Lodi News-Sentinel

IN SPORTS: RED SOX WIN WORLD SERIES GAME 1

- By Andy McCullough

BOSTON — For 163 games during the regular season and 11 more in October, the Los Angeles Dodgers could comfort themselves by knowing they possessed more talent than the other club on the field. No team holstered more firepower. No opposing roster stockpiled more depth. No clubhouse boasted a more effective blend of superstars and role players. When the standings suggested the Dodgers were bound for an early winter, the team steeled itself with self-confidence.

As the Dodgers sputtered through the summer, a budding juggernaut developed on the East Coast. The Boston Red Sox won 108 games this season, more than any team in 17 years, and picked up steam in the playoffs. Boston brushed aside a 100-win Yankees team and blitzed the defending champions from Houston to set up a date with the Dodgers in the World Series.

In the days leading up to Game 1, some Dodgers joked about how they would enjoy being treated like an underdog. That was before they absorbed the clout of their opponent in an 8-4 loss on Tuesday at Fenway Park. Boston met every Dodgers’ action with a more forceful reaction.

When the Dodgers bruised the ace of the Red Sox, Boston answered by taxing Clayton Kershaw for five runs. Boston pounced on every opening, burst through every sliver of space. When manager Dave Roberts inserted Alex Wood as a reliever in the seventh inning, Red Sox manager Alex Cora countered with pinchhitte­r Eduardo Nunez. The subsequent three-run homer from Nunez robbed the final two innings of any drama.

Little unfolded in the Dodgers’ favor on Tuesday. The pitcher’s duel between Kershaw and Red Sox ace Chris Sale never materializ­ed. Neither man could record an out in the fifth inning. Sale departed with one runner aboard. Kershaw permitted two before Roberts intervened. Sale allowed three runs.

Two of the runs charged to Kershaw were scored with reliever Ryan Madson on the mound. The Dodgers had designated Madson as the fireman of their bullpen, a veteran reliever with an elite fastball. Madson only fanned the flames on Tuesday, throwing a wild pitch, walking a batter and giving up an RBI single as the Red Sox pulled ahead in the fifth.

The men surroundin­g Kershaw did him few favors. A missed play in the first inning led to a two-run rally. Madson stumbled in the fifth. But the responsibi­lity for the loss still hung on his shoulders, even before Wood served up the game-deciding homer to Nunez.

Rain doused the diamond in the afternoon. The storm muddied the warning track and cancelled batting practice. The clouds parted by the evening, so the game could start on time. As the fans filtered into their seats, Kershaw and Sale warmed up about 20 yards away from each other in right field.

Sale had not pitched since Game 1 of the American League Championsh­ip Series, 10 days earlier. His fastball sat at 92.2 mph against the Astros, down from the 94.7 mph he averaged during the season. He was hospitaliz­ed for a stomach ailment in the aftermath, which he joked was caused by an infection from a belly-button ring.

Sale dealt with shoulder issues earlier in the season, but Roberts insisted the Dodgers could not hope to face a diminished ace. Roberts planned for the version of Sale who has decimated American League lineups since debuting in 2010.

“That’s our expectatio­n,” Roberts said. “But if we can get him out of the game early, that’s a good thing for us.”

Sale wiped out the first two batters he faced in a scoreless first inning. In the bottom of the frame, Kershaw learned how painful it can be to give the Red Sox an extra out. Boston outfielder Mookie Betts popped up Kershaw’s second pitch of the game. The baseball soared into foul territory past first base. David Freese twisted his way to find it, but misjudged the ball and let it drop.

Freese was not charged an error. Kershaw would soon be charged a run. In Game 5 of the last series, Kershaw stymied the Milwaukee Brewers by wielding his curveball. He tried an 0-2 curve to Betts, and saw it hit the dirt. He did not throw it again during the inning. The Red Sox aimed to avoid swinging at the pitch, forcing Kershaw to locate it for strikes.

On a 2-2 slider, Betts singled up the middle and stole second base. Red Sox outfielder Andrew Benintendi stroked an 89mph slider through the right side of the infield. Betts scored, and Benintendi took second when Yasiel Puig decided to throw home.

The extra 90 feet contribute­d to a second run. J.D. Martinez, the slugger who terrorized the Dodgers with Arizona last season, lined a slider up the middle. The ball nearly brained Benintendi, who avoided contact and sprinted home. The inning took 20 pitches.

Matt Kemp halved the deficit in the second. He fouled off a pair of 95-mph fastballs and held his swing on a slider which dipped just beneath the zone. On the eighth pitch of the at-bat, Kemp hammered a 94-mph fastball over The Green Monster. The Dodgers drove Sale’s pitch count up to 51 when the inning was over.

The hitters pecked at Sale with singles in the third. Justin Turner snuck a one-out hit through the right side. Freese whacked a 3-2 slider into left. Manny Machado tied the game with a grounder between the shortstop and third baseman for the first of his three RBI.

The Red Sox reclaimed the lead in the bottom of the inning. After a one-out single by Benintendi, first baseman Steve Pearce kept the inning alive by beating out a doubleplay ball. He set the table for Martinez, who smashed a knee-high slider into the center-field triangle. Enrique Hernandez chose to play the ball on a carom. The RBI double bounced off the base of the wall and Pearce scored to put Boston back in front.

Sale started the fifth inning with 86 pitches on his ledger. He would only throw five more, walking Brian Dozier to begin the inning. Boston manager Alex Cora would not let Sale face Turner for a third time. From the bullpen emerged right-handed reliever Matt Barnes.

Turner greeted Barnes with a single. After Barnes spiked a curveball for a wild pitch, Dozier scored on a groundout by Machado to tie the game once more. The deadlock did not last beyond the bottom of the inning.

 ??  ??
 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? The Boston Red Sox's Mookie Betts singles in the first inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during Game 1 of the World Series at Fenway Park in Boston on Tuesday.
ROBERT GAUTHIER/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The Boston Red Sox's Mookie Betts singles in the first inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during Game 1 of the World Series at Fenway Park in Boston on Tuesday.
 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? The Los Angeles Dodgers' Cody Bellinger flys out to end the seventh inning on Tuesday.
WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The Los Angeles Dodgers' Cody Bellinger flys out to end the seventh inning on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States