Dayton Daily News

MLB RED SOX WIN FOURTH TITLE IN 15 SEASONS

- By Ronald Blum

Chris Sale’s LOS ANGELES — final pitch for this Boston juggernaut triggered a celebratio­n on the Dodger Stadium infield, among thousands of fans who made their way to California and even outside

— Fenway Park back home.

The quest is complete. A team to remember from top to bottom. A season to savor from start to finish.

David Price proved his postseason mettle, Steve Pearce homered twice and Boston beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-1 on Sunday to finish a one-sided World Series in five games.

A tormented franchise during decades of despair before ending an 86-year championsh­ip drought in 2004, the Red Sox have become baseball’s team of the century with four titles in 15 seasons.

“Seeing all these grown men over there, just acting like kids, that’s what it’s all about,” Price said after pitching threehit ball into the eighth inning on short rest. “This is why I came to Boston.”

After losing on opening day, Alex Cora’s team romped to a 17-2 start and a club-record 108 wins, then went 11-3 in the postseason, dispatchin­g the 100-win New York Yankees and the 103-victory and defending champion Houston Astros in the playoffs. Cora, a player on Boston’s 2007 champions, became the first manager from Puerto Rico to win a title and just the fifth rookie skipper overall.

“I don’t know where we stand in history and all that,” said Dave Dombrowski, the club’s president of baseball operations. “If somebody would say you’re going to win 119 games and lose 57, we’d never, ever fathom that.”

Pearce hit a two-run homer on Clayton Kershaw’s sixth pitch. Solo homers by Mookie Betts in the sixth inning and J.D. Martinez in the seventh quieted the Los Angeles crowd. Pearce added a solo drive off Pedro Baez in the eighth, then was selected the Series MVP after the game.

“Best feeling in my life,” said Pearce, who was acquired in June from Toronto and had three homers and seven RBIs in the final 11 innings of the Series.

After losing to Houston in Game 7 last year by the same 5-1 score, the Dodgers became the first team ousted on its home field in consecutiv­e World Series since the New York Giants by the New York Yankees at the Polo Grounds in 1936 and ’37.

“Ran up against a very good ballclub — and just a little bit too much for us,” said manager Dave Roberts, who played for Boston’s 2004 champions.

Boston outscored the Dodgers 28-16 and had only a slightly better batting average at .222 to .180. But the Red Sox got timely hitting and won their overall ninth title, tying the Athletics for third-most behind the Yankees (27) and Cardinals (11).

All that stood between the Red Sox and a sweep was an 18-inning loss in Game 3, the longest World Series game ever. They trailed 4-0 in the seventh inning of Game 4 when Sale rose from the dugout bench for a fiery, profane, motivation­al rant, and his teammates woke up in time to rally for a 9-6 win.

Boston never trailed in Game 5.

The 33-year-old Price, a Cy Young Award winner in 2012, long pitched under an October shadow cast by his regular-season success. He had been 0-9 in 11 postseason starts before defeating Astros ace Justin Verlander in the clinching Game 5 of the AL Championsh­ip Series. The lefthander won his third straight start Sunday and became the first pitcher to beat Cy Young winners in the finale of an LCS and the World Series in the same year.

 ?? WALLY SKALIJ / LOS ANGELES TIMES SEAN M. HAFFEY / GETTY IMAGES ?? Series MVP Steve Pearce celebrates his second home run of Sunday’s game. Pearce had three homers and seven RBIs in the final two games. David Price pitched seven innings Sunday, allowing just three hits and one run while striking out five.
WALLY SKALIJ / LOS ANGELES TIMES SEAN M. HAFFEY / GETTY IMAGES Series MVP Steve Pearce celebrates his second home run of Sunday’s game. Pearce had three homers and seven RBIs in the final two games. David Price pitched seven innings Sunday, allowing just three hits and one run while striking out five.

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