BOYZ,
...YOU...ditching your team...going into hiding.
Whatever happened to your daily stream of...it's too early...wait and see...the Red Sox will collapse. Oh yeah...you were WRONG the whole time...with every pouting post. :lol:
While Yankees fans have already run away, sniveling in their new "Wait Til Next Year" thread begun even before this regular season was even over, the Boston Red Sox turned everything around in just one year, and one of the great bonuses...Yankees fans can't stand it so much that they are already hiding in desperate delusions of 2014, though prospects due to atrocious planning are next to NOTHING.
All hail John Farrell, Ben Cherington, and the entire BOSTON RED SOX TEAM for what has been one of the most satisfying and enjoyable seasons ever, no matter what happens in the playoffs
Red Sox complete worst to first season
Worst to first, and Sox’s best is still to come
Read more: http://www.heraldnews.com/news/x115...and-Sox-s-best-is-still-to-come#ixzz2gQaorLRT
Follow us: @Hnnow on Twitter | HNNow on Facebook
The 2013 Red Sox season started under the same clouds of gloom that rained on the two previous seasons.
Ex-manager Terry Francona’s memoir, published a few weeks before spring training opened, reminded fans of a narrative they’d been trying to forget: How Francona and the loveable gang of idiots reversed The Curse in 2004; how a more serious, and more talented, Sox team won the World Series again in 2007; and how it all fell apart in spectacular fashion in September 2011, when a toxic clubhouse atmosphere turned the former champs into squabbling losers.
Francona was fired, but the next season was even worse. There was nothing loveable about the 2012 Sox, and no love lost between the players and their new manager, Bobby Valentine. They finished in last place and fired Valentine, but there were few people left on the bandwagon to care.
A patchwork team took the field this spring amid unusually low expectations. Then something happened.
On April 15, the Sox beat the Rays, 3-2, at Fenway and were in the locker room packing for a trip to Cleveland when two explosions rocked the Boston Marathon finish line a few blocks away. The team returned a few days later to face Kansas City, but Boston was in lockdown as police closed in on the last of the Marathon bombers, so the game was postponed.
The next day, with the second suspect in custody, Boston had something to cheer about — and they did it at Fenway Park. After an emotional pre-game ceremony, David Ortiz caught the first pitch from a Marathon bombing victim, and ad-libbed a profane statement of defiance.
“This is our (f-bomb) city,” Big Papi told Boston. “Stay strong.” And the Red Sox started playing strong.
They wrap up the regular season with the best record in the American League. They’ve gone from worst to first and October baseball is coming back to Fenway. If you haven’t already jumped back on the bandwagon, now’s the time.
How did this amazing transformation happen? Credit new General Manager Ben Cherington with dumping a bunch of players with big salaries and bad attitudes. He replaced them with players known for their character as well as their bats: Jonny Gomes, Mike Napoli, Mike Carp, David Ross, Shane Victorino.
Credit Manager John Farrell, Francona’s pitching coach during the championship years, for putting the pieces together and making Boston forget Bobby Valentine. Holdovers from the team’s championship years form a solid nucleus: spunky Dustin Pedroia, the hard-driving heart of the Sox; Jacoby Ellsbury, who leads the world in stolen bases; money pitchers Jon Lester and Clay Buchholtz; and, of course, Big Papi, who now stands with the Red Sox’ all-time greats.
This team has some engaging youngsters: Will Middlebrooks, Daniel Nava, Jackie Bradley Jr. and Xander Bogaerts. Then there’s Koji Uehara, who came out of nowhere to be among the best closers in the game.
This team has pitching, speed and lots of power. It has set team records for grand slam homeruns and come-from-behind walk-off victories.
And it’s got beards — lots of beards. What “Cowboy up” meant to Sox teams a decade ago, “Fear the Beard” means today.
Sure, there are more important things going on. Syria is a boiling cauldron. Washington is a hopeless mess, with a tea party tantrum over health insurance reform threatening a government shutdown and a default on the national debt.
But New Englanders have something to feel good about. The gloom has lifted and the sun is shining. The Red Sox are on the road to the World Series. Sit back and enjoy the ride.
MANY CHEERS,
Merlot
Only embarrassment here...
...YOU...ditching your team...going into hiding.
Whatever happened to your daily stream of...it's too early...wait and see...the Red Sox will collapse. Oh yeah...you were WRONG the whole time...with every pouting post. :lol:
While Yankees fans have already run away, sniveling in their new "Wait Til Next Year" thread begun even before this regular season was even over, the Boston Red Sox turned everything around in just one year, and one of the great bonuses...Yankees fans can't stand it so much that they are already hiding in desperate delusions of 2014, though prospects due to atrocious planning are next to NOTHING.
All hail John Farrell, Ben Cherington, and the entire BOSTON RED SOX TEAM for what has been one of the most satisfying and enjoyable seasons ever, no matter what happens in the playoffs
Red Sox complete worst to first season
Worst to first, and Sox’s best is still to come
Read more: http://www.heraldnews.com/news/x115...and-Sox-s-best-is-still-to-come#ixzz2gQaorLRT
Follow us: @Hnnow on Twitter | HNNow on Facebook
The 2013 Red Sox season started under the same clouds of gloom that rained on the two previous seasons.
Ex-manager Terry Francona’s memoir, published a few weeks before spring training opened, reminded fans of a narrative they’d been trying to forget: How Francona and the loveable gang of idiots reversed The Curse in 2004; how a more serious, and more talented, Sox team won the World Series again in 2007; and how it all fell apart in spectacular fashion in September 2011, when a toxic clubhouse atmosphere turned the former champs into squabbling losers.
Francona was fired, but the next season was even worse. There was nothing loveable about the 2012 Sox, and no love lost between the players and their new manager, Bobby Valentine. They finished in last place and fired Valentine, but there were few people left on the bandwagon to care.
A patchwork team took the field this spring amid unusually low expectations. Then something happened.
On April 15, the Sox beat the Rays, 3-2, at Fenway and were in the locker room packing for a trip to Cleveland when two explosions rocked the Boston Marathon finish line a few blocks away. The team returned a few days later to face Kansas City, but Boston was in lockdown as police closed in on the last of the Marathon bombers, so the game was postponed.
The next day, with the second suspect in custody, Boston had something to cheer about — and they did it at Fenway Park. After an emotional pre-game ceremony, David Ortiz caught the first pitch from a Marathon bombing victim, and ad-libbed a profane statement of defiance.
“This is our (f-bomb) city,” Big Papi told Boston. “Stay strong.” And the Red Sox started playing strong.
They wrap up the regular season with the best record in the American League. They’ve gone from worst to first and October baseball is coming back to Fenway. If you haven’t already jumped back on the bandwagon, now’s the time.
How did this amazing transformation happen? Credit new General Manager Ben Cherington with dumping a bunch of players with big salaries and bad attitudes. He replaced them with players known for their character as well as their bats: Jonny Gomes, Mike Napoli, Mike Carp, David Ross, Shane Victorino.
Credit Manager John Farrell, Francona’s pitching coach during the championship years, for putting the pieces together and making Boston forget Bobby Valentine. Holdovers from the team’s championship years form a solid nucleus: spunky Dustin Pedroia, the hard-driving heart of the Sox; Jacoby Ellsbury, who leads the world in stolen bases; money pitchers Jon Lester and Clay Buchholtz; and, of course, Big Papi, who now stands with the Red Sox’ all-time greats.
This team has some engaging youngsters: Will Middlebrooks, Daniel Nava, Jackie Bradley Jr. and Xander Bogaerts. Then there’s Koji Uehara, who came out of nowhere to be among the best closers in the game.
This team has pitching, speed and lots of power. It has set team records for grand slam homeruns and come-from-behind walk-off victories.
And it’s got beards — lots of beards. What “Cowboy up” meant to Sox teams a decade ago, “Fear the Beard” means today.
Sure, there are more important things going on. Syria is a boiling cauldron. Washington is a hopeless mess, with a tea party tantrum over health insurance reform threatening a government shutdown and a default on the national debt.
But New Englanders have something to feel good about. The gloom has lifted and the sun is shining. The Red Sox are on the road to the World Series. Sit back and enjoy the ride.
MANY CHEERS,
Merlot