37 arrested after World Series

October 29, 2007

BOSTON (AP) — Police in riot gear cleared several large crowds gathered around Fenway Park early Monday after the Red Sox won their second World Series title in four years.

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Police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said 37 arrests were made in the city, mostly for disorderly conduct. No serious injuries were reported.

An unruly crowd flipped a pickup truck to its side near Fenway Park and at least one car fire was reported. Young people sprayed each other with beer and some climbed street signs or utility poles.
“Two World Series in four years is pure heaven,” said Andrew Dumas, a Boston University student from West Boylston.
Police shut down access to Kenmore Square, near Fenway, as Game 4 neared its end in Denver Sunday night. The Red Sox won the game 4-3, touching off celebrations around New England.
Boston authorities cracked down on rowdy sports celebrations after an Emerson College student was struck and killed by a pepper pellet fired by police into an unruly crowd celebrating the Red Sox’s 2004 victory over the New York Yankees in the American League Championship Series.
On Sunday, hundreds of police officers took positions on foot, bicycle and horseback around Fenway, hoping to discourage fans from congregating around the ballpark. The police department had announced it would have more than 50 cameras trained on the city to record any vandalism.
Elsewhere around the region, some 1,500 University of Massachusetts-Amherst students poured out of their dormitories after Boston completed its sweep.
The university said on its Web site that the crowd was boisterous but peaceful, with no damage reported. Six people were arrested for disorderly conduct or for failing to obey a dispersal order that was issued at about 12:45 a.m.
One person suffered a minor injury when he fell to the ground while body surfing.
In Durham, N.H., several thousand University of New Hampshire students gathered on Main Street, many carrying brooms and chanting “sweep, sweep, sweep.”
Several dozen police officers, some in riot gear, pushed the crowds back toward campus and no arrests or injuries were reported.
The victorious Red Sox were expected to arrive back in Boston at about 3:30 p.m. Monday and head to Fenway Park. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino said the city would meet with team officials later in the day before announcing details of a public celebration, possibly as early as Tuesday.
Menino said he expected the parade to be similar to the “rolling rally” that was held after the 2004 title, in which players rode around the city in Duck Boats.


Tim Wakefield Out of the Series

October 23, 2007

BOSTON (AP) — Knuckleballer Tim Wakefield is being left off Boston’s roster for the World Series because of a bad shoulder.

The 41-year-old Wakefield fought through back problems late in the season and was kept off the roster for the first-round series against the Los Angeles Angels. He has pitched once since Sept. 29, allowing five runs in 4 2-3 innings in Game 4 of the AL championship series against the Cleveland Indians.

Wakefield was 17-12 with a 4.76 ERA in the regular season.Also Tuesday, Red Sox manager Terry Francona saidJacoby Ellsbury would start Game 1 in center field in place of Coco Crisp.

Crisp struggled in the playoffs and was replaced in the lineup for Games 6 and 7 against Cleveland, and he also banged into the wall catching the final out of the ALCS.

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Sox Fan Gets Snubbed

September 17, 2007

USA Today

Griffin Whitman, a 10-year-old Red Sox fan, asked Yankees outfielder Shelley Duncan for his autograph before Friday’s big game. The 27-year-old wrote “RED SOX SUCK!” and signed his name before returning the boy’s spiral-bound notebook.

“It was cool to get his autograph,” Griffin tells the Boston Herald. “It didn’t make me feel happy when he wrote that.

Duncan tells the paper he’s surprised that Griffith and his parents were offended. “I thought I was back in middle school or high school, where you try to make a joke or say something funny, and you end up saying something that gets you in trouble,” Duncan says. “I try to be interactive with people, be funny, have a good time and have a laugh. It’s not always Yankees fans that have us sign stuff. I try to rile ’em up and be fun. I don’t expect anybody to make a big deal about it. Nobody ever has before.”

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Curt Schilling’s Bloody Sock a Fake?

April 26, 2007


BALTIMORE -ESPN.COM- The story of Curt Schilling’s famous bloody socks from the 2004 playoffs is turning into a bloody mess after a prominent broadcaster claimed one of Schilling’s teammates acknowledged the blood wasn’t real.

For those who have somehow forgotten, here’s what happened: Schilling, who had a right ankle tendon injury, had sutures stitched into his ankle to keep the tendon stable so he could pitch in Game 6 against the New York Yankees in the 2004 American League Championship Series. A red stain, presumably blood, could be seen on the sock during the game, which the Red Sox won.

Schilling repeated the feat in Game 2 of the World Series and the bloody sock from that game was sent to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., after the Red Sox won their first series title since 1918.

A Hall of Fame official confirmed to ESPN’s Cold Pizza on Thursday that the sock in the Hall is from the World Series. The Hall of Fame’s Web site, however, says that the Hall has the bloody sock worn by Schilling during Game 6 of the ALCS.

Fast-forward to Wednesday night’s Mid-Atlantic Sports Network’s telecast of Red Sox-Orioles.

In the bottom of the fifth, Orioles play-by-play man Gary Thorne said on the air that he had been told by Red Sox catcher Doug Mirabelli that the substance was paint, not blood.

“The great story we were talking about the other night was that famous red stocking that he wore when they finally won, the blood on his stocking,” Thorne told broadcast partner and Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Palmer.

“Nah,” Thorne said. “It was painted. Doug Mirabelli confessed up to it after. It was all for PR. Two-ball, two-strike count.”

Two innings later, according to media reports, Thorne explained Mirabelli had told him the story “a couple of years ago.”

“Go ask him [Mirabelli],” Thorne said.

After the game, Mirabelli flatly and angrily denied Thorne’s story.

“What? Are you kidding me? He’s [expletive] lying. A straight lie,” Mirabelli said, according to The Boston Globe. “I never said that. I know it was blood. Everybody knows it was blood.”

“It gets stupider,” Schilling added, according to the newspaper. “I got the 9-inch scar for you. You can see it. … There are some bad people in your line of work, man.”

Red Sox manager Terry Francona also questioned Thorne’s version of the story.

“What Schill did that night on the sports field was one of the most incredible feats I ever witnessed,” Francona said, according to The Globe. “[Thorne's remarks] go so far past disappointing. Disrespectful to Schill, to his vocation. I’m stunned.

“I am just floored. Schill takes his share of shots, and this one is so far below the belt that I’m embarrassed and I wish somebody would have had the good conscience to ask me,” Francona said, according to the newspaper.

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Red Sox 4 Back To Back Homers Beat Yankees

April 23, 2007

BOSTON — The record-tying flurry of four straight home runs struck by the Red Sox in their stunning bottom of the third inning were all no-doubters. But quite a ways after, the outcome of Sunday night’s latest Red Sox-Yankees madness was still very much in doubt.

All the Red Sox had on their side were a few isolated moments that went their way. And they needed every one of them to separate themselves from the Yankees in what wound up a seat-squirming 7-6 victory that seemed to encapsulate so much of the tension that has taken place in this rivalry over the years.

“The games are always exciting,” said Red Sox manager Terry Francona. “Obviously, it’s more exciting when you win, but they’re never easy.”

Daisuke Matsuzaka, making his first foray into the rivalry, can now attest to that. He had to endure the indignity of allowing six runs to claim his first home victory in a Boston uniform.

Make no mistake about it, this one climbed high on the degree-of-difficulty scale. So much so that Yankees manager Joe Torre seemed to be at a bit of a loss for how his team didn’t escape Boston with at least one win.

“Three games, we battled,” Torre said. “That’s all you can do. We came out on the short end. They made some great plays. It was a great ballgame. You hate to think it’s a great ballgame when you lose.”

When it was over, the Red Sox had completed their first Fenway Park sweep of the Yankees since 1990, three moments that were all decided by a matter of inches.

The first was Mike Lowell’s second homer of the night, a literal wall-scraper that sort of nestled into home run territory. If the seventh-inning liner had caromed off the Monster instead of barely getting over it, the teams might still be playing. Instead, Lowell’s three-run long ball put the Sox ahead for good and made a 5-4 deficit disappear.

“I think I got it by about eight inches,” said Lowell.

Then came the top of the eighth, when the Yankees nearly stormed right back. Runners were at the corners with one out, the Boston lead back down to one. Brendan Donnelly’s pitch was smoked up the middle by Josh Phelps. It seemed like a sure hit to tie the game, but then Dustin Pedroia snared the sinking liner with a diving backhand. Inning over, crisis averted.

“The play he made, he willed himself to catch that ball,” said Francona of Pedroia.

Then just one more moment to create a ballpark full of tension. There were two outs in the top of the ninth and Bobby Abreu on first base after a walk. The hitter was Alex Rodriguez, the hottest hitter on the planet.

The closer was Jonathan Papelbon, Boston’s red-hot closer. A-Rod hit a crisp grounder, but right at Lowell, who fired to second, ending the wildly entertaining contest.

A-Rod vs. Papelbon was definitely a fitting grand finale.

“Yeah, but it’s still easier to enjoy when it was over,” said Francona. “That’s one of those things where you say, ‘Boy, that was cool.’ We obviously love our guy, but you respect what the other guy’s doing. So it’s a neat atmosphere, for sure.”

All the pregame hype was about Matsuzaka’s first encounter with the Yankees. Still, his performance (seven-plus innings plus, eight hits, six runs, seven strikeouts) became a bit of a blur by the end of an eventful night.

“I wanted very badly to record my first win at Fenway Park,” said Matsuzaka. “The opponent being the Yankees and the fact that my teammates had already defeated them twice made me want to win even more. All I can say is that I wanted to win.”

Matsuzaka had his heavy hitters to thank.

The Yankees led this game, 3-0, going into the bottom of the third. Who could have predicted how dramatically things were about to turn?

In an electrifying sequence, the Red Sox briefly turned the game into batting practice, tying a Major League record with four consecutive home runs against Yankees lefty Chase Wright, who was making his second Major League start.

Manny Ramirez put the dramatic power show in motion, hitting a towering drive over everything in left-center field and onto Lansdowne Street. Then it was J.D. Drew’s turn, and he belted a blast over the Boston bullpen in right-center field and into the bleachers. Lowell put one over the wall in left to tie the game, and Jason Varitek was the fourth member of the unlikely quartet, hitting a liner into the Monster Seats to put the Sox in front in the most dramatic fashion imaginable.

“I’ll tell you that I haven’t been a part of anything like that,” said Lowell. “Not even in Little League. I was happy that Manny got one. It looked like he was taking better swings. All right, now we’re on the board, then J.D. crushes one. I just wanted to hit the ball hard and keep the momentum going. I got a hold of one, and the dugout was going crazy. It was a really cool, really unique feeling that four guys tied us up and then put us ahead. That was big.”

It was the fifth time in Major League history a team hit four home runs in succession. The Dodgers, with Drew also teaming in that effort, did it last September in a pennant-race victory over the Padres.

“It brought some life back to the ballpark in a hurry,” Francona said.

But give the Yankees credit for this: The 1-2-3-4 punch didn’t demoralize them.

Derek Jeter tied the game at 4 by taking Matsuzaka deep to left in the fifth inning. In the sixth, the Yankees reclaimed the lead when Melky Cabrera’s 6-4-3 double-play grounder scored Robinson Cano from third base.

That wasn’t going to be enough to hold down the Red Sox on a night history and fortune were both on their side.