Dominican righthander Simon Mercedes has received his visa from the U.S. Consulate, putting him one step closer to officially joining the Red Sox. Mercedes will still need official approval of his contract from Major League Baseball, but a visa is a major step toward the end of the process. Mercedes, 20, signed with the Red [...]
Tag Archives: Red Sox
Yankees postgame: Phelps impresses but Lester rules
David Phelps continued to make a positive impression despite taking this 4-1 loss to the Red Sox. The rookie went a career-high 6 2/3 and gave up just three runs and seven hits. He struck out seven and walked none in what will likely be his final start before CC Sabathia comes off the DL. [...]
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Game 120: Yankees vs. Red Sox
Yankees lineup 1. Derek Jeter DH 2. Nick Swisher 1B 3. Robinson Cano 2B 4. Andruw Jones RF 5. Casey McGehee 3B 6. Curtis Granderson CF 7. Russell Martin C 8. Jayson Nix SS 9. Ichiro Suzuki LF David Phelps RHP Red Sox lineup 1. Jacoby Ellsbury CF 2. Carl Crawford LF 3. Dustin Pedroia [...]
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Yankees pregame: Concern about Teixeira; Valentine gives himself a bad grade
Brian Heyman here for Chad again today. Mark Teixeira is out of the starting lineup for the second straight game due to his left wrist inflammation. “He’s a little bit better today,” Girardi said. “He’s not a player for me today. I wouldn’t imagine so. We’ll see in the next couple of days if we [...]
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Yankees postgame: Home runs galore; Hughes makes a change
The Yankees hit five homers in this 6-4 win over the Red Sox, all solo shots. The homer total tied a season high, and not coincidently the previous time also came against Boston pitching. “Yeah, the home runs, that’s the way they live and they had a whole bunch of them tonight,” Bobby Valentine said [...]
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Game 119: Yankees vs. Red Sox
Yankees lineup 1. Derek Jeter DH 2. Nick Swisher 1B 3. Robinson Cano 2B 4. Andruw Jones RF 5. Casey McGehee 3B 6. Curtis Granderson CF 7. Russell Martin C 8. Jayson Nix SS 9. Ichiro Suzuki LF Phil Hughes RHP Red Sox lineup 1. Jacoby Ellsbury CF 2. Carl Crawford LF 3. Dustin Pedroia [...]
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Yankees pregame: Teixeira injured again; eye of Boston storm speaks
Brian Heyman here for Chad today. Mark Teixeira isn’t in the starting lineup. He missed two games after injuring his left wrist July 29 when Boston was here last time and then aggravated it with a dive the next game against the Orioles. It was sore and inflamed then, and it’s sore and inflamed again. [...]
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Red Sox Promote Xander Bogaerts To Double-A
Xander Bogaerts may only be 19, but the Red Sox shortstop on his way to Double-A Portland, according to high Class A Salem Red Sox announcer Evan Lepler. The only player in the Eastern League who will be younger than Bogaerts is newly-promoted Orioles righthander Dylan Bundy, who was born a month after Bogaerts. The [...]
Teixeira and Padilla
Mark Teixeira and Vicente Padilla have a history and it isn’t a good one. The latest chapter was written in the eighth inning Saturday night when Teixeira sent up a tying two-run homer to right off the Red Sox reliever, then walked very slowly out of the box, watching the ball fly out. Let’s start [...]
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Yankees postgame: Grandy messes up for a change
Curtis Granderson has played a wonderful center field for the Yankees, but he had a bad moment in the ninth and it cost the Yankees this game against the Red Sox. It was 6-6 with Jacoby Ellsbury on first and one out in the ninth when Pedro Ciriaco hit the drive to center. “I thought [...]
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Game 100: Yankees vs. Red Sox
Yankees lineup 1. Derek Jeter SS 2. Curtis Granderson CF 3. Mark Teixeira 1B 4. Robinson Cano 2B 5. Andruw Jones LF 6. Jayson Nix 3B 7. Russell Martin DH 8. Ichiro Suzuki RF 9. Chris Stewart C CC Sabathia LHP Red Sox lineup 1. Jacob Ellsbury CF 2. Pedro Ciriaco DH 3. Dustin Pedroia [...]
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Tex sends a message about hustle
Mark Teixeira gave a lesson in the value of hustling in the Yankees’ 10-3 win over the Red Sox Friday night. The Yankees scored three runs in the first to take a 3-1 lead, the last two on a homer by Raul Ibanez. But it should’ve still been 1-0 Boston. “I think Tex caused that [...]
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Yankees postgame: Tale of two injured-riddled teams
The Yankees sure have done a better job getting past their injuries than the Red Sox. They have more talent and more depth than the Red Sox have, too. The pitching is much better. The gap between these first- and last-place teams is now 11 1/2 games after this 10-3 win by the Yankees. “They [...]
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Adam Jones thinks Kevin Youkilis’ injury was big reason for September collapse
The Boston Red Sox’s spectacular September collapse last season just isn’t going to go away, and this time it’s Orioles outfielder Adam Jones giving his two cents.
Jones, whose Orioles capped the Sox’s downfall with a walk-off win on the last day of the season, thinks that Kevin Youkilis‘ absence for the final 13 games of the season was something Boston wasn’t able to adjust to.
“You had a lineup with (Jacoby) Ellsbury, (Dustin) Pedroia, (Adrian) Gonzalez, Youk and Big Papi (David Ortiz) that played every single day. Now you mess with it, and it throws off your offense a little bit,” Jones told the Boston Herald. “You’ve got a big hole at fourth. A .300 hitter, 30 (homer), 100 (RBI) guy, who’s going to replace that? There isn’t anyone.”
Full story on Larry Brown Sports
Cubs, Red Sox want to talk to Maddux
The Cubs and Red Sox have both asked for permission to interview Rangers pitching coach Mike Maddux for their managerial jobs.
Maddux is widely credited for helping convert C.J. Wilson and Alexei Ogando from relievers into very good starting pitchers and is seen as one of the very best pitching coaches in baseball.
The Red Sox and Cubs are looking at many of the same people as candidates for their managerial openings. Dale Sveum, the Brewers’ hitting coach, and Pete Mackanin, the Phillies’ bench coach, also are interviewing for both jobs
Full story at SI.com
Theo Epstein explains Boston exit
On the day he will be introduced as president of baseball operations with the Chicago Cubs, former Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein explained in a first-person op-ed piece in the Boston Globe why he decided to leave Boston.
“The reason I am leaving has nothing to do with power, pressure, money, or relationships,” Epstein wrote in Tuesday’s edition. “It has nothing to do with September, either.”
Citing football legend Bill Walsh’s theory that coaches and executives in team sports benefit from a change of scenery after 10 years or so in the same place, Epstein — who has spent the past 10 years as general manager of the Red Sox — explained he was initially thinking of leaving his hometown team after the 2012 season, when his contract expired. Epstein also revealed he and assistant Ben Cherington had discussed a transition plan, wherein Cherington took over as GM when Epstein left.
“This summer, when ownership and I first discussed Ben as my successor, the Red Sox were stable, thriving, and talented enough in the big leagues and in the farm system to compete as one of the best clubs in baseball this year and for many years to come,” Epstein wrote.
Full story at ESPN
Terry Francona denies pain pill allegations
Terry Francona was distracted by marital issues and his use of pain medication last season, a team source told the Boston Globe, an allegation the former Red Sox manager denied.
“It makes me angry that people say these things because I’ve busted my (butt) to be the best manager I can be,” Francona said when the Globe presented him with its findings. “I wasn’t terribly successful this year, but I worked harder and spent more time at the ballpark this year than I ever did.”
Francona’s eight-year tenure with the Red Sox came to an end earlier this month in what was called a mutual decision.
The team declined to exercise an option on Francona’s contract following the Red Sox’s historic September collapse in which they went 7-20 and failed to make the playoffs.
Francona, married to his wife, Jacque, for almost 30 years, moved out of their house and lived in a hotel this past season, the newspaper reported.
According to the Globe, team sources also had concerns that Francona’s performance may have been affected by his use of pain medication.
Full story at ESPN
Looks like they are really gonna drag Francona threw the mud and make him the scapegoat.
Red Sox, Francona part ways after collapse
BOSTON (AP) — The Terry Francona era in Boston began with the Red Sox first championship in 86 years. It ended after one of the worst months in club history.
Players who didn’t listen to him needed “a new voice,” he said, and his employers agreed.
The team announced Friday that it was not exercising its contract option for next season and wouldn’t hurry to name a replacement for the manager who rarely criticized his players publicly. That loyalty may not have been returned.
“I trusted them explicitly and things weren’t getting done the way I wanted it in the end,” Francona said, “and I was frustrated because of that. If that’s letting me down, maybe it is.”
But, he said he liked his players and “I actually feel I let a lot of people down.”
In a statement, the Red Sox said they wouldn’t pick up the option for a ninth year as manager following the team’s September collapse in which they blew a nine-game lead in the AL wild-card race. They went 7-20 in September, capped by a 4-3 loss to Baltimore, as Tampa Bay beat them for the playoff spot on the final night of the regular season.
Owners John Henry, Tom Werner, and Larry Lucchino acknowledged a change was needed and thanked Francona, who led the franchise to titles in 2004 and 2007. But the statement also mentioned that Francona was ready to head in a different direction.
“Tito said that after eight years here he was frustrated by his difficulty making an impact with the players, that a different voice was needed, and that it was time for him to move on,” the statement said.
The decision was part of a whirlwind day at Fenway Park that saw the principal parties shuttle in and out of the facility. Francona was in the building three different times.
As Francona drove away once in his Cadillac Escalade, a fan on the street clapped and gave him the thumbs-up sign. Later, after Francona had returned, the driver of a passing ambulance asked a reporter, “Did Francona get fired?”
A day on which talk shows in baseball-crazy Boston were filled with Tito talk took a strange turn later when Henry fell on his yacht moored in downtown Boston and was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital to be examined. WBZ radio reported that he walked off his boat wearing a neck brace.
“He’s fine,” Werner said at an evening news conference with Lucchino and general manager Theo Epstein. “He wished he could be here tonight so his absence, don’t read anything more than just he suffered a minor fall this afternoon.”
He said that at Friday morning’s meeting, management suggested Francona take the weekend to think things over. But he said Francona had made up his mind. He didn’t directly address a question of whether the team would have exercised the option had Francona wanted to stay.
“I was looking forward to hearing Terry’s point of view about how things could improve,” Werner said, “but I think it became clear to us that we couldn’t convince him to remain and I think that’s best for all of us.”
Boston missed the playoffs despite its nine-game lead with 24 left on Sept. 4. It went 6-18 after that amid reports of conditioning and clubhouse problems. The Red Sox did not win consecutive games all month.
“I didn’t feel like the players need to go to dinner together, but they need to be fiercely loyal on the field,” Francona said at a news conference after the announcement. “I didn’t always get that feeling and it bothered me.”
Epstein said Francona was frustrated with clubhouse issues before the September swoon. But that didn’t keep the Red Sox from going 82-44 between a dismal 2-10 start and the 6-18 finish.
“When you’re winning, a lot of that stuff gets covered up,” Epstein said, “and then in September when we started to lose, some of our warts were exposed.”
Francona said it was his decision to leave, although the owners seemed to want to make a change.
“I’m not sure how much support there was from ownership. I don’t know that I feel real comfortable,” said Francona, wearing a long-sleeved dress shirt instead of the red Boston pullover he wore during games and postgame news conferences. “It’s got be everybody together. I was questioning that a little bit.”
Lucchino said, “I was actually puzzled by that comment. We have done nothing differently this year than we have done in previous years.”
Werner gave a vote of confidence to Epstein, who has been criticized for giving long-term deals to underachieving John Lackey and Carl Crawford and is still under contract.
“He’s one of the best general managers in baseball and has been integral to the success of our club the last 10 years,” Werner said.
The official announcement praised Francona.
“We have enormous respect, admiration and appreciation for Tito and the job that he did for eight years, including two World Series championship seasons and five playoff appearances,” it read. “His poise during the 2004 postseason was a key factor in the greatest comeback in baseball history, and his place in Red Sox history will never be forgotten.
“We wish him only the best going forward.”
The statement also quotes Epstein as saying, “Nobody at the Red Sox blames Tito for what happened at the end of this season; we own that as an organization. This year was certainly a difficult and draining one for him and for us.”
Francona said he didn’t know what he would do next but wants to stay in the game. He could be interested in the managerial opening with the Chicago White Sox. He was a manager in their minor-league system, even handling a team on which Michael Jordan tried his hand at baseball, before becoming manager in Philadelphia in 1997.
He said he supports his bench coach, DeMarlo Hale, to replace him but there has been little speculation about who would take over. Hale has never managed in the majors and Epstein said experience in that job is preferable but not required.
Asked about reports of drinking in the clubhouse during games by starting pitchers not playing that day, Francona said, “I’d rather talk about generalities.”
In Francona’s four seasons with the Phillies, they had a 285-363 record with their best coming in 1999 at 77-85.
The Red Sox failed to make the postseason in Francona’s final two seasons but sold out every game since he replaced Grady Little after the 2003 season.
At Friday’s meeting, “I passed along my frustrations at my inability to effectively reach the players,” Francona said in the statement. “After many conversations and much consideration, I ultimately felt that, out of respect to this team, it was time for me to move on.
“I’ve always maintained that it is not only the right, but the obligation, of ownership to have the right person doing this job. I told them that out of my enormous respect for this organization and the people in it, they may need to find a different voice to lead the team.”
The decision came as both of the American League Division Series were set to begin. So, obviously, the Red Sox were a hot pregame topic in Texas and New York.
“I know how well liked he is by his players and that city and in baseball in general. He’s a great guy; he’s not just a good guy,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. “It’s not easy.”
Maddon’s Rays, and Joe Girardi’s Yankees both made the postseason out of the same division as Boston.
“These jobs are precious, there’s no doubt about it. There’s expectations. A lot of times they’re extremely high expectations when you’re in certain towns,” Girardi said. “We understand that when we take the job. High expectations are better than no expectations. You do enjoy it and you enjoy your time when you’re there.
“Tito has done a great job there.”
Francona was the second winningest manager in Red Sox history with a 744-552 record and an 8-0 mark in World Series games, sweeping the Cardinals and Rockies. He became the first manager to win his first six World Series games. They were 90-72 this season.
“I’m going to miss Tito,” Epstein said, “but I am excited that we’re going to get the right guy and that under his leadership these players are going to come together and form a winning team next year, a really good team.”
© 2011 The Associated Press.
Boston sports writer speaks a little too soon
Rays beat Yankees, move into wild-card tie
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon sat alone in his office, waiting for the reaction of his players gathered around a cluster of televisions in the middle of the clubhouse. The Rays beat the New York Yankees 5-2 on Monday night, then celebrated yet another loss that left the AL wild-card race tied with two games to go.
“I didn’t want to expend any more energy in front of a TV,” Maddon said. “It was fun to listen to guys from afar.”
James Shields came within one out of his 12th complete game, yielding six hits. Kyle Farnsworth finished for his 24th save, closing it out moments before the Red Sox lost 6-3 at Baltimore. The Rays and Red Sox each have two games left.
“It’s been a nice little run. All the stars have been aligned for us and here we are,” Shields said. “This is what baseball is all about.”
B.J. Upton drove in two runs with a third-inning double off Hector Noesi (2-2). Kelly Shoppach homered for the second straight day for the Rays, who’ve won three straight and are 14-7 since Sept. 4, when they trailed Boston by nine games. Johnny Damon’s third-inning RBI single moved him into a tie with Lou Gehrig for 57th on the career hits list with 2,721.
Robinson Cano homered in the first and hit an RBI single in the third, giving the Yankees a 2-0 lead against Shields, who allowed just five baserunners over the last six innings. The All-Star right-hander walked three and struck out four to win for the first time in three starts.
“It’s great. We’re really into it. We feel good about this. We like our chances,” Maddon said.
“There’s a real strong believability about what we’re trying to accomplish right now,” the manager added. “It means something to be that far back at the beginning of this month and now we’re tied with a couple of games to go. That’s quite an accomplishment in and of itself. But when you get to this point, you really want to finish things off.”
Shields (16-12) left after walking Eric Chavez. Farnsworth got Jesus Montero to ground out with a crowd of 18,772 on its feet. As the Rays retreated to the clubhouse, fans remained standing while watching a large video screen airing the ninth inning of the Red Sox-Orioles game.
There was an erupted of cheers when the Orioles got the final out.
“Our fate is in our hands,” Shields said. “We don’t have to worry about the Red Sox losing now. That feels really good, especially how far we were back.”
“There’s not a lot of people out there who had faith in us, but here we are,” the pitcher added. “This is where we want to be. We’re down to the last two games of the year, and we control our own fate.”
The Yankees clinched the AL East title for the 12th time in 16 seasons last week during a 6-2 homestand in which they also helped the Rays by winning two of three against Boston. They flew to Florida following Sunday night’s 14-inning loss to the Red Sox, arriving at their Tampa hotel around 5 a.m.
Even though New York also has clinched home-field advantage throughout the AL playoffs, manager Joe Girardi said he would play each game of this series to win while also trying to set his team up for the start of the playoffs on Friday.
“We’re playing to win. I’ve got Bartolo (Colon) tomorrow and I’ve got a loaded bullpen. We’re playing to win games, but I also have to pick the time I use my relievers,” Girardi said. “If you get in some long games Friday and Saturday, I’ve got to make sure that they can go multiple innings. My responsibility is to this club.”
That’s exactly the way Maddon anticipated the Yankees approaching the week.
“I know they’ll have to do some things with their playoff situation, but they’re going to play it straight up I’m pretty sure. Even when they bring the reserves in, they’re pretty good also,” Maddon said before the game. “At the end of the day, the Rays have got to play. We have to win our own games and not worry about anybody else.”
The Yankees rested starters Mark Teixeira and Nick Swisher, with Jorge Posada starting at first base and Eduardo Nunez in right field. Phil Hughes, who’s been bothered by a sore back, was one of six pitchers Girardi used, pitching for the first time in two weeks and allowing no runs and one hit in 1 2-3 innings.
Noesi, a reliever making his second start in five days against the Rays, allowed three runs and five hits in two-plus innings. Damon drove in the final run charged to the Yankees starter with his RBI single off Raul Valdes, then the Rays ran themselves out of what could have been an even bigger inning.
With runners at first and third and one out, Damon and Evan Longoria were both caught stealing after Damon took off for second and stopped. Posada tagged Damon out from behind in a rundown, then threw to the plate to catch Longoria trying to score from third.
Posada also threw Upton out at the plate in the first, fielding a sharp grounder from Ben Zobrist before stepping on first and throwing to catcher Russell Martin, who put the tag on Upton to finish an inning-ending double play that protected a 1-0 lead.
Undeterred, the Rays kept pushing, playing the aggressive style that’s helped them get back in the race.
“We don’t worry about the Red Sox. We don’t worry about anybody. We come out and play our game every night,” Maddon said. “We’ve got to worry about beating the Yankees (Wednesday). If we take care of our own business, then the seconds, the minutes, the hours and the days take care of themselves.”
NOTES: Martin was ejected in the fifth inning after exchanging words with plate umpire Paul Schrieber. … Shields gave up a one-out single to Nunez in the seventh inning, them picked him off first base. His 13 pickoffs lead the majors. … The Yankees plan to use Hughes twice out of the bullpen twice during this series. If he’s on the postseason roster, Hughes would be a reliever. … Girardi said backup C Francisco Cervelli, who has been on the DL since Sept. 13, experienced concussion-like symptoms while doing baseball activities before the game.
© 2011 The Associated Press