After last
Friday’s 12-5 loss to the Angels, it looked as though the Red Sox had hit rock
bottom. Nothing was working for the club. In the three games prior to that
loss, the pitching staff had limited opposing offenses to just 8 total runs,
but the so-called “lethal” Red Sox offense was only able deliver a win in one
of those games. However, in the typical fashion of a Boston sports team, just
when their backs were up against the wall, the Sox clicked a switch, and came
through with two excellent wins over the Angels.
On Saturday,
starting pitcher Stephen Wright delivered the Sox a gem, tossing just 75
pitches over 6.1 innings of work in his club’s 8-3 win. This was great to see
for the Red Sox. Wright didn’t have a whole lot of experience pitching at Fenway
prior to that game, and to pitch as well as he did on national TV in front of a
big Saturday night crowd is an excellent sign of things to come for the young
knuckleballer.
The offense
consisted mostly of one guy: Mike Napoli. Nap struggled mightily through the
month of April, hitting .162 with just one homer, but broke out of his slump in
a huge way this weekend, launching four homers, including the farthest hit ball
at Fenway all season. It was painful to see Napoli struggle the way he did
through the first month of the season, but I think it was worth the wait. When
he’s hot the way he is right now, he is as dangerous as any power hitter in
baseball.
It’s been
hard to predict exactly where the Red Sox struggles would be this year. Prior
to the season, everyone, including myself, said that this year’s club was going
to score a lot of runs, but the pitching staff would struggle. To start the
season, that proved to be true, and the Sox pitching staff had their fair share
of problems. However, in May, the pitching hasn’t been the problem. Sox
starters have had eight quality starts in their last 10 games, and Boston’s
pitchers have posted a 2.94 ERA since May 13th, which is the seventh
lowest mark in the MLB over that span of time. But just as the pitching staff
started to click, it became the offense’s turn to struggle. The Sox’s offense has averaged just 2.7 runs
per game in May, and has been held to two or fewer runs in 13 of their 21 games
in May. Those numbers are simply unacceptable for this team.
It’s been
quite clear that this team struggles against left handers, and it hasn’t helped
them that they’ve faced lefty starters in eight out of their last 13 games. But
that’s still no excuse for their struggles.
Even left
fielder Hanley Ramirez, who crushed the ball in April, has had a rough time as
of late. He hasn’t recorded an RBI in any of his last 17 games. That’s a bat
that the Sox need to have producing in the middle of the lineup.
With all of
that said, though, the Sox’s struggles still haven’t been enough to bury them
deep down at the bottom of the division. The American League East, formerly
known as the best division in baseball, is terrible this year. Basically, if
you win eight out of ten, you are going to move up to one or two in the division.
The Yankees, who lost six straight going into this week, sit in second place in
the division.
In the most
recent Baseball Prospectus playoff odds, the AL East division winner is
projected to win just 84 games. Prior to about two years ago, it was almost a
given that the AL East winner was going to have at least 90 wins. This is
extremely fortunate for the Red Sox, because if they can get hot late in the
season, they are going to be able to make a very serious playoff push.
Contact Jasper Goodman
at jgoodman@radiovermont.com.
Follow him on Twitter @Jasper_Goodman