Tag: Dustin Pedroia

Dustin Pedroia Pushes Papi Out of Slump

Laser show.

Turns out Dustin Pedroia was right. He was one of the last remaining riders on the David Ortiz Bandwagon just a few weeks ago when he promised a mob of local reporters that Ortiz would be fine, referring to his own tumultuous start as a rookie three years ago.

His slump was followed by a campaign that earned him Rookie of the Year honors and prompted him to term his propensity for whistling line drives a “laser show.”

And as we sit here several weeks later, it turns out Pedroia was right. Ortiz has since emerged from his slump and has been perhaps the most potent bat in the lineup, save for Kevin Youkilis, over the last week to 10 days.

Nobody’s intimating that Pedroia divined anything here. Ortiz has done all the hard work himself, proving a legion of media and fans alike wrong in the process. Imagine if, as the overreacting Boston press and rabid fanbase had begged, the Red Sox cut Ortiz?

I don’t want to think about it.

Ortiz has worked his average back to well over .200 and has already smoked seven home runs. His slump to start last season was almost twice as long, and yet this one felt more painful given the pouncing of the press on what many believed to be Big Papi’s carcass.

But the story here goes beyond Ortiz and to whom it was that came out and defended him.

In the first three seasons of his career, Dustin Pedroia was a Rookie of the Year, an MVP, and one of the toughest outs in baseball.

And now he’s the embodiment of a leader.

This is a Red Sox team starved for a vocal presence in the clubhouse to take command. The 2004-era team almost had too many such personalities, with the likes of Schilling, Millar, and Damon fighting for the limelight.

But this season’s team is a library to that team’s sports bar. Pedroia has stepped up and established himself as the unquestioned leader. He’s steady on the field, sturdy in character, and stoic in the face of adversity.

He also happens to have a motor that would make Kevin Garnett salivate.

And now he’s the go-to guy. When the team was scuffling mightily earlier this year, it was Pedroia calling everyone out and demanding better play. And all he did that night was snag a line drive, crawl to tag out a runner, and flip to first from his backside for a double play.

He spoke. Then he backed it up.

And then he came to Ortiz’s defense when everyone else in the locker room was treating the slump like the plague and avoiding any comment at all costs. Instead of shying away, Pedroia stood up, defended his teammate, and begged everyone to move on.

Two weeks later, with Ortiz delivering a laser show, indeed, it’s only fair to give credit to the new little big man in the Red Sox clubhouse.

Whether or not he can will this team back into the pennant race remains to be seen. That’s a tall order for anyone, let alone a 5’8″ second baseman. But he’s made it clear that if anyone is going to do it, it will be him.

He already delivered on one promise this season. Who is to say he can’t deliver on another?

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Boston Red Sox Still in the Race: No Need To Give Up Yet

Alright, I’m finally ready to talk some baseball.

Not that I haven’t been paying attention, quite the opposite actually. Because of my line of work, I find myself watching more baseball than ever before—on Mondays and Thursdays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, not to mention the nationally televised games on Saturday and Sunday.

I see more of Buster Olney and John Kruk then I do of my own family. I even hear Tim McCarver and Joe Morgan’s voices in my dreams, which as you might guess, very quickly become nightmares.

But the real reason I haven’t talked much baseball is that I haven’t had a really good feel for my team, the Boston Red Sox.

Okay, I take that back, I do have a good feel for the Red Sox. And to quote the infamous words of former Arizona Cardinals football coach Denny Grenn, “They are who we thought they were.” To me, that was never a playoff team.

(This is just PART of Aaron’s take on the Boston Red Sox. To read this article in its ENTIRETY, please visit him at www.aarontorres-sports.com)

In my season opening podcast with my buddy Tom Finn , I made the case that I thought the Yankees would win the AL East and Tampa Bay, the wild card. When it came to the Red Sox, “pitching and defense,” was a cute mantra, with many Boston fans claiming it to be the “Moneyball,” of 2010.

Except as I contended, that’s all well and good, except, umm, you still need to score runs to win in the regular season. You need to score when Jon Lester or John Lackey has a bad outing, or when the bullpen ruins a starters good one. You can’t expect to win every game 3-1 or 2-0 or 2-1, that just isn’t reality over a 162-game season.

And although the Red Sox are scoring a reasonable amount of runs (5.21 per game), there never seems to be a rhyme or reason, or any consistency to when they’ll come. The Sox might get nine today, but then score four runs total the next three nights.

They’ll follow it up with 12 against some hopeless schmuck from Baltimore, and then go cold the following night. Watching the Red Sox, their offense really is a case of there being, “lies, damn lies, and statistics.”

It was with that semi-pessimistic (but ultimately realistic) outlook, that I headed to Fenway Park on Sunday night for the Sox-Yankees tilt. Truthfully, I was expecting the worst. And when I say the worst, I’m not just talking about the play on the field, but everything off of it too.

I live an hour and change from Boston, but in this technological world we live, get as much information as anyone actually living on Yawkey Way. The early returns weren’t so good.

From what my friends were telling me, things weren’t pretty in Boston when it came to the Red Sox.

I heard that fans and the media were had turned on certain under-performing players (cough…David Ortiz…cough), and were relentless in their hounding of manager Terry Francona; that some people were already giving up; that tickets to Sox games—arguably the toughest non-NFL ticket in professional sports—were flooding the market, the way you might find a bunch of available copies of Catcher in the Rye at a used book store.

It was with this trepidation that I headed up to Boston Sunday night. For the first time in recent memory, I wasn’t sure to expect.

After all that anxiousness, I’ve got to be honest. I was surprised by what I found. In a good way…

(To read the REMAINDER of Aaron’s article, including his take on Sunday’s big victory over the Yankees, please click here , or visit him at www.aarontorres-sports.com .

Also, for his thoughts on all things sports, make sure to follow him on Twitter @Aaron_Torres )

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Turning Two: The Top MLB Middle Infielder Combinations

Whitaker and Trammell. Morgan and Concepcion. Tinker and Evers. Maz and Groat.

So often, the 2B and SS are linked together on great teams. Why should they not be? What part of baseball more encompasses teamwork than the ability to turn a double play?

While top defensive pairings are not exactly a dime a dozen, the majors definitely have their fair share of talent at the pivot. Let’s take a closer look at the best.

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