Showing posts with label daisuke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daisuke. Show all posts

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Daisuke! And why Big Schill is right again

Considering that thus far this season our new ace from Japan has been the "weak" link in our pitching rotation, last night's performance by Dice-K inspires all the more confidence in the nigh-heretical thought in these quarters that we don't actually need Roger Clemens in order to go all the way in 2007. Simply put, Matsuzaka threw a beauty of a game, allowing only one run on five hits and striking out eight batters over a seven-inning outing that was his best since his Major League debut last month in Kansas City.

Of course the news that our $103 million dollar man has his stuff again on the mound was overshadowed by the media flap which ensued when another of our star pitchers (I wanted to say "our other star", but with Josh Beckett having gone 7-0 thus far this season that wouldn't really be fair now, would it?) Curt Schilling ripped San Francisco Giants slugger Barry Bonds during a phone interview with WEEI on Wednesday morning for his steroid use, saying:
"... There’s no gray area. He admitted to cheating on his wife, cheating on his taxes, and cheating on the game... And I don’t care that he’s black, or green, or purple, or yellow, or whatever."

Schilling has since apologized for this statement on his blog after having the heat from both the national sports media and Red Sox management, but aside from his unfortunate choice to drag Bonds' personal and family life into the issue Curt was absolutely right to call the man out for cheapening the game by using performance-enhancing drugs.

It's clear that Major League Baseball and the Players' Asssociation have both chosen to circle the wagons on this issue lest it cut into their precious bottom line when fans realize that most of the "achievements" of the past 10-15 years of baseball were courtesy of the BALCO Company (Boston is already feeling a little squeamish in the wake of David "Big Papi" Ortiz's revelation that he may or may not have been using steroids back in the Dominican Republic - how long until we find out that the whole 2004 roster was juicing, I wonder? I don't even want to think about that, but isn't it strange how much weight our lineup seemed to lose collectively between Fall 2004 and Spring 2005). So when a player actually steps up and says what we're all thinking is it any surprise how savagely he gets attacked by baseball's Powers That Be™?

My favorite line of argument coming from Schilling's detractors and Bonds' defenders is that all of this is somehow racially motivated - King Kaufman, Salon sports columnist and a longtime apologist for Barry Bonds, recently pointed to an ESPN-ABC News poll that seems to confirm these suspicions by showing that black baseball fans were twice as likely as white fans to root for Bonds and half as likely to think he knowingly used steroids to enhance his performance at the plate. Of course Kaufman and others are conveniently forgetting that fact that the record that Bonds is chasing is already held by an African-American, who for the record wants nothing to do with Barry Bonds himself! So does this make Hank Aaron a racist as well?

This has nothing to do with race and everything to do with the soul of baseball hanging in the balance. When we said nothing as Mark McGuire, Sammy Sosa, and then Barry Bonds shattered Roger Maris' old record of 61 home runs in a season because "it was good for baseball", we knew something was fundamentally wrong with the sport but chose to look the other way - or as McGuire himself so presciently said on an episode of the Simpsons: "Do you want to know the terrifying truth, or do you want to see me sock a few dingers?" At the time we, like the fictional citizens of Springfield, chose the dingers.

Now several years later McGuire's legacy is tarnished (thanks to his evasions during the BALCO testimony which will likely cost him his admission to the Baseball Hall of Fame) and Sosa is a joke (as if juicing weren't bad enough, Sammy was caught "accidentally" using a corked bat back in 2003), and we're supposed to feel sorry or even guilty because the third of this trio of phonies is finally getting the scrutiny he deserved all along?

The only thing anyone should be sorry about is how low we've allowed baseball to sink . Or as Eric Wilbur closes in his fantastic essay yesterday on Boston.com:
Whether it be a matter of just defending an athlete about to do something that’s supposed to be special or blindly refusing to admit there’s a problem with the game that you call the backbone of your existence, one thing is clear: If you have your head in the sand at this stage of the game, there’s nothing anyone can do to help you. You’re a lost cause, and frankly, if you’re that clueless I’m not sure the rest of us really want you joining our team. You know, the one based in Reality. Plays in Obvious Park. Have fun at Pac Bell though.

Monday, April 23, 2007

A "W" is a "W"

Well Daisuke finally got that first Fenway win, although for a while it looked a little dicey (must... stop... bad... puns...). But in the eternal rivalry that is Red Sox versus Yankees, even a messy win is first and foremost a win, and hopefully now that our Japanese hired arm has satisfied the home audience he can settle into something more like what we saw during his debut performance in Kansas City.

As for his plunking of his opponent Alex Rodriguez in the first inning, this is what Matsuzaka had to say for himself:
“With such a hot and talented batter, the thing you want to do as a pitcher is pitch inside to him,” Matsuzaka said. “As I was watching the games the previous two nights I didn’t really think we were pitching too inside to him, so I was definitely very conscious of pitching inside to him.
“But hitting him on that pitch was purely an accident.”

We know that's what you had to say, Dice-K, but you can't argue with results - after hitting A-Rod on their first meeting and reclaiming that inside corner of the plate, Matsuzaka went on to strike out Rodriguez two times, keeping his white-hot bat silent while he was on the mound.

Keep those 'accidents' coming, Daisuke, and you'll do just fine in Red Sox Nation.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Guess who's coming to town?

Yankees versus Red Sox at Fenway Park - the greatest rivalry in sports is renewed this evening at 7:05pm, when Curt Schilling takes the mound against Andy Pettite. The coverage of this series will go national as the weekend progresses, with Saturday's matchup on Fox Sports and Sunday's debut of Daisuke against the boys in pinstripes - including fellow countryman Hideki Matsui - the main event on ESPN Sunday evening.

Major League Baseball has gotten itself rather heavily involved in promoting the Sox-Yanks rivalry this year as part of a multi-million dollar advertising initiative in Japan, a lucrative sports entertainment market that MLB would desperately like to tap. The Boston Globe had a fascinating piece about this initiative in last Sunday's paper. It seems the major obstacle to MLB's penetration into the Japanese consciousness is the fact that many baseball fans in Japan don't have the same kind of team loyalty that we take for granted here in the States - if a star player leaves one club for another, his fans tend to go with him as well, whereas in American baseball a fan is practically married to his or her team for better or for worse (and will actively ridicule a fan who changes those loyalties at some point in their life, even if he or she moves!).

Right now the Japanese are buying up both Yankees and Red Sox merchandise in record amounts, plunking down millions of yen for baseball pilgrimages to Yawkey Way and the Bronx, and participating in "the rivalry" as cheerfully as possible. Will they remain Boston and New York fans when Matsuzaka and Matsui head on for greener pastures? Probably not. But who knows... in the meantime, let's all sit back and watch the fireworks!

Thursday, April 12, 2007

No dice for Daisuke

Note to Red Sox batters: contrary to what you may think, ace pitchers can't actually score runs (unless you're in the National League, but even then most of them bunt or strike out). I know that Mariners hurler Felix Hernandez was on fire last night, but surely one of the most powerful lineups in the game can offer their own star a little run support even against some real pitching.

I believe Yogi Berra summed it up best when he said "Pitching always beats batting -- and vice-versa."

(Yes, I know it's way too early in the season to be taking these things so seriously, but I can't help it! I blame going to Spring Training...)

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

The diceman cometh

7:05pm. Fenway Park. Daisuke versus Ichiro.

"I would first tell them to 'Pray to God,'" he said. "That is what I do first. The second thing is do my best. I think he is one of the best pitchers in Japan, but if you ask me if he was the best pitcher I have ever faced, that is a tough question. But he is one of the best pitchers I have ever faced."


- Seattle Mariners' catcher Kenji Johjima, on how to face the almighty Dice-K