Toronto Star

ALCS: Boston's big bats are enjoying the ride

- JIMMY GOLEN

BOSTON—It was the middle of the pandemic, the Boston Red Sox stunk and, with majorleagu­e ballparks empty in 2020, they couldn’t even count on the crowd to get them going. During one especially humdrum road game at the Rays’ Tropicana Field, coach Jason Varitek suggested they needed to put some fun back into the game.

The words had barely left his lips when Christian Vázquez hit a homer. So backup catcher Kevin Plawecki grabbed a nearby laundry cart, waited for Vázquez to return to the dugout, and told him, “Hey, hop in.”

“We hadn’t talked about it — nothing,” Plawecki said Wednesday. “He sat right in, and I pushed him. And, ever since, it’s been our thing, I guess.”

The 2004 Red Sox were The Idiots. In 2013 they grew bushy beards. And if the 2021 team performs like its predecesso­rs and wins the World Series, the lingering image could be Tunnel Time, the home-run, laundry cart drive through the dugout.

While it started on a lark in a last-place season, the Red Sox have continued the celebratio­n this year and ridden it all the way to a spot in the AL Championsh­ip Series, which begins Friday night in Houston.

“It looked great in a difficult season for them to be able to find something that’s fun, and be able to celebrate something in the game,” Boston manager Alex Cora said. “It means a lot for them. For them to have fun with that, that’s great.”

Sports teams have long found unique ways to celebrate their wins and other milestones, from the now routine post-victory Gatorade bath to jackets or jewelry awarded for big plays.

Even in baseball, where traditiona­lists sneer at anything that might seem disrespect­ful or undignifie­d, teams haven’t been afraid to show some personalit­y. The Blue Jays don a blue blazer after home runs — with pitchers occasional­ly honoured, too — the Phillies have a straw hat, the Rockies have homer shades. The Mets ride a stuffed pony through the dugout, the Padres pass around a sevenpound necklace dubbed the “Swagg Chain.”

During their 2019 World Series run, Washington Nationals car buffs Adam Eaton and Howie Kendrick celebrated by pretending to drive in the dugout — stepping on an imaginary clutch, shifting fake gears and making loud revving engine noises with their mouths.

“Everybody’s got their own way of having fun. That’s what it’s all about,” Plawecki said. “It’s not an ‘In your face’ to anybody. It’s just a way for us to have fun, keep it light.”

Boston’s cart is now a new, customized model that may never have been touched by actual laundry. It even had its own bobblehead day, although the Red Sox will tell you that the giveaway honoured J.D. Martinez, who was riding in the cart.

During the playoffs, infielder José Iglesias has taken responsibi­lity for the “carrito,” and declared himself its chauffeur. Acquired too late in the season to be eligible for the playoff roster, Iglesias said he was happy to contribute in the dugout, since he can’t on the field.

Plawecki said he had no regrets about giving up his cart driving duties. After all, the way the Red Sox are going, he needs to save his energy: Boston hit two homers in an AL wild-card victory over the rival Yankees and nine more in the four-game division series win over Tampa Bay — a franchise post-season record five of them in Game 2 alone.

“They kept me very, very busy,” Iglesias said. “And I hope I get busier over the course of the playoffs.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Hunter Renfroe rides the home-run laundry cart through the dugout in August.
GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Hunter Renfroe rides the home-run laundry cart through the dugout in August.

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