THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
2018
WORLD SERIES, GAME #2
David Price and the Sox bullpen
shut down the Dodgers
October 24,
2018 ...
The Red
Sox pitching came through in a big way in this
one. David
Price proved that his ALCS performance was no
fluke. Except for one so-so inning mixed in there, Price had complete
and total control of this game and of the Dodgers lineup.
After him it was Joe
Kelly, Nathan
Eovaldi and Craig
Kimbrel who all threw lights-out innings. The
offense did what it needed to do, all with two outs, and that was
that.
David Price officially
closed out the Championship Series against the Astros with
one of the best postseason starts in recent Red Sox history and easily his best
postseason start of his life. This was now the expectation.
The first inning felt extremely important for Price and the
Red Sox. He got off to a strong start in this game hitting corners and throwing
his two-seamer in the 93 mph range. Price did allow a walk in that first inning,
but that was it. He’d then come back with a 1-2-3 second before allowing just a
walk in the third, and he got through his first 11 batters without allowing a
hit.
Meanwhile, the Red Sox offense was going up against another
lefty in Hyun-Jin Ryu. They went down without much of a fight in the first, but
they did get something going in the second and found themselves on the
scoreboard first yet again. It was Xander
Bogaerts starting things off with a double rocketed off the
Monster for a one-out two-bagger, and a couple batters later he was knocked in
on a two-out single from Ian Kinsler. With the 1-0 lead, Jackie
Bradley Jr. followed that up with a single of his own, but
Kinsler got greedy and was thrown out at third base. It did take a perfect throw
that magically snuck through Kinsler’s legs to get the out and it abruptly
stopped the inning with just one run on the board.
From here we fast-forward to the top of the fourth, when
Price was looking to continue his strong showing on the mound. His no-hitter
disappeared when David
Freese led off with a base hit that fell just short of a
diving Betts’ glove. Manny
Machado then followed that up with a single of his own before Chris
Taylor drew a walk and suddenly the bases were loaded with
nobody out.
Matt Kemp quickly
tied the game with a sacrifice fly, and after a huge strikeout for the second
out of the inning, Yasiel
Puig stepped to the plate. He jumped on the first pitch and
got jammed, but he still managed to put it just over Kinsler’s head for a base
hit, and the Dodgers left the inning with a 2-1 lead.
Now, it was up to the offense and they showed nothing in
the bottom of the fourth, going down in order with two strikeouts in the mix.
After Price came back for a scoreless fifth, the Red Sox did threaten in the
bottom half. After two quick outs, Christian Vázquez came through with a two-out
single, then Betts did the same and suddenly the tying run was in scoring
position two outs for Andrew Benintendi. The outfielder would draw a walk,
loading the bases and ending the night for Ryu.
The Dodgers brought in the right-handed Ryan
Madson in this bases loaded, two-out spot, and Alex
Cora stuck with his right-handed Steve Pearce. Pearce drew a
walk to bring in a run and tie the game up at two. That brought up J.D.
Martinez who drove a two-run single into right field and the
Red Sox had a 4-2 lead after five.
David Price then
got exactly the shutdown inning he was looking for, setting L.A. down in order
in the sixth. That would mark the end of another very strong outing, one that
featured just one tough inning.
With the score still 4-2 heading into the seventh, Joe
Kelly came on for the Sox and he did what he’s done all
postseason, and that is flat-out dominate. The righty got an easy 1-2-3 inning
with two strikeouts and an easy ground out.
After the Red Sox got a one-out double from Betts but
nothing more, it was Nathan
Eovaldi coming in for the eighth. Cora clearly wanted to get
this win, and was willing to use his Game Four starter for two consecutive games
to do so. He was pumping easy 100 mph fastballs, and he tossed an easy 1-2-3
inning.
That left it all up to Craig
Kimbrel in the ninth. He looked perfect again, getting a 1-2-3
inning of his own to finish up another outstanding performance from the bullpen.
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