By TERRY LYONS
BOSTON – Who are you guys and what did you do with the Boston Red Sox?
After losing six-of-seven games and dropping to (60-65) and fifth place in the American League East Division on August 25th, the Boston Red Sox somehow bounced back this weekend and won two important games from their AL East rival, Tampa Bay Rays.
Realistically, the Red Sox (62-65) still remain some 17 games out of first place, trail the first-place New York Yankees (78-48), and have no shot at catching the Yanks, but the two-game winning streak injected some life into the Red Sox team and sent the fans at Fenway Park home quite happy. In the Wild Card, Seattle, Tampa Bay and Toronto hold the three slots in the AL and Boston is seven games back, with the upstart Baltimore Orioles, the solid Minnesota Twins and the surprising Chicago White Sox in between. The Red Sox possibilities are slim but not none with only 35 games left in the regular season.
Coincidentally, it was back on July 4th when the Red Sox defeated the same Tampa Bay Rays, (4-0), to peak at 10 games over the .500 mark (45-35) and place second in the division as they held the top Wild Card spot in the AL. Then, the slide began. Two consecutive losses to the same Rays, then two straight to the Yankees. A two game bounce-back preceded the Sox losing 9-of-10 between July 11 and July 27 to drop to the AL East cellar.
The return of Trevor Story was a good omen for Boston Saturday but an 11 strike-out effort and three-hitter over seven innings pitched by Rich Hill was the brightest sign of hope for the Sox who play one more game against Tampa this homestand before the Fenway Faithful sing “See You in September” as their club travels to Minnesota for a three-game set against the mighty tough Twins this Monday to Wednesday.
The MLB/AL schedule-maker has the Red Sox returning from the Land of 10,000 Lakes to face the Texas Rangers in a four-game set at Fenway Park, September 1-4, before yet another road trip (three games each at Tampa and Baltimore) which will determine the fate of the 2022 baseball season by September 11th.
The New England Patriots take center stage that same weekend as the seasons begin to change and a chill takes the air in New England.
HERE NOW, THE NOTES: We’re quickly approaching the most sports-centric time of the year. … The U.S. Open tennis tournament begins this Monday, August 29th at the Billie Jean National Tennis Center where Daniil Medvedev will defend his 2021 crown while both Roger Federer(injured/rehabbing) and No. 1-ranked Novak Djokovic (unvaccinated vs COVID) is ineligible to compete. … Keep in mind, Medvedev was blocked from competing at Wimbledon earlier this summer because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Spain’s Rafa Nadal will be poised for a run to the men’s final.
On the women’s side, Iga Swiatek of Poland is the No. 1 seed in a draw that will feature both Serena Williams and Coco Gauff surely to have the boisterous New York crowds solidly behind them throughout the two-week test. … Williams will team with her sister, Venus in women’s doubles. … U.S. Open tickets on the nights Serena or Serena and Venus play will become the toughest tennis ticket in town since Jimmy Conners made his run in 1991.
College football kicked-off Saturday with Northwestern’s 31-28, come-from-behind victory over Nebraska in the B1G Ten opener in Ireland. The local New England college football schedule is highlighted by the Boston College Eagles taking on a big-time B1G Ten challenger in Rutgers for their very first game of the season on September 3 at Noon. BC head coach Jeff Hafleybegins his third season and does so without an “auto win” opening opponent such as UConn, Howard or the likes of past season openers in The Heights.
The National Football League starts for real on Thursday, September 8 when the Buffalo Bills travel to Los Angeles to face the defending Super Bowl champion Rams before the rest of the league opens on September 11-12.
About a month later, the National Hockey League will face-off with their regular season openers (October 11) before the National Basketball Association begins their 76th regular season campaign on October 18th which marks the times of the pro sports equinox when on any given day, all four major North American sports can be playing on the same day – Major League Baseball, by then, fully into the Postseason.
CIRCLE SEPTEMBER 9-10TH: Not only does the NFL kick-off their season on the 8th, and the US Open tennis stage the men’s semi-finals and women’s finals on the 9th/10th, but the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame will induct its Class of ‘22 with opening festivities at the Mohegan Sun in Connecticut Friday and the Enshrinement Ceremony staged September 10th in Springfield, Mass from 7-10pm on Saturday.
BREAKING NEWS: Italy’s Sportando Basketball reporter Emiliano Carchiawas the first to report of Danillo Gallinari’s injury.
GALLINARI INJURED: Newly acquired Boston Celtics shooting specialist Danillo Gallinari injured his knee in a FIBA World Cup qualifying game in Brescia, Italy on Saturday. There was no official confirmation of the injury but Sportando Basketball reported the injury with quotes, video and photos and FIBA.com made reference in its brief game story, noting Gallinari took over the game in the third quarter scoring 15 of his 17 points. Other game stories speculated an injured MCL ligament for the NBA veteran who was playing against Georgia in the FIBA qualifier, a 91-84 meaningless Italy victory. After the injury, the games were called-off. … The injury was the third NBA off-season setback this week as Orlando Magic guard Gary Harris suffered a torn meniscus in his left knee and will undergo further evaluation to determine the extent of the injury and need for treatment or surgery. … Earlier this week, Oklahoma City rookie first-rounder Chet Holmgren was injured and deemed out for the 2022-23 season with a devastating Lisfranc injury. The No. 2 overall pick of last June’s NBA Draft was playing in Jamal Crawford CrawsOver Pro-Am league at Seattle Pacific University on a court that was reportedly very slippery. … In other games at Crawford’s ProAm, LA Lakers’ Lebron James and Boston’s Jayson Tatum were among the players working out.
DIAMOND DUST-UPs: Front Office Sports is reporting Washington’s Monumental Sports and team governor Ted Leonsis along with Carlyle Group co-founder David Rubenstein are interested in buying the Baltimore Orioles or possibly the Washington Nationals of MLB, if and when either team hits the market, as expected.
BOSTON’s Alex Cora won his 345th game with the Red Sox on Friday night and his 346th Saturday, making him the ninth-winningest manager in franchise history, one ahead of Eddie Casko. Among the 10 club managers with 600+ games at the helm of the Sox, Cora ranks third in winning percentage (.564/ 346-267) behind:
- Don Zimmer (.575/ 411-305)
- Terry Francona (.574/ 744-552)
Cora has a 17-8 postseason record (.680) with the Sox, including the 2018 World Series title and an American League Championship appearance in 2021.
TOUR Championship: The 2021-22 PGA Tour season will come to its conclusion today (Sunday, August 28) with the FedEx Cup champion to be crowned at the East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. To the winner? A cool $18 million from a $75 million prize pool. … The PGA Tour will pick-up the 2022-23 season with the Fortinet Championship on the weekend of September 15-18th, but the full Tour will start in earnest in the first week of January 2023 with the annual Sentry Tournament of Champions, a.k.a primetime golf from Maui. … Our sister publication – PGA Tour Brunch – will publish its final 2022 missive on Monday, August 29th with a recap of the TOUR Championship and then re-start publication in January. … The LIV golf circuit will visit Boston September 2-4 with its 12 teams, 48 players, 54 (LIV for you Roman Numeral fans) holes. The site is The International Golf Club in Bolton, Massachusetts, north of Boston. … No cut. … For those unfamiliar with the pro golf scene, the average PGA Tour event has some 125 players, a cutdown after 36 holes and a total of four rounds or 72 holes to win. There is no team concept. … The LIV is considering selling franchises and establishing the teams more definitively for the 2023 season. … Digital Sports Desk is scheduled to cover the LIV event. … September 21-25 will mark the dates of the 2022 President’s Cup with the USA golfers pitted against a team of world golf pros. The competition is scheduled for the Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte. The more popular Ryder Cup is USA vs. European golfers. The 2023 Ryder Cup will be played at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, Italy.
METS DO the RIGHT THING: The New York Mets held their “Old-Timer’s Day” on Saturday and surprised the great Willie Mays by retiring his uniform No. 24. Mays, at age 41 and 42, only played two seasons with the Mets in 1972 and ‘73 but was beloved by the New York fans because of his start with the New York Giants. Mays and the Giants moved from the Polo Grounds (1891-1957) to Candlestick Park in San Francisco in 1958 after six seasons in New York. He missed a season because of necessary military service in 1953. Mays, born May 6, 1931, is now 91 years old and carries the mantle as the greatest living baseball player. His rivals, Hank Aaron (1934-2021), Micky Mantle (1931-1995), Duke Snider (1926-2011), and Joe DiMaggio(1914-1999) have all passed away. … The retirement of Mays’ number comes a year after the Mets “Did the Right Thing” by retiring Jerry Koosman’s No. 36.
JIMMY FUND: According to Radio Ink, the 20th anniversary of the ‘WEEI/NESN Jimmy Fund Radio-Telethon’, raised $3.517 million for the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The radio-telethon was launched by WEEI-FM, The Jimmy Fund and the Boston Red Sox in 2002. New England Sports Network (NESN) joined the effort in 2003.
“This was the 20th anniversary of the Jimmy Fund Radio-Telethon, and our listeners and sponsors came through like never before,” said Mike Thomas, SVP/MM Audacy Boston. “To hear the doctors talk about the progress that is being made, the clinical trials that are ongoing and to hear from patients about how Dana-Farber saved their lives will forever be in our hearts and minds. There really is nothing like the two days of this fundraiser.”
The event was part of a 36-hour live broadcast during WEEI weekday programming on August 23 and 24. To date the radio/telethon has raised more than $65 million for cancer research at Dana-Farber.
TID-BITS: The MLB Network has been airing a series of promotional spots, entitled Baseball Zen. In relative silence, the super-slow motion photography catches some of the subtle nuances of the game of baseball … a grounds crew slowly raking the infield dirt, or watering the infield … Shohei Ohtani delivering a strike, but shot in super-slow motion in order to pick-up the spin of the baseball.
The spots are good. They air on the MLB Network and MLB Extra Innings OTT and are far better than a billboard that states the “game will return.” Yet, the slow, methodical nature of the spots are a 180 from the popular and original “NBA Action … It’s Fantastic” bloopers and superstar highlights with incredible action footage, depth defying acts of NBA players before a well-known actor, musician or comedian delivered the iconic “I Love This Game” tagline. … Two very different takes on league promotional theory.
The MLB Zen spots make you think about the wonderful things you experience when you attend a baseball game, many times far away from the in-game cameras. Coincidentally, this reporter was listing a few just this week. Here’s what was scribbled down on a notebook page:
- The home plate ump with the timeless cleaning of home plate with his brush
- Rafa Devers’ tradition of his pre-At Bat greeting to the Red Sox ballboys
- The announcement of the game attendance in the press box
- Bubble gum and sunflower seeds in the dug-outs
- Breaking-in a new baseball glove
- Dodgertown at Vero Beach
- Tossing a rosin bag directly behind the pitcher’s mound
- The “W” flown at Wrigley Field to signal a Cubs’ victory that day
- Old traditions, gone-by, like the bullpen carts with team helmets
- The San Diego (a.k.a.) The Original Chicken setting the high bar for mascots
- The proper placing and lime for the batter’s box, tap-tap with a hammer
- An impromptu sharpie signature on Fenway’s right field “Pesky Pole”
- Twi-Nighters at Shea Stadium
- Banner Day
I could go on-and-on, but will come back for more next week with football in mind.