Dice-K magic thwarts Rays
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – Daisuke Matsuzaka’s brilliant escape act bewildered Tampa Bay and put the Boston Red Sox on top in the A.L. Championship Series.
Matsuzaka took a no-hit bid into the seventh inning and worked out of trouble all game, pitching the defending World Series champions past the Rays 2-0 Friday night in the ALCS opener.
Dice-K wiggled out of trouble in the first and seventh, then got help from his bullpen to rebuff a threat in the eighth as the Red Sox taught the young Rays about dominant postseason pitching.
“It’s amazing. We always joke how he gets out of these innings,” Boston’s Kevin Youkilis said. “He’ll have bases-loaded, nobody out; or first and third, nobody out, and he gets out of jams. We wish he wouldn’t put himself in those jams, but it’s amazing how he does it and shows how great of a pitcher he is.”
Jed Lowrie snapped a scoreless tie in the fifth with a sacrifice fly against James Shields, and Youkilis drove home a run with a seventh-inning double off left fielder Carl Crawford’s glove as the playoff-savvy Red Sox beat baseball’s best home team on its turf.
Jonathan Papelbon closed out Boston’s team-record sixth straight postseason road win. Now the upstart Rays, who held off the Red Sox for the A.L. East title, are doing the chasing.
Game 2 is tonight at Tropicana Field, with Josh Beckett pitching for Boston against All-Star Scott Kazmir.
Crawford singled leading off the seventh for Tampa Bay’s first hit and raced to third when Cliff Floyd followed with a single. But Dice-K, unbeaten on the road this season, was equal to the task.
Dioner Navarro flied to shallow left, Matsuzaka fanned Gabe Gross for the last of his nine strikeouts and Jason Bartlett grounded into a force play to end the threat.
“You have to tip your cap to Dice-K and the way he got out of jams,” Shields said. “He was the better man tonight.”
The Rays, who thrived on timely hitting in winning a franchise-record 97 games this season, missed another opportunity in the eighth after Matsuzaka, who allowed four hits in seven-plus innings, gave up two more singles.
Hideki Okajima relieved and Carlos Pena flied out on a 3-0 pitch. Justin Masterson took over and got All-Star rookie Evan Longoria to ground into a double play.
“Listen, it happens,” Rays manager Joe Maddon said. “When you’re facing very good pitching at this time of the year, they can stifle you even with nobody out. We can do the same thing to them.”
Papelbon pitched the ninth for Boston, extending his career postseason scoreless streak to a major league-record 202/3 innings in 13 appearances. Joe Niekro held the old mark of 20 scoreless innings.
The Rays finished 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position. They wasted a big chance in the first, too, after Matsuzaka walked the bases loaded.
“I’m not discouraged in any way,” Maddon said. “We played well, and we just have to hit better (tonight) , that’s it.”