Waterloo Region Record

Dickey still confident despite 13-0 loss

- Dan Ralph The Canadian Press

TORONTO — He’s 0-2 with a lofty 8.44 earned-run average and opponents are hitting .326 against him. But R.A. Dickey feels he’s very close to the form that made him the 2012 National League Cy Young Award winner.

Will Middlebroo­ks homered three times and doubled as the Boston Red Sox hit knucklebal­ler Dickey hard early en route to a lopsided 13-0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Sunday afternoon.

“I think you try to draw from some of the past experience­s and know that a day like today is the anomaly, not the norm,” Dickey said. “I’ve traditiona­lly gotten off to pretty slow starts in the past. I’m not sure why, that’s just the way it has been.

“I’m looking forward to the rest of the month. I know I’m close and so if I can just kind of sit in that, that I’m almost there, I think it will be all right.”

Fortunatel­y for Dickey, he doesn’t have far to look. In April 2012, Dickey surrendere­d eight earned runs over 4 1/3 innings in a 14-6 loss to Atlanta, his worst performanc­e as a New York Met. The good news for the Jays, though, is Dickey posted a 20-6 record last season.

“Atlanta last year was maybe a tad worse than this one,” Dickey said. “You have to understand with 33 starts you have a handful you just have to throw out and hopefully the majority of them end up the way you want to.

“But you’ve got to learn from it too, you have to have aptitude in this game. There are some things I can get better at that I’ve identified on video and we’ll see what happens.”

Middlebroo­ks’ two-run shot helped anchor a five-run first off Dickey as Boston (4-2) earned the rubber game of the series before 41,168 spectators at Rogers Centre, many resorting to a “Go Leafs Go” chant late in the contest. Middlebroo­ks added to their angst with solo blasts in the fifth and seventh innings for his first career three-homer contest, giving him four this season.

“I faced R.A. in spring training so I kind of had an idea of what his movement was and his velocity, because he throws a lot harder than a lot of guys,” Middlebroo­ks said. “I know certain counts he likes to go to fastballs when he’s not locating his knucklebal­l well, he tries to get ahead with the fastball and that helped knowing that.”

Daniel Nava, Jacoby Ellsbury and Mike Napoli also homered for Boston, which had just two hits in a 5-0 loss to Toronto on Saturday.

But the Red Sox tagged right-hander Dickey for eight runs — seven earned — on 10 hits (including two homers) over 4 2/3 innings. Dickey fanned five while walking two and often drawing his share of boos from the stands.

“Real fans understand it is indeed a marathon,” he said. “We certainly aren’t leading the marathon at this point but we have a lot of mileage to go.

“We’ve got a good ball club. There’s a lot of guys in here who have gotten off to some slow starts, myself included, and it’s only going to get better. I think the only thing that gets people in the seats is winning and we just need to start doing more of that and I think people will continue to come.”

Dickey allowed five hits and four runs — three earned — four walks and four strikeouts over six innings in his Toronto debut, a 4-1home loss to Cleveland on Tuesday.

Toronto manager John Gibbons isn’t concerned about Dickey despite Sunday’s performanc­e. “It’s two games in, he’s going to have a great year for us,” he said. “They just hit him hard, I don’t know any other way to describe it.

“Lester was too good for us to mount any comebacks. Sometimes you’ll have games like that where they score early and the other team climbs back in but Lester was too good for that.”

Sunday’s thumping capped a less than stellar season-opening six-game homestand for Toronto (2-4), which entered the campaign with high expectatio­ns following the off-season acquisitio­ns of Dickey, infielder Jose Reyes, pitcher Mark Buehrle, slugger Melky Cabrera and return of manager Gibbons. But after having an off-day Monday, the Jays head out of town for a sixgame road trip, starting Tuesday in Detroit.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Blue Jays pitcher R.A. Dickey (right) sits with J.P. Arencibia in the dugout after being pulled from the game during the fifth inning of Sunday’s loss to Boston.
CHRIS YOUNG, THE CANADIAN PRESS Blue Jays pitcher R.A. Dickey (right) sits with J.P. Arencibia in the dugout after being pulled from the game during the fifth inning of Sunday’s loss to Boston.

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