THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
David Price gets the Sox win #100
September 12,
2018 ... The Red Sox have been great in so many
areas for so much of the year, but if you are going to point to one
guy who has carried them and saved their bullpen time and time again
in this second half, it’s David Price. He was on his A-game again,
flirting with a perfect game for about half the game and then still
looking great after it was broken up. The offense didn’t make it an
easy win and we all had to sweat this night out, but the offense can
have some off nights with pitching like this.
As has been the case for this entire second half, Price was
everything we could have asked for and more. By this point, we know what it
looks like when Price is going well. He’s utilizing his changeup as a legitimate
out pitch, and he’s working the corners of the plate without breaking a sweat.
If he’s getting a ton of strikeouts looking, it’s going to be a good night.
Well, that’s exactly what he did against the Blue Jays.
All Price did to start his outing off was retire the first
13 batters he faced in a run that included four strikeouts. It was only
four-and-a-third innings, but he was looking so sharp and so efficient a perfect
game really didn’t seem that far
out of the realm of possibility.
Well, those dreams were dashed when Yangervis Solarte came
up as the 14th batter to face Price. The infielder didn’t get great wood on the
ball, but he was able to connect for a soft line drive that looped into center
field, wiping out both the perfect game and no-hitter with a single. Of course,
Price came back and got two outs to end the inning without any more damage. He’d
give up another single in the sixth, and Jonathan Davis made it to second on an
ugly passed ball from Sandy León, but Price’s shutout would make it through six.
Meanwhile, the Red Sox were once again struggling against
the opponents’ starter. This time it was Aaron Sanchez, who has had a rough year
but looked pretty good tonight.
The Sox did get off to a better start than Toronto did
against Price, and they looked like they might be able to get on the board
early. Mookie Betts led off the game with a single, moved to second on a wild
pitch and then over to third on a ground out. That put him 90 feet away from the
plate with just one out and the middle of the lineup coming up. Unfortunately,
J.D. Martinez struck out chasing a high fastball and Xander Bogaerts hit a
routine grounder to first base, squandering the opportunity.
After that, the bats went very quiet for a few innings,
they did get a leadoff walk from Mitch Moreland in the second, but they only
brought three men to the plate that inning due to a double play. That would also
be their last baserunner in the fifth, though they did get one hit in between
when Bogaerts hit a single but was thrown out trying to stretch it into a
double.
In the fifth, though, they did break through to an extent.
Once again they got started with a Moreland walk, and this time he was cut out
by a fielder’s choice. That put Rafael Devers on first instead, and he quickly
ran on a hit-and-run with Brock Holt at the plate. It worked out perfectly as
Holt smacked one through a wide-open left side, putting runners on the corners
with one out. León couldn’t get his fly ball deep enough to score the run,
leaving it up to Jackie Bradley Jr. Sanchez took the opportunity from Bradley,
however, throwing a wild pitch in the dirt that got to the back stop and allowed
Devers to score. Bradley would eventually walk to setup a runners on the corners
situation for Betts, but the Red Sox settled for the 1-0 lead.
Following a 1-2-3 inning from the Red Sox offense in the
sixth, Price was out to protect the one-run lead. It looked like it would be
another quick inning for the lefty when he got a ground out and a strike out to
kick things off, but then Solarte came through with his second hit of the day.
After bringing in Aledmys Diaz for a pinch hitter, the Blue Jays were a double
away from tying things up with Tesoscar Hernandez at the plate. He fought for a
six-pitch at bat, but he’d eventually succumb to a Price changeup and end the
inning with a whiff.
Boston’s bats would go down in order once again in the
seventh, and Alex Cora turned to the bullpen to protect the one-run lead with
two innings left. Steven Wright got the call in the eighth. Things did not get
off to a great start when Rowdy Tellez put a ball in the left-center field gap
for a leadoff double. Wright followed that up with a four-pitch walk and things
were bleak. Somehow, the knuckleballer came back, though. He’d get a strike out
against Kevin Pillar, then a fielder’s choice from Billy McKinney to put runners
on the corners with two outs for Devon Travis. The second baseman hit one on a
line, but it was right at Betts and the Red Sox escaped the inning with their
lead intact.
The Red Sox had a chance with the bases loaded and two outs
in the bottom half of the eighth, but failed to score, leaving it up to Craig
Kimbrel to protect to the one-run lead. The closer wasn’t quite as sharp as we’d
like to see, but he battled through some control issues to dole out one walk but
otherwise lock down the ninth for win #100.
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