Game Info
TV - NESN
Radio - WEEI 850 am
Venue - Fenway Park
First Pitch - 7:05
http://www.pubclub.com/Boston/Images/FenwayLead.JPG
Starting Pitchers
http://img107.imageshack.us/img107/8706/6403pn6.jpg Versus http://img107.imageshack.us/img107/9764/6441yf5.jpg
15-10, 5.02 ERA-----18-5, 2.77 ERA
Ortiz Cathes a Foxx
Courtesy o' the Herald
David Ortiz did it again for the Red Sox last night.
And, wouldn’t you know it, the Yankees did it again to the Red Sox as well.
On the same night the Yankees won their ninth consecutive AL East title, Ortiz, the Red Sox’ beloved slugger, hit his franchise record-tying 50th home run off Twins starter Boof Bonser in the sixth inning.
The blast gave the Sox a 2-1 lead but after reliever Craig Hansen gave up four runs in the eighth, the Sox went on to lose big, 8-2.
The Yankees, who were beaten by the Blue Jays, 3-2, couldn’t clinch on their own but were able to celebrate north of the border after the Sox lost.
With 10 games left, Ortiz appears certain to surpass Foxx’ 68-year-old mark.
“It means they’re going to remember me for a while,” said Ortiz of the moment’s significance. “It’s a great feeling to be right next to a great player, a superstar, just like Mr. Jimmie Foxx was. To be right there with him is a wonderful feeling.”
Until Ortiz’ next home run, the afterglow from last night’s missile will suffice as one of the brightest spots from this otherwise dismal last month for the Sox.
The game meant much more to Minnesota than the Red Sox. A playoff spot is very much in the cards for the Twins, who are a half-game behind the Tigers in the AL Central and 5 1/2 games ahead of the White Sox in the wild card chase.
With the Twins starting ace Johan Santana tonight, the Red Sox could discover with a loss that their postseason hopes, feeble to begin with, would be completely dead.
Ortiz could wind up shattering Foxx’ record but his thoughts were on the team’s shattered season.
“Let’s see how we finish the season,” Ortiz said. “We’re having a tough time at this point of the season. It’s crazy how things are going but I just told everybody we’ve got to keep on going.”
Curt Schilling, back from a three-week layoff, was not efficient with his pitches - he had thrown 72 after three innings - but he allowed just a single run in five innings.
Ortiz’ home run stood until the eighth, when Hansen faced four batters and did not retire one. He allowed two doubles, a walk and a three-run homer before being sent to the showers. Three more Twins runs came across in the ninth inning.
Schilling marveled at what Ortiz had accomplished.
“You’re talking about a franchise that’s been around a long time and had some of the greatest hitters who ever lived played here,” he said. “To achieve something that potentially he’s on the cusp of doing, something no one’s ever done, in this uniform, that’s special.
“You love to see great people, good people, get rewarded for their effort and hard work.”
And this group of hard-working Red Sox wound up being overmatched in the end by a more talented Yankees team.
“This isn’t the way it was supposed to end,” said Schilling of the Yanks’ division clinch. “They played a lot better than us over the course of the season. No matter where you feel you’re at in April, May, June, July and August, September’s when you make your mark. We put ourselves in position to be taken advantage of and they had talent to take advantage of us.
“We didn’t play well when we had to play well. That five-game set we had with them here was our chance to make hay. We did the exact opposite. I don’t think we opened the door for them as much as they kicked it in.”