Showing posts with label alcs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alcs. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Red Sox Rally To Tie ALCS 1-1


A grand slam from David Ortiz sparked a 6-5 walk-off victory

By Russ Reed

Photo by AP
Just when it seemed like Boston would be heading to Detroit down 0-2 in the series, the Red Sox once again battled back to pick up the win, something that has become a hallmark for them this season.
Boston was down 5-0 after 5 ½ innings when Clay Buchholz got smacked around in the top of the sixth, once again getting dominated by the opposing pitcher.  

One night after Anibal Sanchez and a host of Tigers relievers combined to no-hit the Red Sox through 8 1/3 innings, Detroit’s Max Scherzer seemed to be doing them one better.  Scherzer, who has been picked by most people to win the AL Cy Young at the end of the year, no-hit Boston through 5 2/3 and had struck out 10 batters up until that point.

But with two outs in the top of the sixth, Shane Victorino put Boston in the hit column with a line-drive single to left field.  Then, Dustin Pedroia put the Red Sox on the board by crushing a double off the Green Monster to score Victorino.  But David Ortiz then struck out to end the inning, and the score remained 5-1 until the bottom of the eighth inning.

Those hits ended up being Scherzer’s only blemishes of the night, as he finished with 13 strikeouts through pitching seven innings.  Once again, the game was put in the hands of Detroit’s bullpen, but this time, they couldn’t finish the job.  Jose Veras came in to start the bottom of the eighth and got Stephen Drew to ground out, but Will Middlebrooks doubled down the left field line to try and get something going for Boston.

Then, manager Jim Leyland then decided to bring lefty Drew Smyly into the game to face left-handed leadoff hitter Jacoby Ellsbury.  Smyly walked Ellsbury and was promptly replaced by right-hander Al Albuquerque.

Albuquerque was able to strike out Victorino, but Dustin Pedroia delivered a single into right field.  However, Middlebrooks was held at third, and a pressure-packed stage was set for Big Papi.  To make it even more interesting, Leyland brought in his closer, Joaquin Benoit, to try and pick up the four-out save.  The rest is history.

Ortiz took the first pitch he saw from Benoit and laced it on a high-line toward right field.  Nine-time Gold Glove Award winner Torii Hunter was in right field for the Tigers, sprinting hard to try and make a play on the ball.  Hunter timed it very well and leaped to make a play, but the ball just glanced off the very tip of his glove into the Red Sox bullpen.  Tie ballgame!

Ortiz had done it again, this time with the first postseason grand slam of his career.  Ortiz’s career is defined by his clutch play during the 2004 ALCS against the Yankees, where the Red Sox became the first team in MLB history to erase a 3-0 series deficit.  This grand slam ranks right up there not only among his clutch moments in the postseason, but also all of the clutch moments in Boston’s postseason history.

However, the game was far from over.  But Red Sox closer Koji Uehara, who has virtually been unhittable this season, shut the door on any possibility of a Tigers retort in the top of the ninth.

Then, more magic ensued from Fenway.  Rick Porcello was put in the game to try and extend it to extra innings, but he surrendered a leadoff infield single to Jonny Gomes.  But former Red Sox shortstop Jose Iglesias, a slick fielder brought in an inning earlier to replace the more offensively-inclined Jhonny Peralta, threw the ball into the stands trying to get Gomes on a bang-bang play, so Boston’s leftfielder advanced to second on the error.

With Jarrod Saltalamacchia at the plate, Porcello threw a fastball into the dirt and it got by catcher Alex Avila, and Gomes hustled to third base.  Then, Saltalamacchia stung a single past Iglesias with the infield in and Boston walked off with the dramatic 6-5 victory.

After their league-leading offense got dominated for 16 innings, the Red Sox responded by putting up five runs in the last two innings to salvage a split before heading back to Detroit for Game 3.  This was all the more important considering they will have to face 2011 Cy Young and MVP Justin Verlander.
Verlander dominated in Game 5 of the Division Series against the Athletics, pitching eight innings of shutout ball while surrendering only two hits and striking out 10.  

In addition, Verlander no-hit Oakland through 6 2/3 innings, something Tigers starting pitchers are apparently becoming accustomed to. But, Boston counters with John Lackey, who was their most consistent starter throughout the regular season.  Lackey rebounded nicely after missing all of 2012 while recovering from Tommy John surgery, and helped pitch the Red Sox to the number-one seed in the American League. 

As a bonus for Boston, this won’t be Lackey’s first postseason rodeo.  As a 24-year-old rookie, he won Game 7 of the 2002 World Series for the Angels and pitched in the postseason for LAA in 2005, 2007, 2008, and 2009. 

I would like to apologize in advance to my family and friends, but I will be glued to the couch on Tuesday and won’t be answering any phone calls.  In a matter of two innings, this series just got a heck-of-a-lot more interesting.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Tigers Sweep the Yankees


The Tigers will be advancing to the World Series for the first time since 2006

By Jesse Dougherty 

(REUTERS/Mike Cassese)
Mariano Rivera tore his ACL on May 4 and missed the remainder of the season.

Derek Jeter missed the last three games of the ALCS after breaking his ankle. 

Robinson Cano, Nick Swisher, and Curtis Granderson forgot how to hit a baseball.

Alex Rodriguez was more interested in getting girls, than getting wins. 

These are the things that will surface in the New York media, as the obvious excuses for the Yankees’ shortcomings this October. But at the end of the day, the Tigers were just the better team. 

On Thursday evening, with a full house at Comerica Park salivating for victory, the Tigers completed a 4-game sweep of the Yankees and punched their ticket to baseball’s biggest stage in style.

Contrary to the first three games of the season, the Tigers offense called upon the long ball to take down the Yanks in Game 4. With New York ace C.C. Sabathia pitching, the Tigers took a patient approach to try and tire his arm, and with a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the fourth, their offense exploded. 

It all happened very fast. Omar Infante single, Miguel Cabrera home run. Prince Fielder strikeout. Delmon Young single, Jhonny Peralta home run. In the span of five batters, the Tigers posted four runs and expanded their lead to 6-0, and didn’t look back. 

Nick Swisher provided the only offense for the Bronx Bombers, who were silenced at the plate for the series’ entirety. His RBI double that scored Eduardo Nunez in the top of the sixth simply wasn’t enough. 

The game ended on a putout by Tigers’ first basemen Prince Fielder, who they acquired for over $200 million dollars last off-season. Once Fielder reeled in Jayson Nix’s infield fly, the Tigers rejoiced around the mound, collectively celebrating an unprecedented ALCS performance. 

“We did it,” said Miguel Cabrera in an ESPN interview after the game, “It’s an unbelievable feeling... Four more wins, guys. Four more wins.”

Cabrera is looking ahead to a World Series date with either the St. Louis Cardinals or the San Francisco Giants, but before we look ahead, let’s look back at a dominating performance by a team that deserves supreme recognition. 

In 4 games, the Tigers outscored the Yankees 19 to 6, and while their offense was certainly human, it was enough to support a pitching staff that brought its ‘A’ game. When asked about the Tigers’ pitching throughout the series one word came to Miguel Cabrera’s mind. 

“Unbelievable.” said Cabrera to ESPN. “It’s why we’re here right now, because of pitching. Wow.”

Cabrera’s “unbelievable” could be an understatement for a starting rotation that dazzled a lineup consisting of Ichiro Suzuki, Robinson Cano, and Curtis Granderson, among others, for four straight games. As a group, Doug Fister, Anibal Sanchez, Justin Verlander, and Max Scherzer pitched 27.1 innings and yielded just two earned runs to the Yankees in the ALCS. 

You should probably read that again slowly: they pitched 27.1 innings and yielded just two earned runs to the Yankees in the ALCS. 

Offensively, Delmon Young’s clutch bat earned him ALCS MVP honors. Young went 6 for 17 in the series with two home runs and six RBI’s. He is now the Tigers all-time franchise leader in post-season home runs, and provided the go ahead RBI for Detroit in all four games.

The six runs Young produced for the Tigers equal the entire offensive output of the Yankees in the series, and if that doesn’t describe a dismal offense, what else could?

Yankees’ hitting coach Kevin Long will most likely be fired in the weeks to come, Joe Girardi’s job will be put into question on multiple occasions, and let’s face it, Alex Rodriguez has a long off-season ahead of him. 

But for once, let’s forget about baseball’s Evil Empire and focus on a different American League team. After all, the Tigers are going to the World Series. 

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Texas has Lee to Thank for 2011 Success


Cliff Lee may be the most influential player in Texas Rangers history since Nolan Ryan, even if he only spent a few months in the dugout. By Josh Hyber 
(AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

     With five all-stars on the Texas Rangers roster (not to mention superstars Neftali Feliz, Ian Kinsler, and Elvis Andrus), the key player in Texas’ success this season may not have pitched a single inning for the Blue Crew. Right now he is sitting on a couch in Philadelphia. His name is Cliff Lee.  
     On July 9 last year, the Rangers, who sat five and a half games ahead of the Los Angeles Angels for first place in the AL West, acquired the lefty pitcher from the Seattle Mariners. By season’s end, the Rangers led the division by nine games and won the franchise's first AL pennant. Lee’s success was short-lived, though, as he signed with the Philadelphia Phillies in the offseason.   

Saturday, October 8, 2011

2011 ALCS Preview

Before the series gets underway down in Texas, take a look inside the match-up. By Michael Izzo
 
 
 

I’ll make this short. I’m picking the Rangers. I don’t see this one going to seven games. In fact, I want to predict them winning in four or five, but I can’t go that heavily against any team that has both Justin Verlander and Miguel Cabrera. So I’m going with six games and here’s why: