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EDUARDO RODRIGUEZ |
THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
The Sox come back with four homers
the beat the Atlanta Braves
May 25, 2018
...
The Red Sox got a good start from
Eduardo Rodriguez that did include some of his typical frustrations,
and four home runs from the offense was more than enough to give them
a win to start this series and continue a recent hot stretch for this
club. The Sox weren’t able to get an
advantage right off the bat as the Braves’ Julio Teheran was fine but honestly a
little more hittable than the results would indicate. Despite the righty missing
some spots, the Red Sox went down 1-2-3 in the first and third innings. They did
get a couple of baserunners in the second on a single and a walk, but there
wasn’t really any solid contact and neither runner came in to score a run.
Meanwhile, Rodriguez got off to a nice start against a
challenging lineup to face, though the lefty would get into trouble a little bit
sooner than his counterpart. Still, he looked good in the first despite allowing
a leadoff single to Ozzie Albies. After that, he set down both Ronald Acuña and
Freddie Freeman with strikeouts, and after a two-out walk he escaped the jam
with a ground out. He’d have a similar frame in the second with two reaching on
a pair of one-out singles, but once again he’d leave without a run being scored.
There was some typical frustrating for Rodriguez with him nibbling a bit too
much and throwing too many pitches, but the very early results were good.
That wouldn’t continue into the third, as the top of
Atlanta’s lineup got going this time around. After both struck out in the first,
Acuña and Freeman led off the third with back-to-back singles, putting a pair on
for Nick Markakis with nobody out. The longtime Oriole didn’t miss this chance,
smacking a double into the left-center field gap. That put the Braves up 2-0,
and they had a runner on second still with no outs. It was a chance for a huge
inning, but Rodriguez settled down in the big spot. A strikeout and a couple
grounders later and he escaped the jam with just the two runs on the board. That
sequence would prove important.
In fact, the importance would emerge fairly quickly. After
Rodriguez had a quick fourth with just a walk allowed, the Red Sox came up with
the same 2-0 deficit in the bottom half with the middle of their lineup coming
up. J.D. Martinez led things off, and he got a bad slider from Teheran that
stayed on the inner-half and the slugger ripped it out to the Monster Seats. It
wasn’t a moonshot, but he absolutely smoked it to cut the lead in half. Two
batters later, Xander Bogaerts came up and got another hanging slider. His home
run was more majestic than Martinez’, but both counted for one run and they
combined to tie the game at two apiece.
That was all the Red Sox would get in the fourth, but
they’d have a chance to take their first lead after Rodriguez mowed through a
1-2-3 fifth that included two strikeouts against the middle of Atlanta’s order.
With momentum now on their side, the Red Sox got a huge boost from Jackie
Bradley Jr. The outfielder got a fastball and was able to rip it off the wall in
the triangle for a one-out triple. After Mookie Betts drew a walk, Andrew
Benintendi came up and hit a fly ball deep enough into center field to easily
score the run and give Boston their first lead of the night. Betts would quickly
steal second to threaten another scoring chance, but they’d just get the one in
the inning and enter the sixth with a 3-2 lead.
Rodriguez came back out to protect his new found lead with
about 90 pitches to his name on the night. He started things off with a
strikeout and a ground out, but after walking the number eight hitter and
getting his pitch count into triple digits, Rodriguez was removed from the game.
He had the one rough inning in the third, but other than that the Red Sox lefty
had a strong effort against a tough lineup. In all, he’d last 5 2/3
innings, allowing the two runs on six hits and three walks with an impressive
seven strikeouts. Heath Hembree came on for the last out and got it quickly to
get out of the inning with the lead intact.
After the Red Sox went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the
sixth, Joe Kelly was called upon to handle the top of Atlanta’s lineup and
protect the one-run lead. He wasn’t perfect as he walked Freeman with two outs,
but that was all the Braves got.
In the bottom half of the seventh, the Red Sox got a little
extra insurance on a bunt and a blast. The bunt came from Brock Holt, and the
blast came from Mookie Betts. The Sox star got a hanging slider that caught too
much of the plate and he sent it into the Monster Seats just a few innings after
Martinez had tied him for the MLB lead in homers. Mookie was never going to
allow that to last too long.
So, with the Red Sox now leading 5-2, Matt Barnes came on
for the eighth. He came through with an easy 1-2-3 inning.
After Mitch Moreland hit a home run of his own in the
eighth it was a four-run lead to protect heading into the ninth, and Crag
Kimbrel came in to try and lock it down. The former Braves star did give up a
double, but didn’t allow a run and finished off Boston’s seventh with in nine
games. |