“DIARY OF A WINNER”

THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
#0 is the Hero, as the Sox come back,
from 6 runs down and Sweep the Braves

#97

September 5, 2018 ... The Red Sox never seemed like they were going to win this game, even before it started. Alex Cora was out to get some rest for his guys after taking the first two games of this series and sent out the B-Team. They kept it close for a while before Drew Pomeranz imploded, and with a six-run deficit it seemed over. Then, they put together a bananas rally in the eighth to tie it up, only to see the Braves get the lead right back on a solo homer in the bottom of the eighth. It seemed like it was going to be a closer-than-it-should-have-been loss, before Brandon Phillips destroyed a two-run, go-ahead homer in the ninth in his first game with the Red Sox, in his first major-league game of the season.

The Red Sox clearly weren’t going all-out to win this game, which is justifiable when you have 96 wins on September 5th, have an 8.5-game lead in the. The coaching staff not going all-out, in terms of who was in the lineup. Part of that group was Hector Velazquez, who got the start. He was out to prove he’s still a worthy spot starter with this outing, but thing got off to a disastrous start.

Two pitches into the game he left a middle-middle two-seam fastball to Ronald Acuña, and Atlanta’s rookie sensation sent it into the seats in left-center field. Just like that, it was 1-0. Ender Inciarte immediately followed that up with a triple into the right-field corner, and Nick Markakis followed it up with a single to make it 2-0. When Johgan Camargo gave the Braves their fourth straight hit to start the game with a single of his own, Velazquez was in major need of a break. After a mound visit from pitching coach, Dana LeVangie, the righty settled down. He got a huge double play before ending the inning with another groundout, and the Braves

Velazquez continued to look much better after that inning as well. He got a 1-2-3 second and then worked around a leadoff walk in the third for another scoreless frame. He’d come back out for one more inning of work in the fourth, and that one also started with a leadoff walk. It seemed the Braves would score another run on a Tyler Flowers double, but Lucas Duda showed off his lack of speed while Andrew Benintendi and Brock Holt hooked up for a perfect replay to cut the runner down at the plate. Velazquez would eventually get a grounder to strand runners on the corners and keep the Braves at two.

Meanwhile, the Red Sox and their makeshift lineup was trying to do some improbable damage against Atlanta’s best pitcher, Mike Foltynewicz. They certainly had some trouble. After going down in order in the first, they did get a bit going in the second thanks to some smart baseball. Brandon Phillips, in his first start with the Red Sox, drew a leadoff walk to spark the rally and he’d move to third on a Rafael Devers single. Brock Holt then hit a grounder to first base, and after Duda sort of half-assed looking Phillips back to the bad the veteran second baseman broke for home as soon as Duda turned his back. Phillips would score and cut Boston’s deficit in half. With two runners on the Red Sox needed a hit from Velazquez to tie it up, but they didn’t get it and the inning was over.

Boston went back to struggling after that. They did have another chance in the third when Andrew Benintendi smacked a two-out double, but they couldn’t capitalize. After that, the Red Sox would go down in order over the next two frames.

In the bottom of the fifth, Drew Pomeranz came on for Hector Velazquez and the wheels fell off. The lefty started that inning off by giving up a walk, two singles and another walk to give Atlanta one run and bases loaded with nobody out. Pomeranz then got a groundout for the first out, but it scored another run, before allowing a two-run triple. In the blink of an eye, a 2-1 game was a 6-1 game. William Cuevas then came on to try and get out of the disastrous inning, but he immediately allowed an RBI single and a walk. Finally, he’d get two strikeouts to end the inning with Atlanta holding a 7-1 lead.

The sixth and seventh innings were largely uneventful, but the Red Sox started to make things interesting again in the eighth. Christian Vazquez, Tzu-Wei Lin and Jackie Bradley Jr. started that inning off with three consecutive bloop singles, and the Red Sox had the bases loaded with nobody outs against Dan Winkler. Blake Swihart came up next and smacked a two-run double, and suddenly the deficit was down to four with two in scoring and still nobody out. Andrew Benintendi knocked in one more with a single, and Steve Pearce came up next as a pinch hitter against the left-handed Jonny Venters. He made good contact out to left field, but Acuña made a nice play going back on it for the first out. Still, it did result in another run and suddenly it was 7-5. Phillips came up next and hit what could have been a double play ball, but thirdbaseman, Johan Camargo, misplayed it then threw it away, resulting in no outs and two runners in scoring position with just one out.

The Braves would then turn to former Oriole closer Brad Brach to stop the damage, but Ian Kinsler would have none of that. Coming in as a pinch hitter, he smoked a single into left field, and just like that the game was tied. After the second out of the inning Christian Vazquez got a single on a hit-and-run play, putting the go-ahead run 90 feet from home. Xander Bogaerts then came up to pinch hit with a chance to be the hero against Braves closer A.J. Minter. The southpaw wouldn’t give Bogaerts a chance by walking him, loading the bases for yet another pinch hitter. This time it was Mookie Betts, but he would strike out on a borderline pitch and the inning ended with a tie game.

Brandon Workman tried to keep the momentum with a quick bottom half of the eighth, and early on it looked like he could do that after getting two quick outs. Then, Freddie Freeman came up and changed it. Workman left a fastball right over the heart of the plate, and the Braves star put it over the right field wall, and just like that Atlanta had their lead back. Workman would get out of it after that, but the damage was done.

So, the Red Sox had one more chance to at least tie it up again, and they’d get a one-out single from Benintendi. Then, after Steve Pearce struck out to put two outs on the board, Phillips walked up. And he did the damn thing. The veteran crushed one out to left field on a no-doubter to suddenly give Boston a 9-8 lead.

Craig Kimbrel came on for the save chance in the ninth and set down the first two batters he’d face. The closer then walked the third batter of the inning but then got a strikeout to end it.

 

GAME RECAP

 

at Sun Trust Park (Atlanta) ...

R

H

E

BOSTON RED SOX

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

6

2

 

9

11

0

ATLANTA BRAVES

2

0

0

0

5

0

0

1

0

 

8

10

2

W-Brandon Workman (4-0)
S-Craig Kimbrel (38)
L-A.J. Minter (4-3)
A
ttendance – 28,836

2B-Swihart (Bost), Flowers (Atl)
3B-Albies (Atl)
HR-Phillips (Bost), Freeman (Atl), Acuna Jr (Atl)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Jackie Bradley Jr cf 4 1 1 .230  

 

Mookie Betts ph/cf 1 0 0 .335  

 

Blake Swihart rf 5 1 1 .224  

 

Adrw Benintendi lf 5 2 3 .292  

 

Mitch Moreland 1b 3 0 0 .249  

 

Steve Pearce ph/1b 1 0 0 .292  

 

Rafael Devers 3b 3 3 1 .333  

 

Ian Kinsler ph/2b 3 0 1 .242  

 

Brandon Phillips 2b/3b 2 0 1 .251  

 

Brock Holt ss 3 0 0 .258  

 

Bobby Poyner p 0 0 0 .000  

 

Eduardo Nunez ph 1 0 0 .258  

 

Brndn Workman p 0 0 0 .000  

 

Craig Kimbrel p 0 0 0 .000  

 

Christan Vazquez c 3 1 2 .216  

 

Hector Velazquez p 1 0 0 .000  

 

Sam Travis ph 1 0 0 .158  

 

Drew Pomeranz p 0 0 0 .000  

 

William Cuevas p 0 0 0 .000  

 

Tzu-Wei Lin ss 1 1 1 .196  

 

Xander Bogaerts ph/ss 0 0 0 .281  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  

 

Hector Velazquez 4.0 5 2 3 2  

 

Drew Pomeranz 0.1 3 5 2 0  

 

William Cuevas 1.2 1 0 2 3  

 

Bobby Poyner 1.0 0 0 0 2  

 

Brndn Workman 1.0 1 1 0 1  

 

Craig Kimbrel 1.0 0 0 1 2  

 

 

         

 

 

 

2018 A.L. EAST STANDINGS

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX

97 44 -

 

 

New York Yankees 87 53 9 1/2

 

 

Tampa Bay Rays 75 64 21

 

 

Toronto Blue Jays 63 76 33

 

 

Baltimore Orioles 41 99 55 1/2