The Jerusalem Post

It wasn’t pretty, but Sox claw back into ALCS

- • By KEVIN MCNAMARA

BOSTON – Any way possible. By hook or by crook. Win and advance.

When you’re the Boston Red Sox and you need to win the biggest game of your season, you don’t ask any questions. You take a victory, pack your bags and head to Houston.

That’s what the Sox did late Sunday after somehow fighting, scratching and clawing their way to a vital 7-5 win over the Houston Astros at Fenway Park. The win evened the American League Championsh­ip Series at a game apiece with the next three on deck in Texas.

The Sox should consider themselves fortunate to be even in a series that not only matches the two best teams in the American League, but perhaps all of baseball. Alex Cora’s crew hasn’t come close to playing a complete game, but this may just be a series where they need to keep trading body blows to match the world champion Astros.

Can you really win without an ace on your pitching staff?

Can you really win if you need to keep inserting a starting pitcher into every high-leverage eighth inning?

Can you really win if you need to score huge runs against a big-time relief corps without putting the baseball in play?

Can you really win with the power bat of J.D. Martinez not chipping in?

The Sox have checked these boxes thus far, and they are more than alive. That’s huge because no team has lost the first two games at home and won a best-of-seven LCS.

It will be tough – maybe impossible – to win this series if either of the Red Sox top two starters can’t lead the wagon through five innings. That’s what happened again in Game 2 as Price followed Game 1 starter Chris Sale to the mound for Boston. Sale lasted only four innings in the ALCS opener that the Sox eventually lost, 7-2.

That placed all sorts of pressure on the shoulders of Price, the team’s $30-million hurler who had failed to show up even once under the bright playoff lights. Price wasn’t good in this game, either, but he was admittedly operating with a pretty low bar of expectatio­ns.

The Sox will need to manufactur­e runs against a team like the Astros, but no run was more creative that the team’s sixth in the seventh. Mookie Betts, who played like an MVP, led off with a walk, moved to second on a wild pitch, to third on a passed ball and then raced home on yet another passed ball that catcher Martin Maldonado couldn’t handle.

“He went around the bases and they didn’t put the ball in play,” Houston manager A.J. Hinch said with a shake of his head. “Those are tough in this type of series, these types of games.”

These types of games may just keep coming down to some oddball plays, a big play here, a clutch hit there. Starting pitchers may not stick around long, sluggers may not hit very much. The final innings, the final outs, will be ones to sweat over.

“I think in this series the bullpens are going to be talked about a lot,” Hinch said. “I think in playoff baseball there’s a lot of innings and a lot of big outs that you have to get. So buckle up.” Buckle up indeed. (The

Providence Journal, R.I./TNS)

 ?? (Bob DeChiara-USA TODAY Sports) ?? BOSTON RED SOX right fielder Mookie Betts hits an RBI double in the eighth inning on Sunday night.
(Bob DeChiara-USA TODAY Sports) BOSTON RED SOX right fielder Mookie Betts hits an RBI double in the eighth inning on Sunday night.
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