for a couple of innings. They went down 1-2-3 in the third before failing to take advantage of a good situation in the fourth. There, Steve Pearce started the inning with a double and would move to third on a wild pitch. After a Bogaerts walk put two on with nobody out, Rafael Devers struck out and Núñez grounded into a double play to end the inning without a run.

While this was going on, Brian Johnson was having himself a solid day on the mound. As always, he wasn’t overpowering and didn’t show off dominant stuff, but his command was mostly good and he was mixing up his pitches fairly well. It actually seemed as if he might be in some trouble immediately when his start began with a bloop single and a bunt single against the shift. It was two runners on base with nobody out. Johnson held tight and recorded three quick outs to negate the early threat.

After that, the southpaw got through a second inning that included a single and a walk and also included Sandy León throwing out a base-stealer on one of the most perfect throws from home to second you’ll ever see. After a 1-2-3 third, Johnson started to get into trouble in the fourth.

That rally started with a double from Bryce Harper as he hit one off the wall in right field. It was well-hit, to be fair, but also should have been caught. Harper would move to third on a groundout and come in to score on a single. After another single and a fly out moved Mark Reynolds to third, he’d score on yet another single, this one from opposing pitcher Tanner Roark. Just like that the lead was down to 3-2, and the Nationals had two on with two outs. Johnson got a big third out against Trea Turner to hold on to the lead.

The fifth is where the the Red Sox took a big lead. That rally actually started with Johnson smacking a single into left field, and after two more singles the bases were loaded for Martinez with just one out. He kept that rally going with a fourth consecutive single to score two, and Pearce added a fifth single for another run. With that, it was 6-2, and Bogaerts was at the plate. The shortstop got a changeup middle-in and he did not miss, sending it out to straightaway center field for a big three-run shot. That broke the game out to 9-2.

So, Johnson came back out with a sudden huge lead and was looking for a shutdown inning in what would likely be his last frame of the outing. He continued to look a bit shaky, allowing two runners to reach on a single and a walk. After recording the second out of the inning, Johnson was pulled with his pitch count rising and him still not being fully stretched out.

Heath Hembree came into the jam, and after allowing another single to load the bases, he got a big strikeout to leave the bags full and end the inning unscathed. He’d come back for the sixth as well, and while he allowed a solo homer to Pedro Severino he also racked three strikeouts to give him four over 1 13 innings, which is pretty good.

Brandon Workman had the seventh and tossed a 1-2-3 inning. The eighth and ninth belonged to William Cuevas, making his 2018 debut, and he tossed a 1-2-3 eighth. In the ninth, after the Red Sox added two more runs to their total thanks to a Martinez homer, Cuevas allowed another run on a solo homer but was able to finish off the game without the Red Sox having to turn to another reliever.

 

 
 

GAME RECAP

 

at Nationals Park (Washington DC) ...

R

H

E

BOSTON RED SOX

0

3

0

0

6

0

0

0

2

 

11

12

0

WASHINGTON NATIONALS

0

0

0

2

0

1

0

0

1

 

4

12

0

W-Brandon Workman (1-0)
L-Tanner Roark (3-10)
A
ttendance – 42,531

2B-Pearce (Bost), Nunez (Bost), Harper (Wash)
HR-Nunez (Bost), Bogaerts (Bost), Martinez (Bost),
 Severino (Wash), Goodwin (Wash)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Mookie Betts cf 4 1 1 .336  

 

Andrw Benintendi lf 5 2 1 .279  

 

J.D. Martinez rf 5 2 2 .325  

 

Mitch Moreland 1b 1 1 1 .288  

 

Steve Pearce 1b 4 1 2 .307  

 

Xander Bogaerts ss 3 1 2 .276  

 

Rafael Devers 3b 3 1 0 .242  

 

Eduardo Nunez 2b 4 1 2 .254  

 

Sandy Leon c 3 0 0 .248  

 

Brian Johnson p 2 1 1 .250  

 

Heath Hembree p 1 0 0 .000  

 

Brandon Workman p 0 0 0 .000  

 

Blake Swihart ph 1 0 0 .165  

 

William Cuevas p 0 0 0 .000  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  

 

Brian Johnson 4.2 8 2 2 2  

 

Heath Hembree 1.1 2 1 0 4  

 

Brandon Workman 1 0 0 0 1  

 

William Cuevas

2 2 1 0 0  

 

 

         

 

 

 

2018 A.L. EAST STANDINGS

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX

58 29 -

 

 

New York Yankees 55 28 1

 

 

Tampa Bay Rays 43 42 14

 

 

Toronto Blue Jays 40 45 17

 

 

Baltimore Orioles 24 60 32 1/2