SAVING FENWAY, MORE PEDRO
AND A FRUSTRATING SEASON

Pedro saves his own game in the 9th

July 23, 2000 ... Turning a tiny hill on the Fenway diamond into a public studio, Pedro Martinez submitted his tour de force in a dazzling, 1-0 victory over the Chicago White Sox, a classic he made look almost as easy as painting by numbers.

Pedro, with all but the most distracted of the 33,284 patrons on their feet, sealed the 15-strikeout performance with a virtuoso effort that crushed Chicago's last-gasp rally in the ninth.

After a freak leadoff double put the tying run on second and the go-ahead run at the plate, he unleashed 95-mile-per-hour bullets to one of the most dangerous teams in baseball, Pedro mowing down the last three hitters, forcing one to pop up and striking out the other two.

With his third shutout of the season, tops in the majors, Pedro (11-3) helped Boston win the three-game series against the surging White Sox and kept the Red Sox in second place in the American League East, a game behind the Yankees.

Yet the outcome was in doubt until Pedro's final pitch, his 131st of the game. Chicago slugger Magglio Ordonez, hitless in his first three at-bats, started the ninth by hitting what looked like a routine grounder to Nomar Garciaparra. But the ball hit something in the infield dirt, misdirecting it past Garciaparra and sending it into left for a bizarre double.

Pedro had no control over the landscaping. But he had the White Sox within his grasp, paralyzing them with his changeup until he challenged them in the ninth with his fastball.

With remarkable control, Pedro did not throw three balls to a batter until the sixth inning. And other than the ninth inning, he allowed only one runner to reach second base. That occurred with one out in the second inning, when he hit Paul Konerko with a pitch and allowed a bloop single to left by Chris Singleton. But he promptly struck out Carlos Lee and Herbert Perry to end the inning.

Pedro overshadowed a superb effort by Chicago's Mike Sirotka (9-8), who allowed only five hits and two walks. The only Red Sox run was unearned, made possible when Chicago shortstop Jose Valentin picked up a routine grounder by Izzy Alcantara in the fourth inning and launched it into the Red Sox dugout, allowing Alcantara to take second. The next batter, Jason Varitek, singled a 1-2 pitch up the middle to knock in Alcantara.

Scoring the winning run was sweet for Alcantara, who has been vilified since his abysmal effort in Chicago. He was 1 for 3 yesterday and is hitting .391 in 23 at-bats since joining the team last month.

The Red Sox had several other opportunities to score, but Ed Sprague, batting cleanup in place of the resting Carl Everett, three times hit inning-ending grounders with runners on base.

Pedro, who excelled in the ninth when other pitchers might have come undone after a bad hop became a leadoff double in a 1-0 game, seized the moment instead of the moment seizing him.

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

 

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

 

R

H

E

 
 

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

 

 

0

6

1

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

x

 

 

1

5

0

 

 

W-Pedro Martinez (11-3)
L-Mike Sirotka (9-8)
Attendance - 33,224

 2B-Ordonez (Chi), Daubach (Bost)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Darren Lewis cf 2 0 0 .240  

 

Brian Daubach 1b 4 0 2 .278  

 

Nmr Garciaparra ss 3 0 0 .391  

 

Ed Sprague 3b 4 0 0 .244  

 

Troy O'Leary lf 3 0 0 .264  

 

Izzy Alcantara dh 3 1 1 .391  

 

Jason Varitek c 3 0 1 .270  

 

Bernard Gilkey rf 3 0 0 .144  

 

Manny Alexander 2b 3 0 1 .205  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  
  Pedro Martinez 9 6 0 0 15  

 

 

         

 

 

 

2000 A.L. EAST STANDINGS

 

 

New York Yankees

51 42 -

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX

51

44

1

 

 

Toronto Blue Jays

53 47 1 1/2

 

 

Baltimore Orioles

43 54 10

 

 

Tampa Bay Devil Rays

38 58 14 1/2