April 24, 2001
I just love looking at scorecards from this time period. I
know I say it every time, but just look at this team! Of course, I’m sure you
remember, this is the time period that Nomar missed with his wrist injury. That
deprived the Sox of what would have been a pretty decent heart of the order
made up of Nomar-Manny-Everett. But, as it stood on this day,
Everett-Ramirez-Bichette would have to do. And, in reality, that’s not
terrible. Not quite Ortiz-Ramirez-Millar or Pedroia-Ortiz-Napoli, but not a bad
starting point. It’s the rest of it that really falls apart. Chris Stynes is no
Johnny Damon.
But, on this day they managed to put it all together, and
really score some runs. That was handy because I doubt anyone was expecting
Paxton Crawford to shut the Twins down. (Especially with David Ortiz in their
line-up.) So it was nice when the Sox put up some runs early, thanks in large
part to Not-Damon at the top of the line-up. Stynes was 2-2 after two innings,
having scored two runs.
In fact, if I’m selecting my player of the game, I’d be
tempted to give it to Stynes. He ended the day scoring three runs on three
hits. But, then I scroll down a little farther and see Carl Everett’s second
inning. His grand slam really set the tone. He may have only ended up with two
hit, but he got on base three times, and drove in five runs. That’s what you
need from the guy taking Nomar’s spot in the order.
The goat? You’d guess that there were plenty to choose from,
despite the nine runs scored. You’d be right. Three people went hitless on the
day. Both Scott Hatteberg and Shea Hillenbrand did so in four at bats. I was
trying to decide who made their outs in the least opportune places, but
couldn’t find a distinction. So, I’ll hang the horns on Hillenbrand, just
because he also added a strikeout to the mix.
One additional note. Check out the pitcher’s box. The
starter, Crawford, went five innings for the win. Tim Wakefield went the last
four to earn the save after entering a 6-3 game. You don’t see pitching box
scores like that very often.
Which is one reason the Sox came out on top. The pitchers
combined to hold the Twins down just enough to let the offense pull away. It
was really a whole team effort.
And the scorecard shows how it happened.
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