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Saturday, July 31, 2021

After 15 Seasons As A Bruin, David Krejci Is Headed Home To Play In The Czech Republic

 

    After weeks of speculation about what he would be doing next season-playing in Boston or perhaps retiring from the NHL altogether-longtime Bruins center David Krejci surprised the hockey world as he publicly revealed today that he will actually be leaving here along with his young family to return to his homeland-the Czech Republic-to continue his playing career there this fall. In his statement that was shared by the black and gold, there was no mention of the word retirement leading a few people to think that he is leaving the door open perhaps to a return to the B's at some point in the near future. For a guy that was a second-round draft pick of Boston in 2004 and who made the big club in 2006-07, it will be strange not to see him on the team at least to begin the 2021-22 campaign.
    There was a good reason why fans and the media would refer to "playoff Krejci" since he has that special ability to bring his game to another level in the biggest tilts of the season. He twice has led the entire NHL in postseason scoring as he had 23 points (12 goals, 11 assists) when the Bruins won the Stanley Cup in 2011 and then two seasons later as they made it back to the Final, there was Krejci with 26 points (9 goals, 17 assists). In 156 career playoff games with the B's, he has 124 points (42 goals, 82 assists) and he is plus-23 including two overtime goals and two postseason hat tricks. I hope that he comes back to the Bruins if only for the fact that he should get the respect and admiration that he deserves for being such a dependable pro for so long. 
    His regular season numbers are very good not great with 730 points (215 goals, 515 assists) in 962 career games. What stands out most to me (besides the stellar postseason resume of course) is his remarkable durability for a guy that is neither huge (6-feet tall, 188 pounds) in stature nor blessed with eye-popping skills. Instead, he is an incredible passer (fans would get upset earlier in his career that he didn't shoot the puck more often) that seems to process the game at a faster speed than most others, he's sneaky tough and he protects the puck really well. He is not the fastest guy by any means but you always know when Krejci has the puck on his stick because he appears to be operating at a different speed than everyone else. He only has four 20+ goal seasons but he has reached 50+ assists on three occasions along with another season with 49 helpers. 
    Patrice Bergeron is a future Hall of Famer and he certainly has earned all the praise that he has gotten over the years but with that said, Boston would not have had as much success without all the contributions of Krejci-their superb second line center for all that time. He has been somewhat of an iron man too, appearing in all 82 regular season games twice, in 81 and 80 once and 79 twice. Nobody does that anymore, that is remarkable consistency in terms of games played at the NHL level. When the Bruins re-signed Taylor Hall last week, I think many (myself included) assumed that meant that Krejci would be returning as well since those two guys plus Craig Smith built such good chemistry when they were put on a line together late last regular season. That also leaves a huge void on the second line for this upcoming season with no obvious replacements especially considering that Charlie Coyle just had knee surgery. Those are issues to worry about for another day though because if that is it for Krejci in a Bruins uniform, we have to applaud one of the great (and more underrated) players in recent history with the team. 

Friday, July 30, 2021

With Hours To Go Until The Trade Deadline, Sox Finally Did Something: Trading For Kyle Schwarber

 

    I don't know about you but I will admit that I was getting pretty antsy tonight since tomorrow's MLB Trade Deadline (4 pm ET) was quickly approaching and the Red Sox (63-41 overall) still hadn't made a single deal while many other playoff and World Series contenders like them were quite busy. Thankfully that all changed late this evening as Red Sox chief baseball nerd Chaim Bloom woke up from his slumber and actually did something productive: he flipped some 20-year-old pitcher named Aldo Ramirez (ranked the club's #19 prospect by MLB Pipeline) to the Nationals for left fielder Kyle Schwarber. You might remember him as a key part of the 2016 World Series champion Cubs and he was also the hottest player in baseball earlier this season before he strained his right hamstring on July 2. To make room on the 40-man roster, Boston designated reliever Brandon Workman for assignment. 
    Technically, Schwarber is a rental since he will be a free agent after 2021 who figures to make a boatload of money because he was an All-Star this summer for the first time in his career and he's hitting .253/.340/.570 with 25 home runs and 53 RBIs. He originally started out as a catcher but almost exclusively in the past five seasons, he has been a full-time left fielder (playing his entire career in the National League). Boston's outfield is currently pretty full with Alex Verdugo in left, Jarren Duran in center and Hunter Renfroe in right not to mention J.D. Martinez is primarily a DH so where does that leave Schwarber to play? A new first baseman is arguably the biggest need for the Red Sox so perhaps they hope to have Schwarber try and fill that black hole. 
    Boston lacked lefty hitters so at the very least, Schwarber should immediately help to fix that. He will never win a batting title (his career batting average is .233, yuck) but he has legit power which is hard to find: 146 HRs and 332 RBIs in 623 games. Kyle also has a proven track record of postseason success where he has hit .288/.405/.576 with six homers and 11 RBIs in 24 playoff games. He has reached 25+ home runs four times in seven MLB seasons (6 with Chicago, 1 with Washington) with his best year being 2019 with 38 HRs, 92 RBIs and .250/.339/.531. He strikes out a ton (679 times in 2071 career at bats) so we'll need to get used to that but what do you expect from a guy that's shaped like a fire hydrant at six-feet-tall and 229 pounds? He is in the prime of his career at the age of 28 and the former first-round draft pick (4th overall in 2014) will want to cash in after he bet on himself and signed a modest one-year deal (worth $7 million) last winter with the Nationals. 
    This was a nice start for Bloom and hopefully he continues to work the phone lines tomorrow morning and afternoon to find a true first baseman, a reliever and possibly a starting pitcher as well. Over the last few days, many top MLB reporters had mentioned that the Red Sox were in on Nationals ace Max Scherzer (who is now going to the Dodgers in a blockbuster trade) and Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo (headed to the Yankees, ugh) and while they missed out on both of those guys, Schwarber is better than a consolation prize. Assuming that he's not a complete disaster these next few months in Boston, he would be another nice piece to help Bloom build a World Series contender year after year. We are not sure exactly when he will make his Red Sox debut, they have a huge three-game series at Tampa Bay (61-42 overall)-who is only 1.5 games back with a game in hand-starting tomorrow night (7:10, NESN)-but he has been lightly jogging and taking batting practice lately so it should not be too far away. 

UPDATE 7/30/21:  Welp, the Red Sox made two other trades today but they were for a pair of awful relievers: righty Hansel Robles was acquired from the Twins for minor league righty Alex Scherff and infielder Michael Chavis went to Pittsburgh (poor bastard) for lefty Austin Davis. 

Thursday, July 29, 2021

To Open Free Agency, B's Were Very Active But Did They Get Anyone That Will Make A Big Difference?

 

    When free agency opens in any professional sport, most fans just want to see their favorite team be active and engaged. When NHL free agency officially started today at noon, the Bruins were certainly as busy as any club in the league but when you run through all the names of guys that they signed, you are left wondering if any of them will have any type of major impact for Boston. Leaving out the four players that will most likely be stuck in Providence for most of (if not all of) next season, B's GM Don Sweeney brought in six legitimate NHL veterans. The most notable names are goaltender Linus Ullmark (formerly of the Sabres) and forward and former Blue Jackets captain Nick Foligno. In addition, depth forwards Erik Haula and Tomas Nosek are here too along with defensemen Derek Forbort and Mike Reilly (who was traded to the Bruins before the trade deadline last season).
    Haha is that it? For a team that likes to think of themselves as true Stanley Cup contenders every season, it sure feels like Sweeney was trying to shop at The Dollar Store to get what he needs rather than spending a little more to get some better players. Jaroslav Halak signed with Vancouver and free agent Tuukka Rask is out for awhile following hip surgery so the B's needed a veteran goalie to work with promising young netminder Jeremy Swayman. That's fine and Ullmark had actually put up respectable numbers somehow on the worst team in the league in 2021: 9-6-3 w/.917 save percentage and a 2.63 goals against average. He's only 27 years old but did he really need a four-year contract with an annual cap hit of $5 million (faints)?
    Foligno feels a little bit like David Backes light and we all know how that went for the B's. A well-respected leader and dependable player that at 33 is definitely on the back end of his career after being traded to Toronto last season and not making many contributions to that loser franchise. In 49 games last season between the two teams, he had 20 points (7 goals, 13 assists). The former first-round pick (28th overall in 2006) got a two-year deal with an annual cap hit of $3.8 million. Haula is truthfully a journeyman since this will be his sixth NHL team but he is coming off a pretty nice little season in Nashville: eight goals, 10 assists & plus-21. For that, the 30-year-old earned a two-year contract with an annual cap hit of $2.375 million. Finally for the forwards, Nosek put up eight goals and 10 assists with a plus-seven rating for the Golden Knights in 38 games. Like Haula, he is 30 and he was signed for two years but with a lower annual cap hit ($1.75 million). Foligno could be insurance if David Krejci doesn't re-sign with Boston while Haula and Nosek should easily replace center Sean Kuraly who signed a four-year contract with his hometown team-the Blue Jackets-earlier today. 
    Reilly was a pleasant surprise in 15 games last season with the black and gold after being obtained from Ottawa as he notched eight assists and was plus-seven. In his first postseason with Boston, he slowed down to four assists and a plus-three rating in 11 games. On a good team (which the Bruins hopefully can still qualify as), he is a third-pair left-shot defenseman that is a solid puck-mover with some offensive ability. The fact that he's 27 is most likely why he signed a three-year deal with an annual cap hit of $3 million. I can't say that I know much about Forbort besides the fact that he's big (6-foot-4, 219 pounds) which is something that Boston really lacks on the back end and he averaged over 20 minutes of ice time last season with Winnipeg. He is 29 and with a three-year deal that carries an annual cap hit of $3 million, I'd guarantee that Sweeney expects him to be much more than Jarred Tinordi who signed with the Rangers this afternoon. 
    It would be dumb to make any sweeping conclusions already about this group since odds are that Sweeney still has some tinkering to do both in terms of additional signings and perhaps a few more trades (for instance, backup goaltender Dan Vladar got flipped to Calgary for a third-round pick this afternoon). You also have to remember that he signed Brandon Carlo, Taylor Hall-and to a much lesser extent Trent Frederic-in the past few weeks, who are likely to be more important moves this offseason in the long run when it's all said and done. I'll just leave this here: Jack Eichel is still on Buffalo and while it is probably a pipe dream that he'll ever be a Bruin, we can choose to hold out hope that Sweeney finds a way to acquire him for basically whatever it takes. Can you imagine your excitement level if Eichel was going to be a Bruin for a long period of time? 

Monday, July 26, 2021

Thanks To Verdugo's HR In The 8th, Sox Rally For Their MLB-Best 33rd Comeback Win Of The Season

 

    Their games still might take way too long to complete but at least the Red Sox (62-39 overall, 32-20 home) in 2021 are making it worth your while if you stick around for the later innings since they seem to have a special ability to never be out of almost any contest. Tonight in their series opener against the Blue Jays (49-47 overall, 27-25 away) at smoky Fenway Park (because of the wildfires in California), they trailed 4-3 in the eighth inning before left fielder Alex Verdugo crushed a two-run bomb (his 10th of the season) into the right centerfield seats that scored right fielder Hunter Renfroe (2-for-3 w/2B, 2 runs, BB). Closer and UConn product Matt Barnes worked an easy 1-2-3 ninth inning on just nine pitches to record his 22nd save of the season. 
    The win over the stunned Jays was the 33rd comeback victory of the season for Boston-the most in MLB-and it put them a season-high 23 games over .500 while their slim lead over the second-place Rays (60-40 overall) in the AL East slightly increased to 1.5 games while Tampa Bay has a game in hand. The Sox struck first with a pair of runs in the second inning on an RBI single by Verdugo that plated Renfroe and second baseman Michael Chavis drove in Verdugo with a ground out. Toronto tied it with a pair of RBI singles in the third inning by their superstar first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (that scored catcher Reese McGuire) and second baseman Marcus Semien (that scored UConn's George Springer). 
    Boston's star third baseman Rafael Devers (2-for-4) helped the Red Sox pull ahead again 3-2 with a solo homer (his team-leading 27th of the season) in the third inning that hooked a few rows back into the right field seats. Red Sox killer and Blue Jays shortstop Bo Bichette hit a two-run blast over the Green Monster (his 18th of the season also scored Springer) in the fifth inning that gave the Jays a 4-3 advantage. From there, it was a battle of the bullpens which the Red Sox predictably dominated as relievers Phillips Valdez (2.1 scoreless innings with two strikeouts) and Northeastern's Adam Ottavino (3-3; scoreless eighth inning) bridged the gap from the ineffective starting pitcher Nick Pivetta (4.2 IP, 4 ER, 6 hits, 3 Ks, 2 BBs) to Barnes. One of the main reasons why the Blue Jays currently sit where they are in the standings is due to their putrid bullpen.
    Boston improved to 8-4 against Toronto this season and they'll go for their fourth straight win against them tomorrow night (7:10, NESN) as good old Garrett Richards (6-5) faces Jays ace Robbie Ray (8-5). Obviously, Ray is a much better pitcher than Richards but this same matchup actually happened last Wednesday in Buffalo with Richards outlasting Ray in a 7-4 Red Sox triumph. The Sox are 7-3 since the All-Star break and they own the best record in the American League with the Giants (62-37) being the only team with a better mark than them at this point of the season. Oh yeah and the trade deadline is Friday afternoon at 4 p.m. so if you need me, I'll be busy reading juicy tweets and rumor-filled stories about possible deals until that time.

Friday, July 23, 2021

In The Easiest Move Of The NHL Offseason, The Bruins Signed Taylor Hall To A Four-Year Contract

 

    After hearing days of reports that the Bruins and free agent left wing Taylor Hall were getting very close to signing a lucrative deal, the news dropped this evening that Boston had finally inked him to a four-year contract with a $6 million dollar annual cap hit. For a guy with his pedigree (former No. 1 overall pick in 2010, NHL MVP in 2018, etc) and in the prime of his career-he'll turn 30 in November-this was a relative bargain for the B's. By stealing, I mean trading for Hall from the Sabres last season, the Bruins showed him enough in just 27 games (16 regular season & 11 playoff) that he was openly raving about being on the team and his desire to stay here with a long-term deal. 
    This is Hall's fifth NHL club (along with Edmonton, New Jersey and Arizona) so his reputation naturally preceded him but from our limited experience watching him, he seemed like a model teammate and a player that understandably is sick and tired of playing for crappy teams in bad markets. Age-wise he also represents a critical bridge that the black and gold mostly lack: a star that is neither young nor old. One of Boston's main issues is that they have too many guys on either end of the spectrum in terms of age and not enough guys like Hall that have been productive NHL players for years but haven't been in the league for a million seasons already. 
    We have to admit that while Hall was amazing in those regular season contests for the B's with eight goals and six assists, he was noticeably bottled up in the postseason with only three goals and two assists. That didn't make him unique because pretty much all of Boston's top offensive players got shut down in the second round by the Islanders. It's not a question of work ethic, skill or desire with Hall when it comes to the playoffs, I think it's more about not having much experience there. Before this past campaign, he only had 14 total (5 with New Jersey and 9 with Arizona) playoff games on his resume and let's be honest, it's not like there was any pressure in either of those spots plus it wasn't like they were expected to go far. With some more playoff seasoning as a Bruin, there is no doubt that he can be the dominant force that he was immediately after getting traded here last season. 
    Now with Hall locked up, the Bruins need to do him a solid and either sign center David Krejci or some other quality passer that can get Hall the puck at the right time and where he needs it. There was a report today from The Fourth Period that the B's were looking into signing former Coyotes center Christian Dvorak who previously played with Hall in the desert. I'm not going to pretend to know much about Dvorak (haha who really does?) but I am pretty sure that even an aging Krejci is still better than him. I would hate to see Boston's GM Don Sweeney spend all this money on Hall and then cheap out in terms of getting him some linemates that are at least somewhat on his level. Free agency officially opens next Wednesday but with the NHL Draft beginning tonight, there have been a bunch of notable trades around the league.

Friday, July 16, 2021

With Five Yanks Placed On Covid-19 IL, Sox Blanked Them 4-0 To Improve To 7-0 Vs. NY In '21

 

    The Yankees (46-44 overall, 23-23 home) were already a disaster this season and now they are suffering a Covid-19 outbreak (still?) that caused last night's Red Sox (56-36 overall, 28-17 away)-Yanks game to be postponed. Tonight (along with the rest of MLB), the series and second half began with New York putting five players-left-handed pitchers Nestor Cortes and Wandy Peralta, along with outfielder Aaron Judge, catcher Kyle Higashioka and infielder Gio Urshela-on the Covid-19 injured list. Not surprisingly, with a lineup that was better suited for a Spring Training game in mid-March, the Yanks did not stand much of a chance as Boston shut them out 4-0 this evening at Yankee Stadium. By recording their first shutout in the Bronx in a little over three years, the Sox extended their perfect start (7-0) against their bitter rivals in 2021.   
    The teams combined for eight hits so it was not exactly an offensive explosion but Boston at least made theirs count with a two-run homer and a solo shot. Red Sox starting pitcher Eduardo Rodriguez (7-5) wasn't his sharpest (40 of his 97 pitches were balls) but it was plenty good enough against such a weak starting nine. In 5.2 innings, E-Rod allowed just two hits with eight strikeouts and two walks. It only took two Sox relievers to complete the job from there: Hirokazu Sawamura induced a ground out (on three pitches) from Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez to end the sixth inning and strand a runner at second base. Tanner Houck has spent most of the season with the Triple-A Worcester Red Sox (lucky him!) but he was recalled to Boston yesterday and he closed it out with three scoreless innings including three strikeouts for his first career MLB save. 
    Boston got all the runs they needed in the second inning as shortstop Xander Bogaerts scored on a ground out by right fielder Hunter Renfroe and second baseman Christian Arroyo crushed a two-run bomb to right center (his sixth of the season) that scored third baseman Rafael Devers. Red Sox designated hitter J.D. Martinez added an insurance run with a solo homer to right in the eighth inning that made it 4-0 on his 19th home run of the season. Yankees starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery (3-5) was decent enough (6 IP, 3 ER, 3 hits, 4 Ks, 2 BBs) but he basically would have had to no-hit the Red Sox to steal a win for his overmatched club in the series opener. 
    With the victory, Boston held serve for a 1.5 game lead over second-place Tampa Bay (54-37) in the AL East while New York dropped to fourth-place behind Toronto (46-42). Even though the Yanks are a complete mess, they still undeservedly get the primetime spotlight the next two nights: Nathan Eovaldi (9-5) faces fellow All-Star Gerrit Cole (9-4) tomorrow (7:15, Fox) and Martin Perez (7-5) takes on Jameson Taillon (4-4) on Sunday (7:08, ESPN). There is no chance that the Yanks will make some miraculous comeback and push the Red Sox and Rays for the AL East crown this fall. Hell, I'd be shocked if they sniffed the neighborhood of the Wild Card spots. New York is hopeless but that is not our problem so we can only laugh at their misery as Boston continues to bury them in 2021. PS one of Boston's top prospects-outfielder Jarren Duran-was called up as well and since he's a lefty hitter, I bet that he makes his MLB debut vs. Cole. 

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

As One Bruins Defenseman Retires (Kevan Miller), Another Gets Paid Handsomely (Brandon Carlo)

 

    This week is truly the dog days of the sports calendar with barely anything going on but thankfully, the Bruins gave us not one but two notable pieces of news this morning and this afternoon. First, the sad news: defenseman Kevan Miller is predictably retiring after an NHL career that was riddled with injuries. Next, the much happier news: defenseman Brandon Carlo signed a six-year contract extension with an annual cap hit of $4.1 million. Miller finally hanging up his skates at the age of 33 after seven seasons with the black and gold was not a surprise but you have to appreciate a guy who gave everything he had to Boston. Like Miller, Carlo has only ever played for the B's but he is only 24 years old so hopefully he will be here for many more productive years to come. 
When you think about it, these two players have more in common than you might think: they are both big, right-shot defensive-minded defensemen that are tough, dependable and great teammates from all indications. Unfortunately, the other trait that they both share is that they have suffered numerous serious injuries in their time with the Bruins. Miller's career-high for regular season games was 71 in 2015-16 and he only ever came close to that number one other time (68 two seasons later). Carlo has only played five seasons in the NHL but three of them have ended with injuries that forced him to miss the entire postseason (twice) or cut his playoffs short. For Miller, it was his legs and knees that suffered the brunt of such a rough-and-tumble career that started at the Berkshire School in Western MA, then he starred at the University of Vermont before signing with the Providence Bruins in 2011 as an undrafted free agent. For Carlo, it was leg and knee issues that plagued him (he's twice been hurt in regular season finales) before he suffered yet another concussion this past postseason against the Islanders. 
    Ironically, not having either of these guys available against New York was a major reason why the Bruins fell short in six games in their second-round series. If one or both of them were healthy, you have to feel like at least the series would have gone to seven games or perhaps the B's might have squeaked by the Isles. We'll never know but we can only wish that Carlo has better injury luck for the rest of his NHL career. Concussions are so scary because they affect everyone differently and you never know when one can end your career. On a more positive note, Carlo need to look no further than Boston's captain Patrice Bergeron who had a horrifying stretch of concussions very early in his Bruins career but he has overcome that and put together a Hall of Fame career since then. Obviously, I'm not saying that Carlo is headed for the Hall of Fame but when he is on top of his game, he is one of Boston's best defensemen. He is not Charlie McAvoy who is going to get a boatload of money in his first significant pro deal but Carlo should be a big part of their future as the team eventually turns over to younger guys like him.

Sunday, July 11, 2021

The Red Sox Locked Up Their All-Star Closer UConn's Matt Barnes For At Least Two More Years

 

    Before the Red Sox (55-36) dropped their first half finale 5-4 this afternoon at Fenway Park vs. the Phillies (44-44), the team broke the great news that they had re-signed their free-agent-to-be All-Star closer Matt Barnes to a two-year extension worth $18.75 million with a club option for the 2024 season. At age 31, the Bethel, CT native and UConn alum is having a career year: he's 4-2 with 19 saves, a 2.61 ERA, 0.89 WHIP and 63 strikeouts in 38 innings of work. This type of financial commitment by Boston's GM Chaim Bloom shows that he must believe that Barnes' 2021 season (thus far) is no fluke. Rather, it's the turning point of a reliever who was at times very good earlier in his career but never really great before this campaign. He has become one of Boston's best players and one of their biggest keys in the second half if they hope to reach the playoffs and progress far in October.
    Fittingly on the first night of the 2021 MLB Draft, we can't forget that Barnes was a first-round pick (19th overall) by the Sox in 2011. He progressed through their farm system relatively fast and made his MLB debut in 2014. That means that he has only ever played for the Red Sox and also, he's currently their longest-tenured player for what that's worth. Up until this year, Barnes was best known as the maddingly inconsistent righty with good stuff that could never completely put it all together for long stretches of time. Thankfully for his sake and the team's (who is tied with Houston for the best record in the American League at the All-Star break), it has been a totally different story this season as he was named the closer in Spring Training and he has never really looked back since then. Nothing is guaranteed in pro sports, especially in the world of closers but Matt is tied for the second-most saves in the AL for a reason.
Barnes has made such a huge leap this year (thanks Alex Cora?) that it is difficult to logically explain how he has seemingly morphed into one of the most dominant closers in baseball overnight and a first-time All-Star in his early 30s. I suppose that he always had this ability within himself but perhaps it's just taken this long to unlock it. Whatever the case may be, he headed out to Denver tonight with four of his teammates (Xavier Bogaerts, Rafael Devers, J.D. Martinez and Nathan Eovaldi) for the 2021 MLB All-Star Game at Coors Field on Tuesday night (7:30, Fox). It is crazy how fast he has become almost automatic in terms of consistently high performance levels and likewise in the hearts and minds of critical Sox fans. It seems like every time that he comes in a game these days, I am extremely confident that he will get the job done and probably without breaking much of a sweat in the process. He has always thrown hard (in the upper 90s) but his curveball and off-speed pitches have reached another level not to mention that he is locating everything so well all around the strike zone.

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

The Best Player In Baseball (Shohei Ohtani) Helps Shut Down The Hottest Team In MLB (Red Sox)

 

    Hardcore fans of this blog will note that I have rarely written about losses by the Red Sox (54-33 overall, 27-16 away) this season, not only because they have been few and far between but since it is hard to make a loss in baseball remotely interesting to read about. Tonight was one of those rare occasions where a 5-3 loss by Boston to the Angels (43-42 overall, 25-20 home) at Angel Stadium of Anaheim nevertheless was headline news. The most exciting thing to happen to the sport in years-Shohei Ohtani (4-1)-was the starting pitcher for LA and he also batted second in the Angels' lineup. The man who is the first player ever to be named a two-way All-Star (pitcher and hitter) in the same season went seven innings, allowing two runs on five hits with four strikeouts to earn the win. He also had an RBI double and scored a run, haha is that all? 
    On paper, it looked like an awesome matchup since the Red Sox had won 10 of their last 11 games and they had their own All-Star starting pitcher-Nathan Eovaldi (9-5)-opposing Ohtani. Eovaldi has been really great in his last few outings (part of the reason that he was a bit of a surprise first-time All-Star) but that was not the case this evening as he allowed three runs in the first inning and he could never really get into a groove. Boston only had one brief lead all game: designated hitter J.D. Martinez drove in center fielder Kike Hernandez with a sacrifice fly in the first inning. Ohtani and the Angels responded right away as he knocked in second baseman David Fletcher (4-for-4 with 2 doubles) with that RBI double then his catcher Max Stassi hit a two-run homer (his 6th of the season) to left field to score his batterymate. 
    From there, Ohtani efficiently (89 pitches) started to mow down the Sox until Martinez hit an RBI single in the sixth inning that scored catcher Connor Wong and cut LA's lead to 3-2. Boston could have taken a 4-3 lead in that frame but center fielder Juan Lagares robbed Sox shortstop Xander Bogaerts of what would have been a two-run bomb to right center. Just like in the first inning, the Angels answered with a pair of runs in the sixth: former Red Sox great Jose Iglesias drove in a run with a ground out then Stassi scored on an infield single by Fletcher. Los Angeles' set-up man Michael Mayers pitched a scoreless eighth inning for his 11th hold of the season before Angels closer Raisel Iglesias struck out two in the ninth inning as he recorded his 17th save of the season. The other Sox run came on right fielder Hunter Renfroe's solo shot off Iglesias (his 13th of the season) with two outs in the ninth. 
    The Red Sox conclude their six-game trip to California tomorrow afternoon (4:07, NESN) with Eduardo Rodriguez (6-4) facing crappy lefty Andrew Heaney (4-6). No more late night start times for awhile! After winning two of three games over the weekend in Oakland (49-38), Boston has gone 3-2 on this West Coast swing so ending it with one last victory going into a much-deserved day off on Thursday would be sweet. E-Rod has been much better in his last two starts, giving the club hope that he is finally regaining his stellar form of a few years ago.

Thursday, July 1, 2021

Sox Start July By Completing Perfect (7-0) Homestand & Clinching Four-Game Sweep Vs. KC

 

    Today will go down as one of the most predictable games of the 2021 season for the Red Sox (51-31 overall, 27-17 home). In the finale of their seven-game homestand, they flat out embarrassed the Royals (33-47 overall, 15-28 away) 15-1 this afternoon at Fenway Park. Kansas City has been on the road for the past 10 games (which must feel like forever) so it was no surprise that they laid down and got swept in the four-game series by the Red Sox who have won seven straight games. Boston racked up 17 hits as every batter with a plate appearance had at least one hit which sent the Royals to their ninth loss in a row. Red Sox starter Nathan Eovaldi (7 IP, 5 hits, 0 ERs, 6 Ks, 0 BBs) pitched seven scoreless innings that only took 84 pitches as KC clearly couldn't get out of town fast enough. 
    Boston hit four home runs, starting with second baseman Kike Hernandez who had a leadoff homer (his 9th HR of the season) over the Green Monster for the third time in the past five contests. Left fielder (not a misprint) J.D. Martinez followed with a solo home run of his own (his 17th of the season) in the fourth inning to straightaway center field and first baseman Danny Santana added a three-run bomb to right center (his 3rd of the season) later in the frame for a 5-0 lead. Boston scored four more runs in the fifth inning on a two-run single by first-time All-Star third baseman Rafael Devers that scored Martinez and center fielder Alex Verdugo; Devers scored on an infield single by Santana and right fielder Hunter Renfroe came home on a balk by Kansas City reliever Ervin Santana. 
    Devers crushed a three-run home run (his 20th of the season) in the sixth inning that scored Martinez and DH (for the day)/All-Star Xander Bogaerts. Pinch hitter Michael Chavis' sacrifice fly scored shortstop Marwin Gonzalez (3-for-4) in the seventh inning. The final two runs for the Sox came in the eighth inning as Gonzalez's RBI single plated Devers and Santana's fantastic day at the plate concluded with an RBI double that scored Renfroe. Boston was this close to a recording an elusive shutout but sadly Royals center fielder Jarrod Dyson had other plans as he drove in left fielder Ryan O'Hearn in the ninth inning.
    Everything came up Red Sox today as they beat the rain and flew out to California tonight at a reasonable hour. They will be celebrating July 4th this weekend in Oakland (48-35 overall, 26-20 home). It's a three-game set between two of the best teams in the American League so it should be very entertaining. Tomorrow night (9:40, NESN), Eduardo Rodriguez (6-4) takes on Frankie Montas (7-7); on Saturday night (7:15, FOX) in front of a national TV audience, Garrett Richards (4-5) faces lefty Cole Irvin (6-7), what could possibly go wrong there?; finally, on the afternoon (4:07, NESN) of July 4th, Nick Pivetta (6-3) opposes James Kaprielian (4-2). The heatwave is over in New England but the forecast for the next few days looks sketchy with plenty of rain so settle in for a possible playoff preview type of series against a quality opponent in a place where Boston typically struggles.