Red Sox lead series 2-1
I - BOS 5; NYY 4
II - NYY 6; BOS 2
III - BOS 16; NYY 1
GAME THREE
RED SOX 16
YANKEES 1
FINAL
Boston Red Sox Hand Bronx Bombers Worst Defeat in Franchise Post-Season History.
Featured prominently across the front of Boston's warm-up jersey reads their post-season mantra: Do Damage. Monday at Yankee Stadium the Red Sox do just that, handing the Bronx Bombers their worst post-season defeat in their 115-year history, and pushing them to the brink of elimination.
Already lost upon Bomber fans' collective memory is Gary Sanchez becoming the first Yankee catcher to hit multiple home runs in one playoff game, or that Aaron Judge becomes the first Yankee since Reggie Jackson to homer in three consecutive playoff games. With one more loss in this ALDS, all fans will remember is a 100-win regular season spiraling counter-clockwise down the toilet; rookie manager Aaron Boone's failure to get out of the first round a year after Joe Girardi leads them within one game of the World Series; and something a little closer to their heart, getting eliminated yet again by the rival Red Sox in their own yard. Nothing short of two straight victories changes that narrative now.
This much, however, for the moment remains true as ever: the Yankees live and die by the home run. Through two Yankees losses, they total just one home run - an Aaron Judge blast in the ninth inning of Game One. In their Game Two victory, Judge hit his second of the series, and Gary Sanchez adds two. From a Red Sox perspective, they trade home runs in Game One, and win; get out homered in Game Two and lose; then hit one home run versus zero for the Yankees in Game Three, and win.
Boston had already scored 14 runs on 17 hits before Brock Holt's two-run jolt in the ninth. As an aside, he becomes MLB's first player to hit for the cycle in a post-season game. Cycling back, the Yankees have hit four home runs versus Boston's three, but the Red Sox have now out-hit the Yankees 31-23, and outscored them 23-11, through three games of the ALDS.
Luis Severino's very first offering of the game clocked in at 95-mph. Leading off for Boston, Mookie Betts hits said pitch 405 feet away to the base of the center field wall for a very long out. After which, the route is on. Severino faces 18 batters through three innings, allowing six earned runs on seven hits and two walks, with two strikeouts. The Yankees bullpen (Austin Romine aside) allows eight more runs on ten hits and five walks, with just two strikeouts.
In a tale of two acquisitions, the Yankees acquire J.A. Happ, who through his career has pitched very effectively against the Red Sox. In Game One, Boston knocks him out of the box after just two innings upon allowing five earned runs on four hits and a walk. In turn, the Red Sox acquire Nathan Eovaldi, a one-time Yankee, whom likewise has a reputation for pitching well against his former club. In Game Three at Yankee Stadium, Eovaldi pitches a gem, allowing just one earned run on five hits, no walks, with five strikeouts, through seven full innings pitched. In the seventh he pops the radar gun at 100-mph.
With another victory on Tuesday, the Red Sox clinch a trip to the ALCS, but not before making a complete mess of the visiting locker room at Yankee Stadium for a second time this season. If you're the Yankees, there's all the motivation you need.
Game Four features C.C. Sabathia versus Rick Porcello.
Sabathia last pitched twelve days ago against Tampa, in which he pitches five scoreless innings of one hit ball, with no walks and five strikeouts before being ejected. Sabathia is afforded a similar break coming out of the all-star break, when he goes two full weeks between starts. Upon his return, he allows two earned runs on six hits and two walks, with eight strikeouts against Kansas City. Over his last five starts, however, C.C. has allowed 13 earned runs over 21.2 innings pitched for a 5.51 ERA.
In Rick Porcello's last start against the Yankees on Aug. 3, he tosses a one-hit complete game victory at Yankee Stadium. Porcello's last appearance against the Yankees comes in relief, when he records two game critical outs on 15 pitches in the eighth inning of Game One at Fenway.
Should the Yankees win, another match-up between J.A. Happ and Chris Sale awaits in Game Five.
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