THE BEST RED SOX TEAM EVAH! ...
2018
ALDS, GAME #4
The Sox survive a shaky 9th inning
and move on to the ALCS
October 9,
2018 ...
The Red Sox got more great pitching
tonight. Mostly, it was from Rick
Porcello who
made easy work of New York’s lineup in all but one of his five
innings. The bullpen, much-maligned over the last couple months, was
no slouch either. Well, mostly Matt
Barnes, Ryan
Brasier,
and Chris
Sale combined
for three perfect innings. Craig Kimbrel made it way too close for
comfort, but all’s well that ends well.
For the second consecutive night, the Red Sox
got exactly the kind of pitching performance they needed. Rick
Porcello, who was
expected to take the ball for Game #3, got the start in the potential
series-clincher and we saw the best version of himself. He was hitting the zone
with everything, and he was also mixing his pitches about as well as he had all
year. The
Yankees offense
was off-balance enough that location issues never quite came back to bite him.
Early on, it was all about
efficiency for Porcello against the Yankees. He only needed one pitch for his
first out, in fact, though it was a 400-foot fly out from Aaron Hicks. Porcello
came back strong and needed only seven more pitches to get out of the inning.
He did allow his first
baserunner of the game in the bottom half of the second when Neil
Walker ripped a line
drive into right field, but other than that it was smooth sailing and the Red
Sox righty had his second consecutive single-digit-pitch inning. Porcello looked
good in the next couple of innings as well, setting the side down in order in
the third before allowing just a double in the fourth.
Meanwhile, the Red Sox
offense was rewarding their starter with a bit of a cushion. The Sox did
threaten to break the game open right off the bat, though. After a couple of
quick outs to start the game against CC
Sabathia, Steve
Pearce extended the
inning with a single. Then, J.D.
Martinez reached on an
infield single against the shift before Xander
Bogaerts drew a walk.
Suddenly the bases were loaded and Ian
Kinsler had a chance
for a huge swing before the Yankees even had a chance to bat. It looked like he
might have done it off the bat, but his fly ball down the left field line came
up just short of the wall and Brett
Gardner made the catch
to end the inning with no runs coming across the plate.
After the bottom of the
order managed just a walk in the second, the Red Sox really got to work against
Sabathia in the third. They had made the veteran southpaw in the first two
innings, making him throw about 20 pitches in each frame. That caught up to him
here. Andrew
Benintendi led off the
third by getting hit with the first pitch, and then he moved over to third on a
bloop single. With runners on the corners, Martinez put
a charge into one but it was to the wrong part of the park, settling for a
sacrifice fly. Still, it was 1-0. After Pearce moved
over to second on a ground out and then to third on a wild pitch, Kinsler
again had a chance for damage. This time he did it, ripping a line drive out to
left field that just got over Gardner’s glove for an RBI double. 2-0 Red Sox.
Along with Kinser, Eduardo Núñez was another option to take a seat in this game
for Holt, but he of course got the start and shortly after Kinsler cashed
in Núñez would do the same. The infielder smacked a line-drive single into left
field to knock in Kinsler,
and the Red Sox had themselves a 3-0 lead after three.
That third inning would
also mark the last bit of action for Sabathia in this game, as Aaron
Boone wasn’t about to
let a struggling pitcher enter the fourth for a second consecutive night.
Instead, it was Zach
Britton on to face Christian
Vazquez and, well, it
didn’t go as expected. The Red Sox finally took advantage of that short porch in
right field as Vazquez
popped one just over the wall and just like that it was a 4-0 lead.
So, from here we
fast-forward to the bottom half of the fifth when Porcello coming back out after
rolling to that point. He stopped rolling here and got into his first bit of a
trouble of the night. Gary
Sanchez started that
rally with one out, smacking a ground-rule double into left-center field. Gleyber
Torres came up next and
he tapped a slow roller down the third base line. Núñez had no chance at a play
at first so he tried to let the ball roll foul. Instead, it stayed fair all the
way and suddenly the Yankees had runners on the corners for their best chance of
the night. Gardner cashed one run on a sacrifice fly, bringing Hicks up with one
on, two outs and a three-run game. The outfielder, who missed the last two
games, put up a tough at bat but Porcello eventually came through with the right
pitch to induce a pop up and keep the score at 4-1.
After The Sox failed to
score in the sixth, Porcello was lifted with just 65 pitches and Matt
Barnes came on to face
the heart of New York’s order. His control wasn’t perfect but his stuff was good
enough to get the job done. The righty set down Aaron
Judge, Didi
Gregorius and Giancarlo
Stanton in order,
sending the game to the seventh.
Rather than leave Barnes in
to start the seventh with just 15 pitches, Alex Cora went with Ryan
Brasier. He threw
strikes and his fastball was working to perfection, and the Sox got another
1-2-3 inning.
The Sox had a chance to
break the game open a bit more in the top half of the eighth when Núñez ripped a
one-out double and Jackie
Bradley Jr. joined him
in scoring position after reaching on an error and swiping second base. They
couldn’t come through, though, and settled for the three-run lead with six more
outs to record.
Heading to the mound for
the bottom of the eighth was Chris. Sale.
The Red Sox ace came out of the bullpen and he looked like the Red Sox ace. He
dominated for an easy 1-2-3 inning that was punctuated by a strikeout of Hicks.
The man called upon to get
those final three out of course, was Craig
Kimbrel, and he did not
make it easy. The closer walked Judge on four pitches, then Gregorius hit a
single. Kimbrel followed that up with another walk and a hit by pitch, and
suddenly it was a two-run game with Gary Sanchez coming up. The catcher hit one
well, but it died in front of the wall and the Yankees settled for a sacrifice
fly, cutting the lead down to one with two on, for Gleyber Torres. Finally, a
weak ground ball to third base ended the game and the Red Sox celebrated.
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