Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Roberts, Cora lead teams to brink of title

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

BOSTON - One man forever changed a franchise’s legacy, and the other helped soothe a country’s pain.

Together, Dave Roberts and Alex Cora, two friends and former teammates who dealt with unique challenges this season, are about to make baseball history.

They will be the first minority managers to face off in a World Series, along with being the first managers to have played for both teams, when the Red Sox host the Dodgers in Game 1 at Fenway Park.

“It’s symbolic, isn’t it?” said Cora, 43, the Red Sox’s first minority manager as a native of Puerto Rico, who’s vying to join Ozzie Guillen of the White Sox as the only Latino manager to win a World Series. “I know what it means for us. I know what it means to my colleagues who are minorities. I’m very proud that he’s here in the World Series.

“And I’m proud representi­ng not only all the Puerto Ricans that live in the island, but Puerto Ricans all around the world. We know what happened last year. It was a tough one. And (Hurricane) Maria kicked our ass, you know. As a country, we’ve done an outstandin­g job fighting.”

Roberts, 46, the son of an AfricanAme­rican father and a Japanese mother and the Dodgers’ first minority manager, would be the first African-American to win a World Series since Cito Gaston of the Blue Jays in 1992 and ’93.

“I don’t take a whole lot of time thinking about (it),” Roberts said, “but when I do, it’s special. I think that the needle is moving, maybe not as quickly as most people would like, but I’m always encouragin­g minorities to get opportunit­ies.

“Like Alex said, we don’t do the hiring, but to look across the field and see a minority in the dugout, certainly is exciting.”

Roberts should get the loudest ovation for any opposing manager in World Series history.

He might be trying to ruin the Red Sox’s season, but he’ll forever be remembered in New England for the most famous stolen base in history.

He stole second base for the Red Sox in the ninth inning of Game 4 of the 2004 American League Championsh­ip Series, triggering the greatest comeback in history, overcoming a 3-0 deficit against the Yankees, and then sweeping the Cardinals for their first World Series title since 1918.

“It is great coming back to this great city,” Roberts said. “I’ve got nothing but great memories, even flying into Logan and just this time of year, this city, the leaves changing. And then you drive up to Fenway Park and it all just kind of comes back to you, 2004.

“This is a dream job for me, and I know speaking for him this is his dream job. So for us to play for a world championsh­ip, West Coast-East Coast, Dodgers-Red Sox, I just can’t see it getting any better.”

Where else could Roberts show up in an opposing city in a World Series and be absolutely revered?

Said Cora: “He’s a hero in this city. He comes here, and he makes a lot of money signing autographs. I know he puts (next to his autograph) ‘The greatest stolen base in the history of the game.’ He makes a lot of money in an hour.

“Probably, he’s making money right now.”

The Dodgers players couldn’t help but tease Roberts after winning the National League pennant Saturday night in Milwaukee.

They gathered in a bar to celebrate, and when they looked up at the TV, they kept seeing replays of Roberts stealing that base 14 years ago off Mariano Rivera.

They started chanting, “Turn the Page! Turn the Page!”

Roberts couldn’t help but laugh, knowing that in this turbulent season, and managing in the final year of his contract — with an option for $1.2 million that has yet to be exercised — it has been awfully challengin­g to please everyone while trying to win the Dodgers’ first World Series title in 30 years.

If it weren’t for Roberts’ effervesce­nt personalit­y and his eternal optimism that had him proclaimin­g the Dodgers would win the NL West when they were 10 games out of first place, maybe he’d have had a clubhouse revolt.

While Cora’s brilliant strategic moves this postseason and communicat­ion skills all season have drawn rave reviews in his clubhouse, Cora’s biggest challenge is pacifying a fan base that considers anything less than a World Series championsh­ip a disaster.

“Everyone loves him in here, bought in, and trusts and believes in everything he says,” Pedroia said. “But this is a tough town. There’s a lot of pressure. They want championsh­ips.”

The Red Sox won a franchise-record 108 games, trounced the Yankees and Astros in the first two rounds, but if the Red Sox don’t knock off the Dodgers, guess who’ll be blamed?

“The other day I sat down,” Cora said, “I was like, Whew! We made it. Especially here. We knew about the division and record-setting season and all that stuff, but in this town, everything start(s) after October.

“We’re just glad that we’re here.” That makes two of them.

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 ??  ?? Boston manager Alex Cora (with the Dodgers’ Kike Hernandez) has to pacify a fan base that frowns on anything less than a championsh­ip season. DAVID BUTLER II / USA TODAY
Boston manager Alex Cora (with the Dodgers’ Kike Hernandez) has to pacify a fan base that frowns on anything less than a championsh­ip season. DAVID BUTLER II / USA TODAY

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