“DIARY OF A WINNER”

THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
 2018 WORLD SERIES, GAME #1
The Sox capitalize on Dodger mistakes

October 23, 2018 ... In what was supposed to be a battle of the aces, it was the offenses that stole the show with the bullpens and managers making the differences. Dave Roberts didn’t have a bad game, but Alex Cora pulled all the right strings and the Red Sox were able to come through with the victory. Andrew Benintendi led the charge with four hits, but really it was a group effort and another example of this team’s resiliency, as every time the Dodgers got some whiff of momentum, the Red Sox came right back and ripped it away.

The storyline heading into this first game of the World Series was a classic battle of the aces, with Clayton Kershaw and Chris Sale facing off in a matchup between two of the best pitchers of this generation. Kershaw has a history of disappointment in the postseason, and while the narrative has been overstated he still hasn’t been Clayton Kershaw in October. Sale, meanwhile, has also not been himself in his brief postseason history. On top of that, he hasn’t been himself in the second half of this season, and most recently spent some time in the hospital with stomach issues. So, because of that, it was important for both sides to see good things out of their starters early on.

For Sale, the first was fine if not perfect. There were some early signs that his command wasn’t there right away, but overall there wasn’t a ton to complain about as he allowed just a single in that inning and racked up a pair of strikeouts. It did take 21 pitches to do all of that, though.

For Kershaw, the first wasn’t as smooth and his defense made things much worse. Mookie Betts led off for the Sox and it looked like he would pop out to start the inning. Instead, David Freese lost track of the ball and allowed it to fall in foul territory, giving him a second life. Betts took advantage with a base hit. On the next pitch he stole second base and then Andrew Benintendi knocked him in on a base hit into right field. To make matters worse for L.A., Yasiel Puig made an ill-advised throw to the plate despite having no chance at Betts, which allowed Benintendi to get to second. J.D. Martinez took advantage of that mistake with an RBI single of his own, and just like that it was a 2-0 lead for the Sox with just one out. The Red Sox let Kershaw off the hook after that, though, with Martinez getting picked off and Xander Bogaerts popping one up to end the inning.

Sale was looking for similar results in the second with more efficiency, but he wasn’t going to get it. After starting things off with his third strikeout of the night, Matt Kemp came up. The Red Sox ace got to two strikes but couldn’t find his put-away pitch. Sale left a fastball over the plate and Kemp put it into the second row of the Monster Seats. Just like that, the lead was halved.

The Red Sox threatened again in the second when Rafael Devers led off with a walk and Sandy León singled to put runners on the corners with one out. Jackie Bradley Jr. had the chance for a big hit, and he hit one well, but it was on the ground up the middle. Somehow, it made it throw Kershaw’s legs and the Dodgers shift ate it up for an inning-ending double play.

That would bring us into the third, which was Sale’s worst showing of the night that was made even worse by some bad luck. After getting a quick first out, Sale couldn’t consistently hit the zone and it hurt. He didn’t walk anyone, but he never got a commanding 0-2 count, and when he did get two strikes he couldn’t finish batters off. As a result, the Dodgers ended up with three straight singles to get one more run and tie the game. Fortunately, Sale settled down after that and got a strikeout and a ground out to end the inning and not allow L.A. to take a lead.

In the bottom of the third, the Red Sox offense answered right back. They had the top of the order coming up, and Benintendi started the rally with a one-out bloop single. After Steve Pearce hit into a fielder’s choice, Martinez smoked one off the wall in center field, knocking in Pearce on an RBI double and giving The Sox the 3-2 lead after three.

After both pitchers came through with their first 1-2-3 innings in the fourth, Sale was brought out for the fifth and walked Brian Dozier to lead off the inning and that was his night. Matt Barnes came in to try and hold the one-run lead, and he didn’t succeed. Justin Turner put a second runner on with a base hit, and after a strikeout both runners advanced a base on a wild pitch. It would prove costly because Manny Machado grounded out, but the infield was back, and it was enough to tie the game.

The Red Sox answered back again. Kershaw came back out and he started off with a walk. Then Benintendi hit a single to put two on with nobody out. Ryan Madson then came on in relief, and a wild pitch moved both runners up a base. From there, the bases loaded up on a walk, and Martinez had a chance for a big blow. Instead, he struck out. Xander Bogaerts knocked one in on a ground out, and then a Rafael Devers single added a bit of insurance. After five, the Red Sox had a 5-3 lead.

The sixth belonged to Joe Kelly, and he had the most impressive outing. He set down the Dodgers in order in that inning without any stress at all.

In the seventh, Ryan Brasier got the call. He got the first batter out, but then Max Muncy and Justin Turner came through with back-to-back singles to put the tying run on first base with Yasmani Grandal coming to the plate. The catcher drew a walk to load the bases, and that brought Machado to the plate. He got one run in on a fly ball out to center field, and that was it for Brasier. Eduardo Rodriguez came on to try and get Cody Bellinger. With two on and two out in a one-run game, he got a weak pop out to center field to end the inning and keep the lead at one.

In the bottom half of the inning Benintendi started it off again, this time with a lucky ground-rule double to left field that certainly should have been caught. It looked like the Sox was going to squander the opportunity, getting down to two outs with two on and Alex Wood came on to face Rafael Devers. To counter, Alex Cora called upon Eduardo Núñez to pinch hit. Núñez hit a three-run home run, giving the Red Sox a four-run lead in an improbable and impressive big hit.

So, now it was just up to the relievers holding on to the lead. Nathan Eovaldi came up first, and he got a 1-2-3 eighth inning. That brought Craig Kimbrel on for the ninth. The closer tossed a 1-2-3 inning, and that was that.

 

 
 
 

2018 WORLD SERIES

 

 

Boston Red Sox

1 Game

 

 

Los Angeles Dodgers

0 Games

 

 

GAME RECAP

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

2018 World Series, Game #1

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

 

R

H

E

 
 

LOS ANGELES DODGERS

0

1

1

0

1

0

1

0

0

 

 

4

8

0

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

2

0

1

0

2

0

3

0

x

 

 

8

11

0

 

 

W-Matt Barnes (2-0)
L-Clayton Kershaw (2-2)
Attendance - 38,454

 2B-Martinez (Bost), Benintendi (Bost)

 HR-Nunez (Bost), Kemp (LA)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DODGERS

 

AB

R

H

 

 

Brian Dozier 2b 2 1 0  

 

Max Muncy ph/1b 2 1 1  

 

Justin Turner 3b 5 1 3  

 

David Freese 1b 3 0 2  

 

Yasmani Grandal ph/c 0 0 0  

 

Manny Machado ss 3 0 1  

 

Chris Taylor lf 2 0 0  

 

Cody Bellinger ph/cf 2 0 0  

 

Matt Kemp dh 4 1 1  

 

Enrique Hernandez cf/lf 4 0 0  

 

Yasiel Puig rf 3 0 0  

 

Austin Barnes c 2 0 0  
  Joc Pederson ph/lf 2 0 0  
             
    IP H ER SO  
  Clayton Kershaw 4 7 5 5  
  Ryan Madson 1 1 0 1  
  Julio Urias 1 1 1 2  

 

Pedro Baez 0.2 0 1 2  
  Alex Wood 1.1 2 1 2  

 

         

 

             

 

RED SOX

 

AB

R

H

 

 

Mookie Betts rf 4 2 1  

 

Andrew Benintendi lf 5 3 4  

 

Steve Pearce 1b 2 1 0  

 

Mitch Moreland ph/1b 1 0 0  

 

J.D. Martinez dh 3 1 2  

 

Xander Bogaerts ss 3 0 0  

 

Rafael Devers 3b 2 0 1  

 

Eduardo Nunez ph/3b 1 1 1  

 

Ian Kinsler 2b 4 0 0  

 

Sandy Leon c 4 0 2  

 

Jackie Bradley Jr cf 4 0 0  
             
    IP H ER SO  
  Chris Sale 4 5 3 7  
  Matt Barnes 1 1 0 1  
  Joe Kelly 1 0 0 2  
  Ryan Brasier 0.2 2 1 0  
  Eduardo Rodriguez 0.1 0 0 0  
  Nathan Eovaldi 1 0 0 0  
  Craig Kimbrel 1 0 0 2