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THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
Chris Sale is nasty as he shuts out
Seattle with 13 Ks
June 24, 2018
... The Red
Sox finished off a series victory against
Seattle thanks to an absolutely incredible day for Chris Sale. The
Red Sox ace was once again pumping triple digits with the fastball
and was incredibly efficient while doing so. It led to a lot of
strikeouts and a relatively low pitch count. Even by his standards,
it was a phenomenal day. For a while, the offense was doing the
all-too-familiar thing where they just don’t score runs for Sale, but
midway through the game they broke out. Mitch
Moreland smashed a mammoth home run and Jackie
Bradley Jr. had a three-hit game. The Red
Sox used that catapult themselves to another win and clinched the
season series over the Mariners.
Sale was absolutely ridiculous, and that was obviously the highlight of the
early parts of this game even with the lineup’s familiar inability to provide
the ace some run support. The lefty had it all working, though, and faced the
minimum throughhis first three innings of work, and even having to face an extra
batter he was averaging two strikeouts per inning for most of this start.
Sale set down the first three batters of the game in order
with one strikeout mixed in. When the 4-5-6 hitters came up in the second, he
did the same thing. In the third he allowed his first baserunner of the game on
a Denard
Span single, but he would end the inning by getting
picked off and caught in a rundown between first and second. Sale also worked in
a couple strikeouts in that third inning for good measure.
The fourth saw the loudest bit of contact against the Red
Sox ace, and it was from Nelson Cruz. The Mariners slugger has been killing the
Sox all weekend, and that continued here. Fortunately, this one stayed in the
yard. Cruz ripped a ball into the right field corner that got caught up under
the wall and he raced in for a triple that was partially aided by a botched
relay. Either way, Seattle had a runner on third with a couple of outs, but Cruz
would be stranded there when Sale struck out his third Seattle batter of the
inning. He then came right back out and set down the side on strikes in the
fifth. That gave him ten strikeouts with 60 pitches at that point in the game,
which is absurd.
Meanwhile, the offense was struggling to get anything going
against yet another lefty. It continued with Marco
Gonzales. While Sale was cruising, he was in line for a
no decision through four innings of work.
The top of the order went down in order in the first with
two strikeouts mixed in. They’d go down 1-2-3 in the second as well, and they
finally got their first baserunner of the game in the third. That came on a Jackie
Bradley Jr. single, but it was with two outs and he was
stranded at first. The fourth got right back to the ineptitude with the Red Sox
being set down in order with all three batters going down by way of the K.
The fifth, finally, brought some action. Xander
Bogaerts started things off with a double down the left
field line. Eduardo Núñez was up next, and he kept things going with a single
into center field. With runners on the corners, Rafael
Devers had a chance to come through and he did just
that, ripping a double into the right field corner. Bogaerts came
in to score, Núñez got to third and Boston had a lead, two runners in scoring
position and still nobody out. Sandy León was up next and hit a deep fly ball to
score another run, and another hit for Bradley gave Mookie
Betts a chance with runners on the corners and one out.
He got a hold of one but hit it to straightaway center field, settling for a
400-foot sacrifice fly to give the Red Sox a 3-0 lead.
Sale finally had a lead and was looking for a shutdown
inning. He did allow another baserunner, this one coming on a perfect bunt
single from Andrew Romine. With two outs, Mitch
Haniger came to the plate and he gave on a drive to
right field towards the bullpens. It looked like it might have a chance but Betts made
a grab right up by the wall, potentially saving a home run and definitely ending
the inning with the 3-0 lead still intact.
The Red Sox offense got back to work against Gonzales in
the sixth. J.D.
Martinez got this one started with an infield single,
showing good hustle on a grounder in the hole of the left side. That brought Mitch
Moreland to the plate, and the Mariners lefty threw him
a 2-0 fastball up and away, and Moreland crushed it about halfway up the
batter’s eye in center field. Just like that, it was a 5-0 lead for the Sox.
Sale then came back with another scoreless inning, this one
including two strikeouts. That would be the end of his amazing day. In all, he
tossed seven scoreless innings with 13 strikeouts and just one walk with only
four hits allowed. It only took him 93 pitches.
Joe Kelly had
the eighth and he had no trouble at all there, setting the side down in order.
That just left things for Matt Barnes in the ninth, and he would also toss a
1-2-3 inning to end the game. |