July 9, 2000
A little inter-league intrigue with the game as the Braves
returned to Boston. Let’s dive right in.
The nicest part about this card is the pitchers section
still having some room in it. If you only needed three pitchers, chances are
you had a good game. And, that’s exactly what happened. Tim Wakefield had a
great start, going seven strong innings. Rich Garces and Derek Lowe each
pitched a scoreless inning to finish it out. I imagine that’s exactly how they
drew it up before the game.
The other great part about the card is all the colored
diamonds. When you have the pitching that the Sox got, and you see all those
runs scored, you know it was a pretty good day.
The player of the game? Easily Nomar. He only had two hits,
but both of them were home runs. He both scored and drove in three runs on the
day. Since the Braves only scored two runs, Nomar was almost all the Sox
needed.
The team goat? It’ll have to be Ed Sprague. He was the only
player on the Sox without a hit on the day. He stumbled though the game going
0-4 with a strikeout. Even from the last spot in the order, you’d like more
than that.
But, it didn’t matter. The Sox pounded their former
cross-town rivals. The pitching held them down, while the offense couldn’t stop
scoring. It was a fantastic team effort.
And the scorecard shows how it happened.
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