* Text Features

* Text Features

The Boston Red Sox Saturday, August 10, 2019 * The Boston Globe Red Sox bats sounded off Friday, but the bullpen shone too Nicole Yang Baseball fans in favor of robot umpires may want to bookmark the first inning of Friday night’s Red Sox game. With two outs and a runner on second, starter Brian Johnson appeared to strike out the Angels’ Justin Upton on a 76.8-mile-per-hour curveball to end the inning. Catcher Christian Vazquez tossed the ball to first baseman Mitch Moreland, and the Sox should have been on their way to the dugout with leadoff batter Mookie Betts ready to take the plate. But umpire Mark Ripperger never signaled that Johnson’s pitch was, in fact, a strike. Instead, on a full count, he deemed it a ball. As Upton trotted his way to first, the sellout crowd at Fenway Park showered Ripperger in boos. “It’s a pitch that we thought was a strike, but it wasn’t called there,” manager Alex Cora said. According to the pitch chart provided by MLB, Johnson’s throw was clearly inside the strike zone. Yet the 28-year-old lefty remained on the mound in search of his third out. Up next was first baseman Albert Pujols, who promptly crushed a home run off a billboard above the Green Monster. 3-0, Angels. “It’s baseball,” said Johnson, who was filling in for starter David Price after Price was placed on the 10-day injured list on Thursday. “People make mistakes. Maybe it wasn’t a strike; maybe it was. I’m not one to look back now. I should have moved on and gotten the next guy. It is what it is. It sucks.” The bleeding stopped there, as Johnson struck out right fielder Kole Calhoun to officially end the inning. After retiring the side in the second, however, Johnson’s night wouldn’t last much longer. Cora pulled the plug 2⅔ innings into his start; he’d said before the game Johnson could last four or five frames. But righthander Marcus Walden seamlessly took over, pitching a perfect 2⅓ innings. During that span, the Red Sox mounted a comeback, taking a 4-3 lead. It was his sixth straight outing not allowing a hit. His last 12 appearances, he has a 1.42 ERA in 12⅔ innings. “He’s been throwing the ball well,” Cora said. “He’s kind of fallen into that same role as earlier in the season, coming in early, throwing clean innings. You start looking at his numbers against lefties, against righties, and he’s throwing the ball well.” Ripperger’s flub ultimately proved inconsequential, as the Sox tallied 10 straight runs for a lopsided 16-4 win. “When the offense goes out and does that, it’s huge, especially when I give up three in the first,” Johnson said. “It’s never the plan.” Not only did the flurry of production give Cora confidence in the team’s bats moving forward, but the combined effort from the bullpen provides him with hope, too. Nathan Eovaldi retired the side in the sixth and, despite surrendering a run, managed to escape a bases-loaded jam in the seventh; Hector Velazquez retired the side on 11 pitches in the eighth; and Josh Taylor retired the side to close it out in the ninth. Though the focus seemed to be on the team’s offense — the Red Sox have a league-high seven wins by at least 10 runs this season — Cora noted the rotation and bullpen are more than capable as well. “I do believe that pitching-wise, we can do it,” Cora said. “[Chris Sale’s start on Thursday] was a great day. You felt the energy [on Friday]. That’s how it starts. [Saturday] is the next guy, and then we keep going.” Opting out could be hit or miss for J.D. Martinez Peter Abraham J.D. Martinez was 4 for 5 with two home runs, two doubles, four RBIs and four runs scored for the Red Sox on Friday night in a 16-4 thrashing of the Angels that for now at least kept them on the periphery of the American League wild-card race. But the undercurrent of his big night at the plate was more interesting than the standings. Martinez is now hitting .310 with 27 home runs, 71 RBIs, and a brawny .952 OPS with 43 games remaining this season. It’s reasonable to think he will finish the year with 34 or 35 homers and close to 100 RBIs. Is that enough to gamble with his future? Martinez has the right to opt out of his contract after the World Series and become a free agent. Or he could hang onto the deal he has and collect $62.5 million over the next three seasons. It’s an interesting dilemma, especially for a player who will turn 32 later this month. Martinez is unquestionably one of the best hitters in the game. Since revamping his swing prior to the 2014 season, he has hit 198 home runs while maintaining a .307 batting average. But he’s also primarily a designated hitter at this stage of his career. Martinez has started only 25 games in the outfield this season, none since July 19 when he badly misplayed a ball off the right-field wall at Camden Yards and Baltimore’s Richie Martin scored on what was ruled a triple and an error. Martinez also has missed games on three occasions this seasons because of back spasms. Plenty of teams could use a hitter like Martinez. But how many teams would be willing to pay him more than what the Red Sox are committed to for the next three seasons? Agent Scott Boras said just a few weeks ago that Martinez is in the small group of players who can consistently hit for average and power and won’t lack for offers. That’s surely true. He’s also an influential player in the clubhouse, his studious approach to hitting and work ethic rubbing off on teammates. Red Sox coaches joke about their sore arms from all the batting practice Martinez takes, even during games. But name the team that will pay him $65 or $70 million for the next three seasons. And keep in mind the Red Sox will have the right to give Martinez a qualifying offer that will depress his value in the open market. You can’t cross all 15 National League teams off the list. But it would certainly be risky to pay Martinez $65 or $70 million to play the outfield full-time. Eliminate the Red Sox. Take out the Angels, who have Shohei Ohtani as their DH. The Yankees? They’re heavily invested in Giancarlo Stanton through 2027. One option could be for the Red Sox to sweeten his deal a bit. Or just wait. Martinez has another opt-out after the 2020 season. It’ll be a tough call for Boras. But that’s why Martinez pays Boras to make those decisions. “I leave that to him,” he said. “We’ll see what happens.” For now, the Sox will enjoy the services of one of the hottest hitters in baseball. Martinez has hit safely in eight consecutive games at 15 of 29 and has reached base in 18 straight games. Going back 20 games, he has hit .425 with a 1.327 OPS. The notion that Martinez is having a down season is being steadily chipped away. “We’ve been talking about him grinding,” manager Alex Cora said. “If you look at the numbers, if that’s grinding . .” Martinez is going so well that even his mistakes work out. He hammered a pitch to right field in the sixth inning that got over the head of Kole Calhoun on the warning track. Martinez thought he had a home run and went into his trot. But when he rounded second, he saw third base coach Carlos Febles motioning for him to go back to the base. “I was panicking,” Martinez said. “Around second and he’s looking at me and was yelling, ‘No, no, no’ with his hands up and I’m like, ‘What happened?’ ” Martinez should have been tagged out but was able to dive back safely. The Sox went on to score five runs and blew the game open. When Martinez came up again in the seventh he hit a no-doubt home run to right field and trotted safely around. Martinez won’t look at his statistics until after the season ends. “When I get home I sit back and say, ‘Dang, I had a pretty good year.’ That’s kind of how it is.” When he does that this season, Martinez also will have to sit back and decide whether he wants to stick with the Red Sox. J.D. Martinez powers Red Sox past Angels Julian McWilliams It’s easy to gloss over what J.D. Martinez is doing this season. His production at the plate last season, which included a .330 batting average and 130 RBIs, might have spoiled Red Sox fans a bit. But this year is shaping up to be another productive one for Martinez despite where the Sox are in the standings. It’s August and Martinez is starting to heat up. In the Red Sox’ 16-4 shellacking of the Los Angeles Angels Friday night, Martinez played a big part, going 4 for 5 with two homers and two doubles. He’s now batting .310 with a .952 OPS.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    32 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us