armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan

About the Author

LouGehrig
I have been a Yankees fan for many years. Thanks to what has occurred during the last few years, I am beginning to wonder.

More By LouGehrig

Ken Caminiti: National League's 1996 MVP
2 votes, 0 comments
Triple Crown Winner Lou Gehrig: No MVP
3 votes, 1 comment
Judge Sonia Sotomayor Blamed the Owners
6 votes, 2 comments
View All

Other recent contributors

Make this page better by editing it.

Other recent voters

If you like the article, vote for it.
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

The Boston Red Sox Are Not as Good as We Think

by LouGehrig
created August 06, 2009, last edited August 07, 2009
9
Vote

by Harold Friend

The addition of Victor Martinez from the Cleveland Indians was an excellent move, but adding Martinez addressed only one half of the problem. Boston's real need is starting pitching.

Josh Beckett and Jon Lester Are Solid

Josh Beckett is having a Cy Young Award season and has shown that he wins the big games. He is as good as any pitcher in the American League. Jon Lester is a solid lefty on the verge of stardom. He won 16 games last season, and has pitched almost as effectively this year. After Beckett and Lester, it is a crap shoot.

Dice-K and Wakefield Are Injured

Daisuke Matsuzaka is probably gone for the season, Tim Wakefield is on the disabled list with back problems, and Justin Masterson is in Cleveland. After Beckett and Lester, Boston sends Brad Penny, John Smoltz, and Clay Buchholz to the mound. The fact that they just signed Paul Byrd to a minor league contract reveals the concern that exists.

Brad Penny Has Problems

Brad Penny has been inconsistent at best. He had problems in Los Angeles, winning 6, losing 9, and allowing 112 hits in 94 2/3 innings, with an obscene 6.27 ERA. In Boston, Penny is 7-6, with a 5.20 ERA, but he has yielded 136 hits in 116 innings.

John Smoltz' Injuries

John Smoltz is 42 years old. He had Tommy John surgery prior to the 2000 season, has been on the disabled more times than he cares to remember, is joined Boston after undergoing shoulder surgery after last season. He no longer is John Smoltz when he pitches.

Clay Buchholz

Clay Buchholz pitched a no-hitter in his second major league start in 2007, but he struggled mightily in 2008 and was sent to the minors in August, where he pitched until after the 2009 all-star game. The Red Sox needed a starter against Toronto on July 17. Buchhotz was brought up, won the game, and was sent back down, but when Tim Wakefield went on the disabled list, Buchholz joined the Red Sox rotation. He is 1-1 with a 6.05 ERA, allowing 28 hits in only 19 1/3 innings.

Get to the Bullpen

The way baseball is managed today, teams need six innings from their starting pitcher. The Red Sox must score enough runs in the first innings to get the game to their bullpen, which has not been as good as it must be for the Red Sox to win, but which has been a strength most of the time. Jonathan Papelbon will join Mariano Rivera many years from today in the Hall of Fame.

Red Sox Will be the Wild Card

The Red Sox will not win the Eastern Division, but they will be the wild card. Teams with strong starting pitching have a better chance of winning the World Series than teams that rely primarily on offense. With Josh Beckett, the Red Sox have the necessary ace. Jon Lester is really the key, because when he pitches well, he is dominant. The problem is that he has not been consistent enough.

If the Red Sox get adequate pitching from the starters who follow Beckett and Lester, they have a chance, especially if Wakefield returns. His knuckle ball can mess up an offense for days after he pitches. Buchholz is young and has great potential. He must believe in himself.

Fine Offense

Boston's offense covers many weaknesses. Dustin Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis, Victor Martinez, Jason Bay, and J.D. Drew form the nucleus of a batting order that will score many runs. Jacoby Ellsbury is maturing into a star, who hits .300 and steals bases.

Nick Green is a liability at shortstop. How much Jed Lowrie can help is not known. Jason Varitek handles the pitching staff well, but teams run wild on him, and he no longer frightens pitchers.

The Red Sox will make the playoffs, but their chances would be much better if they had one more reliable pitcher. The guess here is that John Smoltz may have one last breath remaining.

Baseball-Reference


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
113 days ago
Score 1+-
The Red Sox suck EXACTLY as much as I think they do.

[edit] SWEEP!!!

Go Rays!
Permalink | Reply
Pittsburgh GunnyMajor Leaguer
113 days ago
Score 4+-
Last evening as we went out for dinner we were sitting at the bar. The Sox and Rays game was getting ready to start. I told Mrs Gunny that this may be a decent game to watch. The bartender switched it to the Pirates game and then rapidly apologized to all the patrons.
Permalink
Anonymous Fanatic #1
113 days ago
Score -1+-
You are completely wrong. The Red Sox will not be in the playoffs. Yes, starting pitching has been a big problem since 2009 starts. They will not be in the playoffs!!!!!!
Permalink | Reply
RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
113 days ago
Score 0+-
Not much of a revelation here. The combined slumps/injuries of Drew and Bay, Wakefield on the right after going to his first All-Star Game, and the bullpen falling to earth have coalesced into a super slump for the Sox. We're desperate enough to sign Paul Byrd.
Permalink | Reply
PmoehrinVarsity
113 days ago
Score 3+-
You say after Lester and Beckett it's a crapshoot, but how many teams out there really have more then two solid starting pitchers as it is?

Plus I guarantee you virtually none of them have the offense the Red Sox have.

It's just a shame that Boston, New York, and Tampa Bay all can't get into the playoffs, because I think those are the three best teams in the AL right now.

I think Tampa Bay will be the odd team out, but it wouldn't shock me at all if they got into the playoffs.

You just have to wonder how much longer the Rays can keep this up for given the current economic situation of baseball.
Permalink | Reply
EvanLongoriaFan3Varsity
113 days ago
Score 2+-
The Detroit Tigers, Verlander, Jackson, Porcello, Washburn. They have the best staff in the AL
Permalink
JuTMSY4Legend
113 days ago
Score 1+-
Oddly enough, I agree ELF3. When they got washburn, I was talking to a buddy about it. He's a yanks fan and I'm a phils guy but we both agreed that their top 3 (Verlander, Jackson, Washburn) would be scary in a short series...sorta like San Fran's
Permalink
PmoehrinVarsity
113 days ago
Score 3+-
Do they have the offensive Boston does though?

Pitching wise Detroit is great, but at the plate, their mediocre.

Cabrerea, Inge, and Granderson are solid, but beyond that, the Tigers have nothing. Magz isn't the same player he used to be. Josh Anderson has no business being an everyday left fielder, and if you add up Laird, Everett, and Polanco's power numbers, you wind up with 13 home runs, and only Polcano is batting above .250 right now.

Also while they have a great starting staff, that bullpen is nothing special. I don't think anyone has an ERA under 3.20

The Tigers are a good team, but I don't think they would even be in contention right now if they were in the AL East.

I look at that AL Central, and I think the White Sox have a little better offensive then Detroit does, and that's what's going to be the difference.

That's going to be a great race down the stretch, and I certainly feel the Tigers have a chance.

Boston definitely has problems with the back end of that rotation though, and it may cost them come either September or October. Smoltz is probably finished. Dice K's career could be over (that's the real long term problem Boston is looking at), Brad Penny has been simply way to sporadic to be relied upon.

It may ultimately come down to Clay Bucholz who thus far hasn't shown a whole lot outside of that no-hitter he threw two years ago.

I'd be cautiously optimistic if I were a Red Sox fan right now. The only thing they have going for them is that great lineup. They could just try to out slug everybody, and get into the postseason by doing that alone, but in the postseason you will run into a pitcher or two where you won't be able to do that against.
Permalink
JuTMSY4Legend
113 days ago
Score 0+-
Re: Clay Buchholz Makes you wonder what the discussions with Toronto were like. I've never been a fan of Buchholz (I remember watching Taylor suck serious ass) and so far I've been right, no hitter aside.
Permalink
PmoehrinVarsity
113 days ago
Score 1+-
The problem with Buchholz just from I've seen from him is that he doesen't trust his stuff.

He's trying to be Greg Maddux out there, and pin point all of his pitches, rather then just say here it is, hit it.

When he threw the no-hitter that's what he was doing.
Permalink
JuTMSY4Legend
112 days ago
Score 1+-
He's not the only one who doesn't trust his stuff
Permalink
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free
Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User LouGehrig | August 6, 2009 | August 2009 | MLB Opinions | Boston Red Sox Opinions | John Smoltz Opinions | Josh Beckett Opinions | Jon Lester Opinions | Dustin Pedroia Opinions | Kevin Youkilis Opinions

Don't Miss

Phillies World Series 2009: A Year Later, and They Still Don't Want Us
Sorry, But I'm Not Sorry
2009 NHL Preview
In Which Ricketts Wins World Series
2009 Week 3: Let’s Talk About Your Favorite NFL Team

In the News

Hey ArmchairGM users! Want to help the admins update this news section? Click here to help us out.

Comments of the Day

0 Wheres Vinny Testeverde?
0 Lou, you said it all......Mickey Cochrane wasn"t j...

Play the Picture Game

Athlete That is Losing Their Mind

New Articles

Best African-American Quarterback Ever?
Ken Caminiti: National League's 1996 MVP
Winter Olympics 2010
Highlights from Dubai 7's
Triple Crown Winner Lou Gehrig: No MVP

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Article:The_Boston_Red_Sox_Are_Not_as_Good_as_We_Think"

This page was last modified 15:16, 6 August 2009. Content is available under the GFDL.

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise