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Monday, August 10, 2009

So much for a rejuvinated offense

By Chris Maza
Fan Fanatic Sport Staff


Yes, Sox fans. It was as ugly as it seemed.

In the six-game embarasment that was the Red Sox' last road trip, they found pretty much every concievable way to lose a ballgame.

But in pretty much all of them, there was one common theme - an extreme lack off offense. And as bad as it looked, when you mull over the numbers, it's enough to make a grown man cry.

Let's start with the basics. The Red Sox managed to score a whopping 16 runs on 39 hits over the six-game stretch. Now remember that two of those games went into extras, so in reality, Boston scored 16 runs in 64 innings. Average that out and the Red Sox scored once every four innings. You can't win ballgames that way. Not against good teams.

Who can you blame? How about everybody? As a team, the Red Sox batted a dismal .176, accumulating just 39 hits in 222 at bats. At the top of the order, Jacoby Ellsbury and Dustin Pedroia were unproductive. The leadoff hittter batted .233, while the former MVP was just a shade better at .240. But wait, it gets worse. Here's a list of the Red Sox' key players who laid eggs in the pivotal series.

Victor Martinez: 6-for-26 (.231)
Kevin Youkilis: 5-for-23 (.217)
J.D. Drew: 4-for-19 (.210)
Mike Lowell: 2-for-13 (.154)
David Ortiz: 1-for-18 (.056)
Jason Varitek: 1-for-19 (.053)

Jason Bay was absent for most of the week because of a re-aggravated hamstring injury, but he went 2-for-8, extending his horrible post-All-Star slump. He's now batting .204 since the Midsummer Classic. (In the process, he's become a statistical enigma of sorts. He is slugging just .296, but stil has an on-base percentage of .377 in that time.)

The road trip was one of the worst stretches of offense in Red Sox history, including a scoreless streak of 31 straight innings. At least they avoided getting shut out in back-to-back-to-back games for the first time since 1981.

Say what you will about John Smoltz. The rest of the starting pitching in either series was good enough that they could have won. Jon Lester was superb in both of his starts. Josh Beckett was dominant through seven innings in his start against the Yankees. Clay Buchholz was less than spectacular, but still wriggled his way through six inning to put the Red Sox into a decent position in game three of the Yankees series. Brad Penny did not pitch well, but five runs is not exactly disastrous.

Some could point to the bullpen being the problem, having been tagged with the loss in three of the six games and some of the blame could be placed on it, but consider how much they have had to pitch over those last six games and it's not hard to see that they miss having a long man like Justin Masterson (though I doubt anyone would be willing to hand Victor Martinez back). And had the Red Sox been able to muster anything more than nine hits in the combined 28 innings of the two extra-inning games they played, maybe, just maybe those games could have been a lot shorter.

You have to also tip your cap to the opposing pitchers, especially the Yankees, but some of the blame has to fall on what was supposed to be one of the better, most balanced lineups in baseball. Now the Red Sox sit at a .262 batting average as a team, planting them behind the Seattle Mariners in that department. That's just not going to do it for a team that wants to hold onto its postseason dreams.
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Stick a fork in the Red Sox?

By Chad Garner
Fan Fanatic Sports Staff
So have you given up hope?
If you're a Red Sox fan, today is an official day of mourning. 
But you've got to get back up, brush yourself off and immediately get back to work.
Do you think the season is over?
While it never looks good to be back 6 1/2 games in the American League East -- to the archrival New York Yankees no less -- don't for one second think the season is over.
Boston can get hot at any time, especially with a lineup that features Victor Martinez, Kevin Youkilis, Dustin Pedroia, Jacoby Ellsbury and Jason Bay (he needs to start hitting again), and everyone knows it.
Big deal. The Yankees just swept the four-game series in the Bronx. It's only August and there's more than a month of baseball left. The Sox have the pitching to get right back in the race, but the offense needs to start hitting, and some clutch hits are going to be necessary.
Keep the faith, Nation. 
There's a lot of baseball left to be played -- 52 more and six against the Yanks. Plus, you don't actually think that the Red Sox will be ice cold for the rest of the year and Yankees will stay hot for that long do you?
So Red Sox Nation, do you think your hometown team is cooked or do they have a chance to win the East or at least get that Wild Card berth?