Red Sox have become baseball tornado
Watch out AL, Boston showing deadly mix of pitching, hitting
![]() | Jonathan Papelbon, left, David Ortiz and the Red Sox celebrate after disposing the Angels in three quick ALDS games. |
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Video: Baseball from NBC Sports |
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Actually, it just seemed that way. It was the Boston Red Sox who devoured them, and really Saturday was more like the final bite before the last burp. Rarely do you see an entire baseball team push itself back from the table, take a deep breath, loosen its belt, and reach for a mint.
The Red Sox advanced Sunday to the American League Championship Series by completing a sweep of the surprisingly submissive Angels with a 9-1 victory in the best-of-five division series. Although Stanford upset USC on Saturday, proving that just about anything can happen in sports, this result seemed as if it had been etched in stone, or more specifically, in Bill Stoneman, the Angels’ GM whose mantra is that the Angels don’t need another big bat.
The Red Sox are moving on because, at least in this series against Los Angeles, it seemed like the only kind of bats they have are big ones. They provided a glimpse of that Sunday in the fourth inning off Angels starter Jered Weaver when their prodigious third and fourth hitters, David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez, parked consecutive shots over the fence on a pristine Southern California afternoon for a 2-0 lead.
That held up until the top of the eighth. Perhaps figuring that it wasn’t enough to win, they had to also send a message to either the Indians or Yankees that a baseball tornado was on the way, so they hammered the Angels for seven more runs. That sent the sun-baked throng to the parking lots. It was one of those displays these Red Sox have become known for, even though wind conditions in Orange County and the absence of the Fenway faithful and the Green Monster made things a tad more antagonistic.
The contrast was startling, as it figures to be in the ALCS. The Red Sox had been sliding somewhat down the stretch in the regular season, allowing their formidable lead in the American League East over the Yankees to dwindle to a squirmy margin. But now that that nonsense has been dispensed with, it’s almost like they’re interested again.
Schilling went seven innings, giving up six hits and no runs, tossing 100 pitches, 76 of them strikes. He is now 9-2 for the postseason in his illustrious career, with an ERA of 1.93.
“Their pitching probably doesn’t get as much notice as some of the guys on the offensive side of that team,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “That’s the heartbeat of that club, and they pitched well in this series.”
Said Red Sox third baseman Mike Lowell: “Our main key is pitching. I knew we’d have to pitch well in order to be successful in this series.”
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