The Welland Tribune

Sweet, sweet retributio­n for former Blue Jay Price

- TYLER KEPNER

LOS ANGELES — Tim Corbin spent Sunday afternoon coaching high school prospects at a camp in Nashville, Tenn. Corbin is the head coach at Vanderbilt and he told the players about the day David Price lost the final game of his college baseball career.

This was in 2007 and Price was lined up to be the first overall pick in the draft later that week. Vanderbilt held the No. 1 national ranking and was seeking its first-ever trip to the College World Series. Price was undefeated and had pitched two days earlier, but he offered to work in relief in the regional final against Michigan.

Price allowed a home run, spoiling Vanderbilt’s hopes for a title. But in Corbin’s retelling, it is not the result that mattered. It was Price’s desire to take the ball for his teammates.

“I told them the story in terms of what this guy was willing to do and why he was willing to do it,” Corbin said by phone Sunday from a sports bar in Nashville, as he watched Price pitch the Boston Red Sox past the

Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-1, to clinch the World Series in Game 5.

“It was all predicated on team. I talked about how, when you buy in to the notion of a greater union and you buy in to the notion of team, there are no limits to what you’ll do. That’s how David was wired as a kid and that’s how he was wired today.”

A year after that college letdown, Price was pitching in the World Series as a rookie with the Tampa Bay Rays. Yet it took him a decade to return.

In between, Price did almost everything a pitcher could want to do. He won a Cy Young Award. He made five All-Star teams. He led his league, at various times, in victories, earned run average, innings and strikeouts. He helped three more franchises reach the post-season — the Detroit Tigers, the Toronto Blue Jays and the Red Sox, who signed him to a seven-year, $217-million contract in December 2015.

All that was missing was a championsh­ip and the reputation for clutch pitching that would go with it. In his first 10 post-season starts, Price was 0-9 with a 6.03 ERA, capped by a miserable division series outing against the Yankees on Oct. 6.

“I give Alex Cora a heck of a lot of credit,” said Jack Morris, the Hall of Fame starter, who covered the World Series for MLB.com. “There’s a lot of managers who would have put him out in the bullpen after that first round and left him there. But he said, ‘No, we need you,’ and he went out there and did it.”

Price now stands with Morris — who won twice in the World Series in 1984 and ’91 — in the pantheon of pitchers who have owned the brightest stage. Price was 2-0 with a 1.98 ERA against the Dodgers, beating them in Game 2, collecting two outs in relief in Game 3 and then beating them again with seven dazzling innings in Game 5.

“He’s got it in here,” said Red Sox starter Rick Porcello, patting his chest. “He’s got a big heart. That was as good as it gets. I’m speechless. That was an absolutely stunning performanc­e.”

Price assumed Chris Sale would start Game 5 until Cora told him otherwise on the field after Game 4. Price quickly went into his pre-start shell, eating his postgame meal alone in the travelling secretary’s office, listening to rap and hip-hop through his headphones. One selection, Price said, was “The Flute Song,” by Russ. “People keep talking, I just keep winning,” the chorus goes, continuing after an expletive, “They talkin’ reckless; I don’t believe ’em.”

The lyrics fit a pitcher who knew there was only one way to escape the question that greeted him in Boston and had never ceased: Why did he pitch so poorly under pressure? Price’s simple stock answer — “If you don’t like it, pitch better” — made for a good sound bite, but belied his frustratio­n with the doubters.

Price’s first two Octobers with the Red Sox ended with eliminatio­n in the division series. A troublesom­e elbow limited him to relief work last fall against Houston, but Boston pitching coach Dana LeVangie noticed that Price had thrived in the bullpen. LeVangie mentioned it to Cora soon after the Red Sox made him manager.

“David loves to be ready to compete on a daily basis,” Cora said, repeating what LeVangie told him. “He enjoys being available and he was available the whole time — the whole time — from the division series to the championsh­ip series to the World Series. There was a text, ‘I’m ready for tomorrow. Count on me. Use me.’”

Price said he would have started every post-season game if

Cora had asked. He lasted into the eighth inning on Sunday, deeper than any Red Sox starter had gone all post-season. He felt strong, he said, acknowledg­ing only one painful toss — when he heaved his championsh­ip cap over the tall netting behind the dugout, where visiting Red Sox fans had chanted his name.

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GETTY IMAGES ?? Red Sox pitcher David Price celebrates with the World Series trophy.
HARRY HOW GETTY IMAGES Red Sox pitcher David Price celebrates with the World Series trophy.

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