Journal Pioneer

Aces out: Sale, Kershaw chased early in Series opener

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Aces were out early in the World Series, where four-plus innings for starters is becoming the new norm.

The outings of the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw and Boston’s Chris Sale turned into short stories . Each failed to get an out in the fifth inning Tuesday night, just the fourth time both starting pitchers were chased that early in a Series opener and the first since 2004 - also at Fenway Park. They were long gone by the time Boston won 8-4 in what became a predictabl­e post-season battle of bullpens.

“I say it all the time, and I say it to my son, I’ve never seen an ugly win,” Sale explained in a packed Boston clubhouse. “Obviously the stat line isn’t the prettiest thing. It’s not exactly how you draw it up or dream about it, but we got a win, so I’m good to go.”

For a century, aces were baseball’s studs, grabbing the mound for Game 1 as if by birthright and not letting go easily. Think Bob Gibson 50 years ago, pitching a five-hit shutout for St. Louis against Detroit with 17 strikeouts and one walk. But no pitcher has thrown a complete game in the opener since Philadelph­ia’s Cliff Lee beat the New York Yankees in 2009. The last complete-game shutout in Game 1 was thrown by Oakland’s Dave Stewart against San Francisco in 1989, part of a tradition of opening gems that included complete-game shutouts for Boston by Luis Tiant in 1975 and Babe Ruth in 1918. Complete game shutouts have gone the way of flannel uniforms and spittoons, the sport transformi­ng at its most rapid pace since the live-ball era began nearly a century ago.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Clayton Kershaw
AP PHOTO Clayton Kershaw
 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Chris Sale
AP PHOTO Chris Sale

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