Red Sox win ALDS 3-1
I - BOS 5; NYY 4
II - NYY 6; BOS 2
III - BOS 16; NYY 1
IV - BOS 4; NYY 3
- Date: Monday, Oct. 2, 1978.
- Setting: Late afternoon, Fenway Park, Boston.
- Condition: Yankees and Red Sox finish the season tied necessitating regular season game #163 in order to decide the A.L. East title. The winner moves on to the ALCS against the Kansas City Royals.
The Red Sox take an early lead on Carl Yastrzemski's second inning home off Ron Guidry. Jim Rice drives home a run with a hit in the sixth giving Boston a 2-0 lead. Mike Torrez pitches six scoreless innings, but with two outs in the seventh, he surrenders consecutive base hits to Chris Chambliss and Roy White. Into the batter's box steps shortstop Bucky Dent. He is 0 for 2 on the day with a fly to right and a pop-up to short. Dent takes Torrez' first offering for a ball, then fouls the second pitch off his left foot. The game is delayed as Dent receives attention from trainer Gene Monahan. Dent also switches bats, then finally steps back in. With the count at one ball and one strike, Mike Torrez delivers a fastball square over the plate ...
Here is Yankees WPIX announcer Bill White's call:
"Deep to left ... Yastrzemski will not get - It's a home run! A three run home run for Bucky Dent! And the Yankees now lead it 3-2! Bucky Dent has just hit his fifth home run of the year, into the screen! And look at that Yankees bench, led by Bob Lemon."
Catcher Thurman Munson shortly thereafter doubles home the Yankees fourth run of the inning. However, it is Reggie Jackson's eighth inning home run to straight away center field which proves most pivotal, as Yastrzemski and Fred Lynn help the Red Sox rally for two runs off Goose Gossage in the bottom half of the frame, but no more. Gossage closes out Boston in the ninth, and the Yankees clinch the A.L. East title. They go on to defeat the Kansas City Royals in the ALCS, then for a second successive World Series defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers.
That historic one-game playoff takes place forty years ago. Twenty-six years later the Yankees invite Bucky Dent to throw a ceremonial first pitch at Yankee Stadium during the 2004 ALCS against the Boston Red Sox. We all know what happens next. The Curse of the Bambino if finally and forever broken. Fourteen years later, the Yankees again invite Bucky Dent to throw out the first pitch prior to the start of Game Four of this year's ALDS.
I have a saying: Once is an occurrence; twice is a coincidence; three times is a trend.
Just saying ...
Now for the ALDS that was.
Dave Dombrowski is a highly regarded executive. He develops a reputation towards the latter part of his tenure with Detroit for spending like a drunken sailor and receives criticism for leaving the Tigers in a state of financial crisis. When in truth he operates according to the mission statement handed him by Mike Illich during the late great owner's latter years of life. But there's also a case to be made for Dombrowski's continuing fiscal folly with the Red Sox. Releasing Edgar Renteria ($$$) is merely one example that hardly scratches the surface. However, owner John Henry appears copacetic with the state of his economy, and his team.
Once the Red Sox are eliminated by the Astros in last season's ALDS, Dombrowski fires manager John Farrell with haste and immediately requests permission to speak with and ultimately interview Houston's bench coach Alex Cora while the Astros are still in the midst of their post-season run.
With regards to modern analytics, the Red Sox recognize its value and embrace baseball's newest evolutionary mutation with three arms. Like most managers these days, Alex Cora is handed reams of information. Dombrowski, however, leaves its application in Cora's hands to manage as he sees fit, or deems necessary.
Unlike Dombrowski who very early set his sights on Alex Cora, Brian Cashman informs Joe Girardi his contract will not be renewed, but then remains strangely idle. Meanwhile, other available, and (to varying degrees) desirable candidates begin finding employment elsewhere. Aaron Boone's name is presented to Brian Cashman as a late, unexpected, and obviously inexperienced candidate. But the two are far from being strangers. According to most reports Boone overwhelms the Yankees general manager and is hired on the spot. I would argue, though, Aaron Boone isn't signed until December - two months after the World Series ends - when the market for managers had already thinned considerably.
Unlike Alex Cora, Aaron Boone is beholden to a far more restrictive operating procedure. Brian Cashman is addicted to analytics, and has on numerous occasions appeared on sports radio making no bones about it: he wants his manager(s) adhering with strict compliance to information provided by the front office's expansive analytics department. For both Joe Girardi and Aaron Boone, deviation was/is not an option.
Despite a most disappointing outcome I still believe this is one of general manager Brian Cashman's finest seasons on record, if not his best. He put one dynasty to bed, and is in the process of potentially building another. He's done everything a fan base could ask for: revitalizing the farm system; graduating new major league talent and legitimate stars; making subtle and well received transactions; following through with off-season maneuvering; and procuring reinforcements by the trade-deadline. Then there are his boss' requirements. Cashman not only satisfies Hal Steinbrenner's desire for being under the salary tax threshold, but has the Yankees supremely positioned to spend big money again on free agency.
All that being said, the manner in which this team sets their on field priorities and go about the game of baseball - losing this year's ALDS included - fall on the general manager for what I believe is his flawed application of analytics driven baseball. Additionally, by parting ways with Joe Girardi and his ilk, Cashman shifts away (IMO) from demanding player accountability.
Cashman once mandated that Joe Girardi follow a script set forth by his Ivy League info squad, and presently demands Aaron Boone follows suit. Outside of Boone being more affable with players and the media, there is no philosophical difference to speak of from one manager to the next. There's no change with regard to in-game approach. In fact, what's new is actually old. I would argue Yankee analytics are just a 21st century cover of Earl Weaver's school of thought: reliance on strong pitching and three run home runs. Problem is, the Yankees in the ALDS got neither. Thus, in this results driven business Aaron Boone fails to elevate last year's band of overachievers to the next level. Despite a 100-win season, they effectively take one step backwards.
Aside from Masahiro Tanaka, the trio of J.A. Happ, Luis Severino, and C.C. Sabathia all struggle mightily. Boone, however, appears unprepared to negotiate three early exits. Thus his failure to act in a timely manner ultimately contributes rather considerably in all three Yankees losses. There's something to be said for all-hands-on-deck. In Monday's Game Three at Yankees Stadium, Mookie Betts hit Luis Severino's very first offering of the game 405 feet to straight away center. The bullpen should have began stirring right then. After all, the Yankees main strength in both quality and depth is their bullpen. Instead, Boone plays right into Alex Cora's hands.
Otherwise, a general lack of execution should be blamed on players. After all, Aaron Boone is just doing what he's told.
Alex Cora brings his bench coaching experience and a share of Houston's World Series winning sensibilities to Boston where one of his first acts is to let his new team know just how bad they've been, and exactly what they're going to do in order to change it. He inaugurates sweeping changes to the extent both Houston and Boston rank top two in most key statistical categories. Under Cora, the Red Sox win a franchise record 108 games. He stresses throughout each and every game to play aggressively. The ALDS proves no less differently. Many of his positional moves are in conflict with analytical directives. Not to mention he twice gambles with Rick Porcello and Chris Sale in relief. And there's the rub. Alex Cora abandons the book and goes for the kill. If Chris Sale blows Game Four, he loses him for a decisive Game Five. Rick Pocello is scheduled to pitch Game Three. Instead, he becomes one of the heroes of Game One. His relief appearance necessitates Nathan Eovaldi pitching Game Three, who winds up tossing a gem. And that's how Alex Cora circumvents his precarious bullpen bridge to Craig Kimbrel.
From bench coach and friends to being opponents and adversaries, Alex Cora now faces A.J.Hinch; Grasshopper versus Sensei.
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