JKurz1
Banned
Bulldog_10 said:Oh, I thought you asked when the last time we won one was. If we're talking like that...when was the last time you were in the playoffs?
Bro - we went in '00 and have been rebuilding since.....guess that's why we have a payroll of a quarter of what the SOx has and it still hasn't gotten them shiiiiitttt..........here's what I recall from 2000 forward...............LOL
SOX
2000 87-74, 2nd place in the AL East, 2-1/2 games back of the New York Yankees
June 19, 2000: The Yankees beat the Red Sox 22-1, handing them their most-lopsided home loss ever. New York scored sixteen runs in the final two innings of the game.
June 19, 2000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
New York Yankees 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 9 7 -- 22 19 1
Boston Red Sox 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 -- 1 6 2
July 15, 2000: The player's families (including Carl Everett's wife and baby boy) were in the stands for "Family Day" at Fenway. Everett was ejected from the game for a profanity-laced tirade that resulted in his bumping home plate umpire Ron Kulpa twice. Everett (who blamed the media) was suspended for ten games. Earlier in the season, Everett went into a tirade and demanded that reporter Dan Shaughnessy leave the clubhouse after Shaughnessy reported that Jeff Frye and Everett had an "animated discussion". Later in the season, Jim Rice had to restrain Everett after he threatened teammate Darren Lewis, who had questioned him about not arriving early to get treatment for injuries.
September 29, 2000: A one-run extra-inning loss against Toronto on September 14 started a Yankee losing streak where they dropped twelve out of fifteen games. New York's lock on the AL East crown was at risk. The Sox needed a sweep of their final series versus (last place) Tampa Bay in order to have a chance at forcing a one-game tiebreaker for the Division Title. Boston lost the first game 8-6, permitting the Yankees to back into the postseason. New York went on to win the World Series (their third in a row, fourth out of five, and twenty-sixth overall).
December 11, 2000: The Boston Red Sox signed Manny Ramirez to a contract worth $20 million per year, surpassing the prior record of $17 million (earned by Carlos Delgado).
2001 82-79, 2nd place in the AL East, 13-1/2 games back of the New York Yankees
May 23, 2001: Yankee SS Derek Jeter had the only five-hit game of his career, as New York beat Boston, 7-3.
May 30, 2001: Boston's Pedro Martinez beat the Yankees for the first time in over a year (since May 28, 2000 Martinez faced the Yanks five times and Boston lost all five games). The following day Pedro scoffed at "The Curse", telling reporters "Wake up the Bambino and let me face him -- I'll drill him in the %#$." At the time Pedro was 7-1 with a 1.44 ERA. After his challenge, he managed only seven more starts during the season (without a win) due to rotator cuff trouble. It was the first time that Martinez was winless in seven straight starts since the first seven of his major league career; during this time he went 0-2 with a 4.54 ERA. The Red Sox lost their seven remaining games in 2001 against the Yankees after Martinez's comment.
June 16, 2001: The Atlanta Braves shut out the Boston Red Sox, 8-0. It represented the 1000th time that the Red Sox were shut out in their history.
July 22, 2001: As the Red Sox visited Chicago, Magglio Ordonez and Ray Durham each stole two bases. White Sox C Mark Johnson had one of his two SB of the entire season, and Herb Perry had one of his two SB of the season. Aaron Rowand added another. The seven swipes were all off of Red Sox C Scott Hatteberg. No White Sox runners were caught stealing during the 13-8 Chicago victory.
August 13, 2001: After hitting a home run, Carl Everett grabbed his crotch as he spit at opposing pitcher Jamie Moyer. Major League Baseball fined Everett for "inappropriate on-field conduct." Prior to the start of the regular season, Everett had been fined over $97,000 by the Red Sox and suspended for one exhibition game. Later, in September, he was fined and suspended by the team after berating manager Joe Kerrigan, calling him a drunk and a racist.
August 16, 2001: On the 53rd anniversary of Babe Ruth's passing, Boston terminated Jimy Williams, and named pitching coach Joe Kerrigan manager. The move was considered questionable for three reasons; historically pitching coaches have not been successful at managing major league teams, Kerrigan had never managed a team at any level, and at the time, Williams had the Red Sox in playoff contention (five games back in the East, three behind Oakland for the wildcard).
In response to player complaints about Boston's ever-changing lineup and batting order, Kerrigan promised a "stable lineup" during his introductory press conference. In his first twenty-four games as manager, he used twenty-four different batting orders (and 42 different orders in his 43 games as manager). His 17-26 record is one of the ten worst in the history of the franchise.
September 2, 2001: New York's Mike Mussina took a perfect game into the bottom of the ninth at Fenway, but had to settle for a one-hit shutout. It was the finale of a three game sweep, and the first time in major league history that a team swept a series despite not scoring in the first seven innings of any game. The sweep was the second of four consecutive against Boston; Cleveland swept Boston between August 28 and 30, New York swept between August 31 and September 2, The Indians swept again on September 4-6, and that was followed by another three-game sweep in New York.
September 7, 2001: Mariano Rivera grabbed his 45th save of the season (enroute to a total of 50) as New York beat Boston, 3-2, at Yankee Stadium.
The 2001 Red Sox had a .286 record in September. They did not have a pitcher who won more than thirteen games or who was among the top-thirty ERA leaders. However, four ex-Red Sox were on the top-30 list (including three 20-game winners); Curt Schilling (2.98 ERA, 22-6), Jamie Moyer (3.43, 20-6), Roger Clemens (3.52, 20-3), and Aaron Sele (3.60, 15-5). The 2001 Red Sox stole an AL-low 46 bases, while allowing the most in the majors (223; 68 more than second place Baltimore). Both Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki (56 SB) and Detroit's Roger Cedeno (55) individually had more stolen bases than the entire Red Sox team. Boston batters led the AL with 1131 strikeouts.
December 13, 2001: Boston unloaded Carl Everett by trading him to the Texas Rangers. In return they received starting pitcher Darren Oliver. Oliver's ERA over the prior two seasons was 6.60. His last winning season was 1997, when he went 13-12. Oliver was released at the end of June after he failed to win a game over a seven-week span. After Everett fully recovered from arthroscopic knee surgery, he became the Ranger's full-time leftfielder. He represented Texas in the 2003 All-Star Game.
2002 93-69, 2nd place in the AL East, 10-1/2 games back of the New York Yankees
February 27, 2002: Ownership of the Red Sox was transferred from the Yawkey Trust to a group led by ex-Florida Marlins owner John Henry. GM Dan Duquette was fired the next day. Tom Yawkey, his wife, or their trust had owned the team for 69 years. During that span, the Red Sox went to four World Series, losing all four in game seven. Nobody has ever owned a major league baseball team for a longer period of time without winning a championship.
May 26, 2002: New York had six home runs at Fenway (including two by 2B Alfonso Soriano) during a Yankee 14-5 victory.
July 16, 2002: Detroit's Damion Easley tied the major league record when he was hit by three Red Sox pitches on May 31, 1999. It happened again on July 16, 2002 when he was hit twice by Boston's John Burkett and once by Willie Banks.
July 20-21, 2002: On July 20, Boston rallied to take an 8-6 lead in the eighth inning at Yankee Stadium. New York tied the game in the bottom of the inning. The Yankees had the bases loaded with one out in the eleventh with the game still tied at eight; Mike Stanley (managing for Grady Little, who was ejected) left the infield at normal depth instead of bringing them in. Robin Ventura's grounder up the middle drove Alfonso Soriano home as the infield was too far back to make a play at the plate -- or to try for a double play. On the next day, the Red Sox again rallied from behind, taking an 8-7 lead in the seventh inning. After getting the final two outs of the eighth, Boston's closer, Ugueth Urbina, took the mound in the bottom of the ninth -- still holding the one-run lead. With the Red Sox infield in an extreme shift (playing three infielders between first and second), Jason Giambi led off with a check-swing single to the third-base side. Enrique Wilson, running for Giambi, scored the tying run when Trot Nixon let a Bernie Williams single to roll under his glove in right. Boston intentionally walked the next two batters, loading the bases with no outs. Urbina walked Jorge Posada, forcing Williams home from third. The Yankees won their second game by a score of 9-8 in their final at bat.
August 1, 2002: John Burkett started the game in Texas for the Sox. He gave up eight earned runs on six hits and two hit-batsmen in 1-1/3 innings pitched. He was relieved by Frankie Castillo, who gave up ten earned runs on eleven hits (including four homers) and four walks over 3-2/3 innings. After five innings, the Rangers had an 18-1 lead. The game ended in a 19-7 Texas victory.
August 27-28, 2002: The Yankees came to Fenway for a two game series. David Wells pitched eight scoreless innings as New York blanked Boston 6-0 in the first game. On the following day, Mike Mussina pitched a three-hit complete game shut out, winning 7-0. It was the first time since 1943 that the Yankees shutout the Red Sox in consecutive games at Fenway.
September 3, 2002: Roger Clemens struck out ten Red Sox batters in 7-1/3 innings, notching his 100th win since leaving Boston.
September 7-8, 2002: The drug-themed song "I Get High", by Styles, was played before Manny Ramirez's plate appearances on September 7. Ramirez took an unusually long amount of time before his first at-bat on September 8. Fifty-four seconds into the song, the word m$therf&*ker blared over Fenway's loudspeakers and the music was shut off. Afterwards, Red Sox spokesperson Charles Steinberg said there were no plans to stop letting players choose their own music.
Boston starting the season by winning forty games and losing only seventeen (.702 through June 6). In their final 105 games, they went 53-52. The Red Sox were the first team in baseball to reach 40 wins in 2002, the fourth to reach 50, the eighth to 70, and the ninth team to reach 90 wins. Nomar Garciaparra led all shortstops in the American League with 25 errors, Shea Hillebrand was tied for the most in the majors at thirdbase with 23.
With player salaries topping $108 million, the Red Sox had the second highest payroll in baseball for the second consecutive year.
November 25, 2002: The Red Sox named Theo Epstein general manager. At age 28, he became the youngest GM in major league history. His first move was to claim Ryan Rupe off of waivers two days later. Boston OF Trot Nixon had thrown his bat at Rupe on May 5, earning him a four game suspension. Rupe did not make the team. It was reported that Epstein became violent after failing to sign two free agents in December. He reportedly broke a window and a door in his Nicaraguan hotel after Jose Contreras signed with the Yankees. It was also reported that Epstein broke a chair during the winter meetings after realizing Edgardo Alfonzo had chosen the Giants over the Red Sox.
2003 95-67, AL Wildcard, lost to the New York Yankees in the ALCS
July 20, 2003: Jeff Bagwell hit his 400th career home run. He was still playing for the Houston Astros, to whom the Red Sox traded Bagwell in 1990 for Larry Andersen.
August 31, 2003: Roger Clemens made his final regular season Fenway Park appearance. Clemens threw 6-2/3 innings of six hit, four run ball -- at one point retiring eleven of twelve Red Sox hitters. The game ended 8-4 when Nomar Garciaparra struck out with the bases loaded. Roger Clemens won his 100th game at Fenway Park, making him the pitcher with the best record ever at the Fens (100-55). Manny Ramirez did not play in the three game series due to a severe sore throat, although he was seen out at the Ritz-Carlton lounge with Enrique Wilson.
With 95 wins and 67 losses, Boston had their best record since going to the World Series in 1986. 2003 marked the sixth year in a row that the Yankees took the AL East, while the Red Sox came in second. Boston won the wildcard, and played in their first postseason in four years.
October 11, 2003: The Boston Red Sox came back from a two-game to none deficit against the Oakland Athletics to advance on to the American League Championship Series. They split their first two at Yankee Stadium and the series moved to Fenway tied at one game apiece.
Boston took a 2-0 lead in the first inning of game three with three hits off of Roger Clemens. Jorge Posada scored on a Karim Garcia single in the second, and Yankee Shortstop Derek Jeter tied the game with a solo homer over the Green Monster in the third. In the top of the fourth, with the game still tied at two, the Yankees had runners on first and second. Hideki Matsui's ground rule double gave New York a 3-2 lead. With first base open, Pedro Martinez hit Karim Garcia with his next pitch. Nick Johnson scored when Alfonso Soriano hit into a double play and Garcia slid hard into secondbaseman Todd Walker. Both teams came out of their dugouts as the two players started shoving. While standing well behind his teammates, Martinez pointed at his head taunting New York's Jorge Posada, but did not enter the fray.
In the bottom of the fourth inning, Roger Clemens threw a 1-2 pitch to Manny Ramirez that was high, but clearly over the plate. Ramirez dove out of the way before the ball reached home plate; both dugouts emptied. In the melee Martinez grabbed 72-year-old Don Zimmer by the head and slammed him to the ground after Zimmer charged towards him. Once play resumed, Ramirez struck out on the next pitch. Boston later scored a run in the seventh to bring the game back to within one. Yankees closer Mariano Rivera pitched scoreless eighth and ninth innings; New York won the game 4-3. Roger Clemens got the win in his final appearance at Fenway Park. Don Zimmer was taken from the park by ambulance after the game.
October 14, 2003: After Boston tied the ALCS at two games each, New York's David Wells pitched seven innings, giving up four hits and one run. He handed over the game to Mariano Rivera, who got his second save of the 2003 ALCS as the Yankees beat the Red Sox, 4-2. New York took a three game to two lead in the best-of-seven series. Wells is one of only five lefties to ever beat the Red Sox at Fenway in the postseason (joining Rube Marquard, 1912 Giants World Series game 3; Hippo Vaughn, 1918 Cubs World Series game 5; Bob Ojeda, 1986 Mets World Series game 3; and Andy Pettite, 1999 Yankees ALCS game 4).
October 16, 2003: After rallying to come back from a two-run deficit in game six, winning 9-6, the Red Sox painted the World Series logo on the field at Fenway Park. They took an early lead in the final, deciding, game of the ALCS. Boston got four runs off of an ineffective Roger Clemens before Mike Mussina took over with runners on first and third with none out in fourth. Mussina got out of the jam, and pitched a total of three scoreless innings in the first relief appearance of his career. The Yankees chipped away, scoring one run in the fifth, and one in the seventh -- both on Jason Giambi home runs.
New York's David Wells came in to the game in the top of the eighth and gave up a homer to David Ortiz on his first pitch. Boston took a 5-2 lead into the bottom of the inning. Pedro Martinez's pitch count was in triple-digits after a shaky seventh, Boston's bullpen had been doing an outstanding job during the entire postseason, and two relievers were ready in the pen. It appeared that Pedro would not be pitching the eighth. The early edition of the New York Post already included an editorial chiding the Yankees for being unable to close out the series. Grady Little left Martinez in the game. Pedro got Nick Johnson to pop out and Boston was five outs away from beating their archrivals to advance to the World Series.
Derek Jeter doubled to deep right. Little left Martinez in the game to face Bernie Williams, who brought Jeter home with a single to center. New York's best two clutch hitters were due up next. As Grady Little walked to the mound, it seemed that the righthanded Martinez was once again done for the night; lefthanded hitting Hideki Matsui was due up at the plate -- representing the tying run. Matsui was in the top-fifteen in the league in hits, RBIs, and doubles. But Little left Martinez in the game to face Matsui, whose ground rule double brought Bernie Williams around to third. Then, Little left Martinez in to face Jorge Posada (top six in the league in walks and on-base-percentage, 101 regular season RBIs, 30 regular season home runs, .345 season average versus Boston). Posada's two-run double tied it at five.
After Martinez was finally removed from the game and Jason Giambi was retired by Alan Embree, Ruben Serria reached first on an intentional walk. He was replaced by pinchrunner Aaron Boone, who failed to scored. Yankees closer Mariano Rivera came in to pitch the top of the ninth of the tie ballgame. Jason Varitek hit a one-out single, and was replaced by Damian Jackson who moved to second on a Johnny Damon grounder. Todd Walker lined out to end the inning. New York could not get a runner on base in the ninth against Mike Timlin.
David Ortiz hit a two-out double off of Rivera in the top of the tenth. Little replaced the slow-footed Ortiz with Gabe Kapler; Boston no longer had Ortiz or Varitek in the lineup. The next batter, Kevin "Cowboy Up" Millar, popped out to end the Sox inning. Knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, who already had two wins in the '03 ALCS, had a 1-2-3 tenth inning. Rivera stayed in, retiring three straight Boston batters in the top of the eleventh. Aaron Boone (who had been batting .161, and had managed only one RBI, in the postseason) hit Tim Wakefield's first pitch of the eleventh inning into the leftfield stands to win the game, 6-5. The following morning a large blue tarp, surrounded by yellow warning tape, covered the freshly painted World Series logo on the Fenway Park grass.
2003 ALCS Game Seven
October 16, 2003 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 R H E
Boston Red Sox 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 5 11 0
New York Yankees 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 3 0 0 1 6 11 1
Mariano Rivera, who had two saves and a win, was named MVP. In the two American League Championship Series in which New York played Boston (1999 and 2003), Rivera pitched a total of 12-2/3 innings. He gave up ten hits, walked none, struck out nine, and allowed just one earned run.
AL Batting Champion Bill Mueller hit .222 in the ALCS, striking out seven times. In twelve postseason games, he never drove in a run, and scored only once. Nomar Garciaparra was second in the league in runs scored during the regular season, but only scored twice in the series. He came to bat with runners on base twelve times against the Yankees, and never had a hit in those twelve at-bats. With runners in scoring position during the 2003 postseason, Garciaparra, Jason Varitek, and Mueller all batted .000. The Red Sox record in the six AL Championship Series in which they have played is 11-19 (.367).
2003 AL Championship Series
G W-L IP H ER SV BB SO ERA
Mariano Rivera (NYY) 4 1-0 8 5 1 2 0 6 1.13
Pedro Martinez (BOS) 2 0-1 14 16 9 0 2 14 5.65
Derek Lowe (BOS) 2 0-2 14 14 10 0 7 5 6.43
G AB R H HR RBI SO BA SLG
Nomar Garciaparra (BOS) 7 29 2 7 0 1 8 .241 .310
Bill Meuller (BOS) 7 27 1 6 0 0 7 .222 .296
Shortly after the postseason, the Red Sox declined to pick up Grady Little's 2004 option and announced their annual ticket price hike. The average cost of a ticket to see a game at Fenway in 2004 will be $44.37. The cost to take a family of four to a Sox game at Fenway is $263, which is $70 more than the second place Chicago Cubs. Fenway is the most expensive venue in baseball for the sixth straight year, and 2004 is the ninth consecutive year that the Red Sox have raised prices.
2004
The Red Sox entered '04 with a $125 million payroll; second only to the Yankees, and approximately twenty percent higher than any other team besides New York. Boston was the early favorite to win the Series. They have four All-Stars eligible for free agency after this season; Pedro Martinez, Derek Lowe, Nomar Garciaparra, and Jason Varitek. Even if the team is able to shed Manny Ramirez's contract, it is unlikely they will be able to sign all four. Additionally, starting DH David Ortiz, starting 2B Pokey Reese, and RP Scott Williamson are also eligible for free agency. This, coupled with their lack of depth in the minors, paints a bleek pickture for beyond this year, placing pressure on the 2004 Red Sox to get it done now.
February 16, 2004: Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig approved the trade of New York's Alfonso Soriano, and a player to be named later (minor leaguer Joaquin Arias), to the Texas Rangers for reigning American League MVP Alex Rodriguez. The Red Sox had courted Rodriguez for the better part of the off season. In the end, they needed to absorb another $2 million dollars annually of A-Rod's contract in order to come to terms that would satisfy the player, the league, and the Players Association. The talks between the Rangers and the Red Sox spent little time in private, with both sides issuing statements and deadlines through the press. When the player's union first rejected the proposed restructuring of Rodriguez's contract, Red Sox President/CEO Larry Lucchino lashed out at the union and their Associate General Counsel Gene Orza. That aliented Orza, and placed A-Rod in a difficult position among his fellow union-members. Those two items made a compromise difficult. During their negotiations, the Sox made it known that they were planning to trade their "franchise player," Nomar Garciaparra, to Chicago.
Rodriguez offered to play third for the Yankees, allowing their captain, Derek Jeter, to remain at shortstop. Rodriguez will be wearing number 13 for the Yankees, since the number three is retired in honor of Babe Ruth. The trade for Rodriguez has been called the biggest move in baseball since New York purchased Ruth from the Red Sox prior to the 1920 season. The need for a thirdbaseman in New York arose when Aaron Boone injured his knee in a basketball game and appeared to be out for the season. Boone hit a bottom of the eleventh homerun to beat the Red Sox in game seven of the 2003 ALCS.