“DIARY OF A WINNER”

THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
Mitch Moreland supplies a walk-off base hit

#98

September 9, 2018 ... The Red Sox came into this game needing a strong all-around performance, as had been proven in the previous two games against the Astros. Rick Porcello did what he could to do his part. The righty wasn’t perfect, as he missed some spots and gave up some hard contact here and there, but for the most part he looked good against one of the best lineups in all of baseball. The Red Sox need him trending in the right direction over the rest of this month, and this was a nice step in that direction.

The first inning is always going to be a big one against Houston given the firepower they have at the top of their lineup, and Porcello worked around a little bit of trouble in that frame. George Springer kicked things off with a single, and Alex Bregman would reach on a four-pitch walk to put two on with just one out. Porcello came back strong, though, getting back-to-back strikeouts against Yuli Gurriel and Carlos Correa to end the inning and the threat in impressive fashion.

In the second inning, after his team handed him a 1-0 lead, Porcello made a big mistake. Marwin Gonzalez was the first batter here and he worked a tough at bat, eventually getting up to an eighth pitch. Porcello tried to sneak a changeup by the Astros super utility man, but it stayed right over the heart of the plate and Gonzalez destroyed it for a 421-foot homer over Pesky’s Pole. It was a no-doubter off the bat, with the only question being whether or not it would stay fair. It did, and the game was tied.

After that, Porcello got into a bit of a groove for a bit. His command looked markedly better and he was getting through Houston’s order. The righty retired the next three batters he saw to end the second, and then in the third the only baserunner he allowed was a double from Bregman. The Astros star infield hit a weak pop up to shallow right field, and miscommunication between Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez allowed it to fall. Porcello worked around that in the third before coming back for a 1-2-3 fourth. In the fifth, he allowed a leadoff single but only had to face three batters when Brian McCann was inexplicably caught stealing.

Meanwhile, the Red Sox offense was trying to get something going against a left-handed groundball specialist in Dallas Keuchel. Mookie led it off with a double out to right field, and he’d move to third with two outs for Xander Bogaerts. The Red Sox shortstop has been money with runners in scoring position all year, and he came through once again with a line drive to center field for an RBI single.

The lead would be wiped out in the very next half-inning, and the Red Sox would wait until the third to get it back. Once again it was the top of the lineup doing work, and once again it was a rally started by a Betts double. He’d move on over to third on a ground out, and then Martinez drove him home with a fly out to the wall in left field for a 2-1 lead.

After the Red Sox failed to score in the fourth, they were once again looking for the top of the lineup to lead the way in the fifth. They did just that, and they got more than just the one run this time around, too. Betts reached on a leadoff walk. After Andrew Benintendi contributed an infield single, there were two on for Martinez. He smashed his 40th homer of the year into the Monster Seats. Suddenly, it was a 5-1 lead and the Red Sox had Keuchel against the ropes with still nobody out. Bogaerts would follow that up with a single to keep it going, but the Red Sox wouldn’t get any more after that.

So, Porcello had a four-run cushion from which to work and had a big test coming up against the middle of the order seeing him for a third time. Jose Altuve got to the righty in the first at bat of the inning, putting one into the Monster Seats down the line for a solo shot, cutting Boston’s lead to three. After getting the first out of the inning, Porcello gave up back-to-back singles and it seemed the wheels were ready to fall off.

After the righty got a line out from Gonzalez, Alex Cora came out and pulled his starter for Heath Hembree, who was trying to clean up a two-on with two-out mess. He did not succeed, allowing a two-run double to Tyler White and cut Boston’s lead back down to one. That was the only batter he’d face as Brian Johnson was called in to face McCann. He walked the catcher, bringing up Josh Reddick. He’d come through with a double to right field, and in the blink of an eye this game was all tied up and Ryan Brasier was entering the game. He finally, mercifully, ended the inning and kept the tie score intact.

The Red Sox had no answer in the bottom half of the sixth, and Steven Wright got the call in the seventh to face the middle of Houston’s lineup. Things got off to a rough start when Altuve dropped a bunt down to third base and Brandon Phillips’ throw got by Steve Pearce, putting Altuve on second base. The Astros star would then move over to third on a wild pitch with one out, but he was thrown out on a ground ball to shortstop. Bogaerts made a bad throw that was too high, but León was able to get the tag down just in time. That turned out to be a huge break because Wright got out of the inning after that and the score was still tied.

From here, we fast-forward to the bottom of the eighth with the Red Sox getting a chance against Collin McHugh. Bogaerts and Mitch Moreland started the inning with a pair of singles, leading to a potential bunt situation for Ian Kinsler who struck out. Brock Holt followed that up with a walk to load the bases for Blake Swihart, pinch hitting for Eduardo Núñez against left-handed Tony Sipp. He’d strike out, leaving it all up to Christian Vazquez in another pinch hitting spot. He’d also strike out, leaving the bases loaded and keeping the score tied.

Craig Kimbrel came out in a tie game and tossed a 1-2-3 top of the ninth, giving the Red Sox one more chance to end this one in regulation. They were able to do just that, and once again it was the top of the lineup. This time it was Benintendi starting the rally with a base hit, and a fielder’s choice would swap him out for Martinez with two outs. After Bogaerts got a base hit of his own, Tzu-Wei Lin came in to run for Martinez, and Moreland had a chance to win it. He didn’t crush one, but he hit a little looper into left field that got down and scored Lin.

 

 
 

GAME RECAP

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

 

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

 

R

H

E

 
 

HOUSTON ASTROS

0

1

0

0

0

4

0

0

0

 

 

5

11

0

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

1

0

1

0

3

0

0

0

1

 

 

6

14

1

 

 

W-Craig Kimbrel (5-1)
L-Hector Rondon (2-3)
Attendance - 32,787

 2B-Betts (Bost), Bregman (Hou),
 White (Hou), Reddick (Hou)

 HR-Martinez (Bost), Gonzalez (Hou), Altuve (Hou)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Mookie Betts cf 4 3 2 .342  

 

Andw Benintendi lf 5 1 2 .294  

 

J.D. Martinez rf 4 1 1 .331  

 

Tzu-Wei Lin pr 0 1 0 .196  

 

Xander Bogaerts ss 4 0 4 .291  

 

Steve Pearce 1b 3 0 0 .287  

 

Mitch Moreland ph/1b 2 0 2 .251  

 

Ian Kinsler 2b 4 0 1 .249  

 

Brandon Phillips 3b 3 0 0 .167  

 

Brock Holt ph/3b 0 0 0 .257  

 

Eduardo Nunez dh 3 0 2 .261  

 

Blake Swihart ph 1 0 0 .228  

 

Sandy Leon c 3 0 0 .188  

 

Christan Vazquez ph/c 1 0 0 .213  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  

 

Rick Porcello 5.2 7 4 1 6  

 

Heath Hembree - 1 1 0 0  

 

Brian Johnson - 1 0 1 0  

 

Ryan Brasier 0.1 0 0 0 1  

 

Steven Wright 2 2 0 1 0  

 

Craig Kimbrel 1 0 0 0 2  

 

 

         

 

 

 

2018 A.L. EAST STANDINGS

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX

98 46 -

 

 

New York Yankees 89 54 8 1/2

 

 

Tampa Bay Rays 78 64 19

 

 

Toronto Blue Jays 65 78 32 1/2

 

 

Baltimore Orioles 41 102 56 1/2

 

     
 

Number to clinch - 11