Monday, August 21, 2006

The Boston Massacre, 2006 Edition

1770. 1978. And now 2006.

I can barely think about this right now, let alone type about it, but I'm going to try.

The Sox are hurtin'. We just dropped FIVE games in a row to the Yankees, and we now sit 6.5 games behind them in the AL East standings. I watched all the games but the one on Friday night, and I followed that game online. For the first 3 games our starting pitching was way below average, but not completely horrible. Our bullpen is what did us in during those games. Then Schiller took the mound on Sunday Night Baseball on ESPN, and he was exactly what he paid him to be. Unfortunately, Terry Francona opted NOT to use Papelbon for what was clearly the perfect time for a 2-inning save(Papelbon had 4 days rest, so he was ready to go); instead, he brought in journeyman Mike Timlin and lefty-specialist Javier Vasquez(just recalled), who got the bases loaded with Giambi at the plate. NOW Papelbon came in. *sigh*. Papelbon got through the inning with the lead intact, and he had 2 outs with a man on 2nd in the 9th inning, but Derek Jeter blooped one into right field, bringing the game even. Giambi rocked a 3-run homer off Hansen in the 10th inning, and the rest was history. Today David Wells again went deep into the game, but our offense decided not to show up, and we lost 2-1. Of course, having Ramirez out with a hamstring cramp wasn't going to help, either.

So that's where we stand now. It was announced today that Alex Gonzalez has an oblique strain, which was the same injury that kept Albert Pujols out for a couple of weeks earlier in the season. That sucks. But assuming that his injury isn't that bad as Pujols' was, and considering Manny is only day-to-day, here's what's going to be happening in the coming weeks:

Here's our rotation right now: Schilling, Wells, Beckett, Lester, and _______. Wells has shown resurgence, and he deserves that #2 spot right now. And yes, I left that last one open on purpose, but it's probably Snyder. Wakefield is set to return in about a week, so that places him in that 3/4 spot, meaning we can move Snyder back into bullpen, where we need him.

Speaking of bullpen, ours IS good, but I have to believe their collapse over the past 5 days has been due to the absence of our captain behind the plate, Jason Varitek. Varitek is THE play/pitch caller of the MLB; no one does it better. The pitchers feel confident with him sitting 60 ft, 6 in. away, and it cannot be a coincidence that they look like little league pitchers with Javy Lopez and Mirabelli calling the pitchers. Varitek is a few weeks away from returning, maybe earlier. After Wakefield gets back, and before Varitek returns, Trot Nixon will come back off the disabled list. Now, that might not be a problem, as rosters expand after September 1st. We already have a great bench, and with Nixon back, we can rest guys while also remaining very competitive. And resting will be HUGE the next month or so, as we are not getting many days off.

Offense wise, we're just fine. Like I said earlier, as long as Manny doesn't decline(again, he's only day-to-day, could be worse), we're gonna be golden. We have the Greek God of Walks(Youkilis), the most feared 3-4 combo in the majors(Ortiz and Manny), and some up-and-coming bats of the likes of Wily Mo Pena and Hinske. Pena has been absolutely CRUSHING the ball, and he could very well end up being our #5 hitter down the stretch.

Defensively, there's no question. We're the best in the business. We could very well end up with 2 gold glove winners(Lowell and Gonzalez).

Over the next couple of series, both the Sox and the Yankees have tough road trips to the west coast, while also playing difficult series at home. Then both teams play Kansas City and Baltimore before meeting up again in the Bronx for the final showdown.

It's evident that this AL Wild Card/East is nowhere close to being over. I didn't give up on October 16th two years ago, and I sure as hell am not going to give up this year. We're in a bind, that's for sure, but we're far from the dire circumstances of the ALCS in 2004. We've got great picthers, but they aren't pitching great. We've got the bats. We've got the gloves. If losing 5 games in a row to the Yankees and falling to almost 7 games back lets us fly under the radar, fine by me. Watch out for the Red Sox these last 40 games folks; it'd be a mistake to write them off.

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