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Needing the Phoenix, Don't give the Sox the Bird

8
Vote

by user Ron Sen, MD

Has the Nation gone soft? Have our collective weakness atrophied that limbic enmity reserved for the Bronx Bombers? Is the theory that depression arises from anger turned inward become reality? The four game 'Armageddon' against the Yankees has become the equivalent of spring training, not even worthy of traditional 'salary drive' play. As Shakespeare might say, "the fault lies not in the stars, but in ourselves."

The reality show called "MLB" has kicked the Red Sox off the island. Maybe they swallowed too much sea water, or sprained their collective ankles, or just didn't want it enough. Partitioning the blame hasn't become the sport du jour, as, mercifully, it's football season.

What went wrong? Maybe the season was doomed from the start, doomed by overconfidence in a "geriatric" pitching staff, overreliance on promising but inexperienced youth, and offensive holes that revealed themselves in a discouragingly narrow 'Pythagorean' equation, manifested as an inadequate run differential. Huh? The Red Sox won more than their share of close games, saved by Jonathan Papelbon, but often lost games that weren't close because the pitching simply wasn't good enough.

Three major events intersected to doom the 2006 Red Sox. The injury to Jason Varitek, exposed the soft underbelly of the staff, the loss of Tim Wakefield, who provides stability and innings on a regular basis, and a general offensive drop off.

Some blame the 'Sabremetricians', the 'Moneyball' crowd. Pre All-Star break, the Sox had an OPS of .823 and 486 runs scored, both 3rd in the AL. Post All-Star break, the Sox are 12th in OPS at .742 and 9th in runs scored (276) in 62 games, about 4.4 runs per game.

Pre All-Star break, the pitchers compiled a 4.52 ERA (8th), a 1.36 WHIP (6th), and a K/BB ratio of 2.26 (3rd). The latter predicted MORE successful second half results. Post break, the K/BB is 1.92 (9th), ERA 5.21 (11th), and WHIP 1.57 (12th). The aggregate pitching and offensive results easily explain how the Sox moved from the penthouse to the outhouse, amongst the Royals, Orioles, and D-Rays in AL futility.

In summary, no mystery exists concerning the Sox collapse. The collective personnel changes and performance, statistically or observationally, brought the Sox from contenders to pretenders. Affixing the responsibility of not making 'deadline deals' borders on the absurd, as the Sox lived not on the edge of contention but on the fringe of despair. Throwing good money after bad would have accomplished nothing short of appeasement of the unrealistic.

The Sox need to get younger and better in the pitching staff (perhaps Papelbon and Josh Beckett, if both can maintain or regain health will help), and stabilize the lineup with quality leadoff hitting, and more production from the 5-6 spots in the lineup. The Sox cannot rely on an injured and declining Trot Nixon, a fatiguing Mike Lowell, and have to wonder what Jason Varitek's future offensive production will be. The upper minors do not appear to be overladen with position players who are on the cusp of stardom, and the lower minors' pitching depth presumably will require a couple of years of seasoning.

Theo Epstein and ownership face a tall order this off-season, as the 'transition year' became a 'disaster year' as the Sox slipped into the bottom quartile, yes bottom fourth of major league teams. Talent discrepancy, not effort, becomes the focus. Ownership's focus must be to restore the talent level to compete with other franchises on the rise.


Date

Sun 09/17/06, 7:41 am EST


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The sharkDraft Pick
1168 days ago
Score 2+-
Perhaps some terrible personnel moves lately contributed to this painful (half)season.


Look who's gone and never coming back: Anibal Sanchez, Cla Meredith, Bronson Arroyo, Hanley Ramirez, Josh Bard, Johnny Damon, Kelly Shoppach (to name a few).
My contention: Theo is not as smart as everyone (including myself) once thought he was. 2004? Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every now and then.

Good article, Ron.
Permalink | Reply
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
1168 days ago
Score 0+-
They'd be a MUCH better team if they wouldn't have traded away those studs Josh Bard and Kelly Shoppach (Two O!F meter movers!!)
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
1168 days ago
Score 0+-
+ Who are these "Red" "socks" you keep referring to??? I've heard recently of a team called the Reds and another named the White Sox...
Permalink | Reply
BWWWaterboy
1168 days ago
Score 2+-
Agree largely with shark. Front office has been less than stellar since letting Pedro, Derek Lowe, and Orlando Cabrera walk after '04.
Permalink | Reply
Davis21wylieMVP
1168 days ago
Score 2+-
Looking for things to blame? How about a spate of injuries that no team would be able to overcome: Varitek, Nixon, and Gonzalez were all absent when the chances of making the playoffs began to slip away; late-August injuries to Manny, Pena, and Ortiz prevented any last-gasp drive; and the health issues of the pitching staff all season were nothing short of ridiculous, culminating with the news that Jon Lester has cancer! There were a lot of reasons for the collapse, but let's not gloss over one of the worst cases of the injury bug I've ever seen bite a team.
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The sharkDraft Pick
1168 days ago
Score 2+-
Yeah - the injuries are the given. But there's no denying that the front office has been dropping the ball for two years. Having signed some of the players who got them "there" and maintaining some of the promising youngsters they gave up would have bolstered the orgnization enough to cover some of those injuries much more effectively.
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