Friday, July 20, 2012

Walk-Off Winner

Hey All,

The Boston Red Sox were taking on the Chicago White Sox at Fenway. The Red Sox had a 2-1 lead in the series and were looking to bring the brooms out last night. They did just that, by in dramatic fashion with a 3 run walk off homer by Cody Ross.

Ross' 5-year-old son stood behind him as he sat at a podium during a postgame interview session, triggering him to recall when he first started to enjoy hitting in the clutch.

"I've always wanted to be up in those situations since I was like my son's age," Ross said of his three-run homer in the ninth that lifted the Boston Red Sox to a 3-1 victory against the Chicago White Sox on Thursday night. "It's a great feeling, especially when you're the hero."

Ross' dramatic shot came one night after he hit three-run homers in back-to-back innings of a 10-1 victory.

Before the game, he was jokingly asked if there'd be a repeat performance.

"I thought it was kind of a dumb question, but I guess it wasn't," he said, smiling, with his blond-haired son, Hudson, just off to his left.

Boston took three of four games in the series and is 5-2 since the All Star break.

It was the fifth loss in 13 games for AL Central-leading Chicago, which opens three-game series at second-place Detroit on Friday night.

Boston's Clay Buchholz had a solid start, allowing one run, six hits, striking out six and walking one in eight innings. But he was set to be the loser until Ross' blast.

"I was sitting on the couch watching," he said. "He's been in big situations and is a guy that thrives in those situations most of the year."

When Ross reached home plate, he was met by Nick Punto, who tore his jersey.

"He was famous for that in St. Louis [last postseason]," Ross said. "I met the shredder."

While Buchholz had his own little celebration.

"I was running around the clubhouse," he said.

Matt Thornton (2-6) got one out, but left with runners on first and second before Addison Reedfaced Ross, who hit a 1-1 pitch into the Green Monster seats.

Carl Crawford opened the ninth with a single, but was erased on Dustin Pedroia's fielder's choice grounder. Adrian Gonzalez then singled to right before Reed came in. Just before the first pitch, Boston sent Punto in to pinch run, slowing Reed down a bit.

"You go back and forth and make decisions, figure them out," White Sox manager Robin Ventura said of electing to open the inning with Thornton. "You got the two lefties coming up with Crawford and Gonzalez, so you know you know you still got Reeder out there if Ross and the rest of the righties come up."

Reed just felt he missed badly with the pitch.

"It was supposed to be a fastball away, and it just sailed over the middle of the plate and he got a good piece on it," he said.

Alfredo Aceves (1-6) pitched one inning for the victory.

Chicago rookie left-hander Jose Quintana continued the impressive start to his career, pitching eight shutout innings.

Quintana held Boston to five hits, striking out two and not walking a batter in his 10th major-league start. The 23-year old has held opponents two runs or fewer in eight starts.

Buchholz had been given the second-most run support in the majors at 7.48 runs per nine innings -- only behind teammate Felix Doubront's 8.38 per -- but the Red Sox couldn't solve the rookie lefty.

Boston was held to one hit until loading the bases with one out in the seventh on singles by Pedroia, Gonzalez and Ross. Shortstop Alexei Ramirez was leaning the wrong way on Will Middlebrooks' liner, dove back, grabbed the ball on one hop and fired to second to start an inning-ending double play.

The White Sox grabbed a 1-0 lead in the fourth when Adam Dunn drew a leadoff walk and advanced to third on Paul Konerko's single, barely beating right fielder Ross' throw. Alex Rios followed with his sacrifice fly to center and Dunn trotted home easily.

Unlike Wednesday night when the Red Sox pounded a rookie left-handed starter for eight runs, three home runs and 12 hits in four innings, Boston had only Pedro Ciriaco's two-out triple in the third.

Second baseman Pedroia returned from the 15-day disabled list after being out with a strained right thumb and went 1 for 4.

Chicago's Kevin Youkilis didn't play because of a tight left hamstring. He was 4 for 8 with a home run and three RBI in his first series against his former team of 7½ years since being traded on June 24.

This can only mean good things for the Boston Red Sox. They are getting healthy, starting to hit the long ball, and winning games since the All Star Break. This happened last year with Boston getting off to a slow start, picking it up near the middle, but we all remember the crumble that happened last September. As a Red Sox fan I hope there's no crumble this year, but rather just great baseball and a run for the postseason.

Until next time,
You keep doing what you do, and I'll keep you up to date with everything sports.

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