The Red Sox pile it on the
Orioles
May 12, 2007
...
The Red Sox were beat on the Orioles,
13-4. Even the Sox acknowledge their win was hardly a
four-hour-and-four-minute exercise in nonstop excitement.
After Curt Schilling
uncharacteristically squandered a 4-1 lead in the sixth at the only juncture in
the game striking for its suddenness - the Orioles loaded the bases on just
three pitches, Schilling giving up three straight singles, and all three runners
eventually scored - the Sox scored nine unanswered runs in their last three
at-bats.
They were ably assisted by an Orioles
pitching staff that heaved 209 pitches, only slightly more than half of which
were identified as strikes (114). Jason Varitek was hit by a pitch by Jon
Leicester to open the sixth and came around to score the go-ahead run on Kevin
Youkilis's two-out single. Leicester then walked the bases loaded to start the
seventh, misfiring on 14 of 16 pitches, before clutching the back of his
shoulder in pain. He left with what was called a strain.
While Javier Lopez and Hideki Okajima
succeeded in rescuing Schilling, Orioles reliever Todd Williams could not escape
the hot bat of Alex Cora, who delivered a two-out, two-run pinch single after
Coco Crisp's ground ball had brought home one run. Sox pinch hitters had been
called upon 18 previous times by manager Terry Francona, and not one had
returned to the dugout having produced a run. Cora knocked in two.
The Sox piled on for five more runs
in the eighth, helped by some sloppy Orioles fielding. Williams took a 9.45 ERA
back to the team's hotel. He'd begun the day at 3.60. Cora, who remained in the
game at second, had an infield hit in that rally, and is now batting .475 (19
for 40) in his last 16 games.
On the day the Sox had 15 hits, drew
seven walks, had two batters plunked by pitches, dropped down two sacrifice
bunts and a sacrifice fly, and were 11 for 22 with runners in scoring position.
Lugo became the third Sox player this
week to have a four-hit game, joining Varitek and David Ortiz, and is now 11 for
his last 25 (.440), improving his average to .261. Ortiz blooped an RBI double
and singled, scoring three times. Lowell had two hits, a sacrifice fly, scored
twice, and had two RBIs. The Sox only had three extra-base hits on a cool day
with a 14 mile-an-hour northeast crosswind knocking down deep flies - ask J.D.
Drew about the three-run home run he thought he had in the fourth - but they
made starter Steve Trachsel labor early (102 pitches in just 4 1/3 innings) and
made the Orioles bullpen pay late.
Schilling, of course, was not pleased
about giving back the lead. Miguel Tejada (bloop to center), Ramon Hernandez
(opposite-field single to right), and Aubrey Huff (opposite way to left) pounced
on Schilling's first three pitches in the sixth. Schilling fought back from a
3-and-0 count to strike out Melvin Mora, but Jay Gibbons lined a full-count
fastball to left for an RBI single, his third hit of the day, and Schilling
walked Payton on another full count after fuming that plate umpire Chris
Guccione had missed the 2-and-2 pitch.
The walk forced home another run and
Schilling was done. Lopez, just recalled from Pawtucket Friday, entered and
retired Corey Patterson on an infield chopper that scored the tying run, then
retired Brian Roberts on a roller to short. He became the pitcher of record when
the Sox took the lead in their next at-bat, and emerged with the win after
Okajima bailed out Brendan Donnelly in the seventh after a single and hit
batsman, Okajima striking out Huff and retiring Mora on a grounder to third.
It's 17 2/3 scoreless innings and counting for Okajima.
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MIKE LOWELL |
David Ortiz, who drove in a run with
an opposite-field double that fell just inside the left-field foul line in the
fifth, still leads the Red Sox in RBIs with 31. He came into yesterday's game
ranked third in the American League in that category. But just behind him is
teammate Mike Lowell, who drove in two more runs with a sacrifice fly and single
and now has 30. Lowell drove in 20 runs in 23 games in April and in his first 11
games in May has 10. Nine of those have come in the last five games, as Lowell
hit home runs in three straight games in Toronto earlier in the week. Lowell
leads the club in batting with runners in scoring position with a .400 average
(12 for 30). In 2006, his first season in Boston, Lowell had 80 RBIs. He has had
two seasons of 100 or more RBIs, both with the Marlins, but the last was 2003,
when he had 105.
Reliever Javy Lopez was credited with
the win after making his second appearance in two nights since being recalled
from Triple A Pawtucket. Lopez had options when spring training ended and was
sent down; with Timlin on the DL and the Sox deciding they'd rather see Devern
Hansack starting in Pawtucket rather than be 12th man here, the call went to
Lopez, even though the Sox already have lefties Hideki Okajima and J.C. Romero.
Manny Ramirez extended his hitting
streak to 11 games with a two-run double in the fifth and is batting .386 (17
for 44) in that span, with 3 doubles, 4 homers, 12 RBIs, 9 runs, and 6 walks.