Jonny Gomes Evokes Opening Day Flashback and Other Red Sox Notes From Game 1 of ALDS

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Oct 4, 2013

Jacoby Ellsbury, Jonny Gomes, Shane VictorinoBOSTON — Only 10 more to go.

The Red Sox returned to playoff baseball in style Friday, smoking the Rays 12-2 in Game 1 of the ALDS at Fenway Park. Boston now holds a 1-0 lead in its best-of-five series with Tampa Bay and is just 10 wins shy of a World Series title.

Clearly, the Red Sox still have a ton of work to do this postseason. But it never hurts to start with a bang, and that’s exactly what the Sox did Friday. The Red Sox pounded out 14 hits to back Jon Lester, who was fantastic, and the game was pretty much in the bag by the sixth inning.

The Red Sox and Rays will play again at Fenway on Saturday, with John Lackey squaring off with Tampa ace David Price. Before turning the page, though, let’s take a look at some Game 1 developments.

  • Jon Lester came out guns blazing. His velocity maxed out at around 96-97 mph, and he struck out the first four batters he faced. By comparison, Lester’s average fastball velocity this season, according to Fangraphs, was 92.6 mph.

John Farrell said after the game that it was the most powerful he has seen Lester all season. Even the opposing manager was impressed by Lester bringing it.

“He had struggles in the recent past with command issues with his fastball, but that’s not the case right now,” Rays skipper Joe Maddon said. “He’s throwing his fastball where he wants to. The cutter’s outstanding. He just had a really good fastball. He came out there on 97. I was hoping that would be pretty much adrenaline wear off and become more the pedestrian version, but that never happened.”

  • Lester’s four strikeouts to begin the game tied a Red Sox postseason record. The only other Boston starter to accomplish the feat was Josh Beckett, who struck out the first four batters in Game 1 of the 2007 World Series.
  • Lester’s first inning was impressive, but his fifth inning was perhaps the most important. The Red Sox had just scored five runs in the bottom of the fourth to grab a 5-2 lead, and Lester came back out and tossed a 1-2-3 fifth.

“What was probably as big an inning was after we scored the five runs, to come out and put up a zero,” Farrell said. “That’s the most important thing in the game, is to keep up the momentum and put up a zero, and we were able to come back with three more runs in that [fifth] inning.”

  • Jonny Gomes was the catalyst — go figure, right? — in Boston’s five-run fourth inning. He tied the game with a two-run double, and then scored the go-ahead run by hustling all the way around from second base as Stephen Drew beat out an infield single at first base. The aggressive baserunning was reminiscent of a play on Opening Day, when Gomes came around to score from second base on an infield single by Jacoby Ellsbury in the ninth inning against the Yankees.

“Absolutely, yeah,” Gomes said when asked if he had flashbacks to Opening Day. “Yeah, we were talking about that right when I got in the dugout. With that being said, you don’t get 97 wins throughout 162 by waiting for the three‑run homer. We generate some runs any way possible. And that’s just not my hustle from second. That hustle is definitely erased if Stephen Drew doesn’t hustle to first. So it’s double hustle and we were able to touch the plate and get a run on the board.”

  • Shane Victorino went 3-for-4 with two RBIs and a stolen base. He is 9-for-9 in his career on postseason stolen-base attempts, and the three hits matched a personal playoff high.
  • Jarrod Saltalamacchia has emerged as a leader for Boston, but Friday was actually his first playoff game as a member of the Red Sox. Salty marked the occasion with three RBIs, becoming just the third player in franchise history to drive in at least three runs in his postseason debut. He joined Nomar Garciaparra (1998) and Todd Walker (2003).
  • All nine hitters in the Red Sox’ starting lineup recorded at least one hit and scored at least one run. That’s only been done three times in playoff history, with the last such instance coming in 1936.
  • Farrell might have offered up a little foreshadowing during Thursday’s media availability. He said Thursday that there would be a defensive play inside of a game that served as a swing moment.

On Friday, that moment was Wil Myers’ miscue in right field in the fourth inning. David Ortiz hit a fly ball to deep right, and Myers appeared to have it sized up on the warning track. Myers backed off at the last second, though, and the ball landed for a ground-rule double. The Red Sox subsequently scored five runs in the inning.

  • Myers was showered with “My-ers! My-ers!” chants for the rest of the game. He was greeted with a standing ovation in his first at-bat after the play.

Looks like that home-field advantage is already playing a factor.

  • Myers handled the gaffe like a champ. He didn’t make any excuses, accepted blame and was straightforward in his explanation.

“I didn’t hear anything,” Myers said. “I just saw [center fielder Desmond Jennings] out of the corner of my eye and backed off.”

Myers also vowed to brush it off for Game 2. You can’t ask for anything more, especially from a rookie.

  • It took 38-year-old reliever Jamey Wright 18 years to finally taste playoff baseball. He’ll need to wash his mouth out after his first postseason appearance.

Wright gave up four runs on four hits and two walks in the eighth inning. Yikes.

  • The Red Sox stayed aggressive until the very end, and ultimately walked away with a 10-run victory. Did they run up the score?

“The old school rules that were written when singles were the norm and homers were not — there’s a lot of the game that people get upset about, and part of it is the phrase that, ‘They are trying to embarrass us.’ If they did, that was our fault,” Maddon said. “Entirely our fault. If you get embarrassed in the game, I blame it on me, us. The accountability lies with the Rays — not the Red Sox doing their job.  The object of the game is to score runs, and that’s what they were doing.”

  • Oh yeah, Bobby Valentine was fired exactly one year ago Friday.

Have a question for Ricky Doyle? Send it to him via Twitter at @TheRickyDoyle or send it here.

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