|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 18, 2022 17:46:23 GMT -5
Blue Jays @ Red Sox Tuesday April 19th 2022 7pm @ Fenway Park
Kikuchi 0-0 5.40
Eovaldi 0-0/ 4.50
Red Sox ready for challenge vs. 'powerful' Blue Jays FLM
The Boston Red Sox open their first home series against an American League East opponent as the Toronto Blue Jays visit New England on Tuesday night.
Boston's Nathan Eovaldi (1-0, 4.50 ERA) will make his third start of the season. The right-hander has thrown five innings in each of his first two starts, winning Wednesday at Detroit after striking out six and allowing just two earned runs on four hits.
The Red Sox, who fell 8-3 in Monday's finale of a four-game set against Minnesota, went 10-9 last season against the Blue Jays.
"(They're) one of the best teams in the big leagues, very powerful," Boston manager Alex Cora said. "They have one of the best players in Vladdy (Vladimir Guerrero Jr.), but they were a really good team (last year) that kept getting better."
After the upcoming three-game set, the division foes will play four more starting next Monday at Toronto.
Tuesday will mark Eovaldi's ninth career start opposite Toronto. He is 1-2 with a 4.56 ERA and has 48 strikeouts in 49 1/3 innings against the Blue Jays after facing them twice in 2021.
Eovaldi pitched 6 2/3 shutout innings in a June 14 home start against Toronto last season but had a no-decision in an eventual 2-1 Boston win.
Toronto has alternated results over its last seven games. Sunday's 4-3 win over Oakland was its second in three weekend matchups against the Athletics.
With Teoscar Hernandez (oblique) out, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. has performed well behind Guerrero in the batting order, collecting at least one hit in eight of 10 games this season. He was 2-for-3 Sunday.
"It's a big responsibility hitting behind Vladdy, but it will be the same plan for me," Gurriel said recently. "There's no secret we have the best hitter in the league in Vlad. ... I'm going to continue to be prepared for (intentional walks) because it's going to happen again and again and again."
This will mark Toronto's first series without left-hander Hyun Jin Ryu, who was placed on the 10-day injured list Sunday with left forearm inflammation. Ryu lasted just four innings in his Saturday start against Oakland, which the Jays lost.
Right-hander Alek Manoah gave Toronto a boost with six innings of two-run ball Sunday.
"His last 10 starts, we've won every game," Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said. "He just gives us a chance. Everybody feels it when he takes the mound."
Blue Jays left-hander Yusei Kikuchi (0-1, 5.40) makes his second start after being charged with a loss at Yankee Stadium last Tuesday, allowing three runs (two earned) on five hits in 3 1/3 innings.
Kikuchi has allowed 10 hits and eight runs (seven earned) in two career starts against Boston, while going 0-1 with a 5.92 ERA.
For Boston, the series begins just a day after catcher Kevin Plawecki and two staff members tested positive for COVID-19. Connor Wong was recalled from Triple-A Worcester after Plawecki, who is vaccinated, landed on the COVID-19 injured list.
Cora previously said that the team would be without multiple unvaccinated players next week in Canada. Pitcher Tanner Houck, who is slated to start Thursday in Boston, confirmed that he is one of them.
"We knew it beforehand, so we'll plan accordingly," Cora said.
"I'm definitely bummed that I won't be able to make that start," Houck said, according to the Boston Globe. "But the starts that I am able to make, I plan on giving 100 percent for this team, if not more so."
--Field Level Media
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 18, 2022 17:48:50 GMT -5
SP Probables for rest of series
Wednesday..7pm..Berrios 0-0/11.84 vs Pivetta 0-0/ 9.39
Thursday....1:30pm.....Gausman 0-0/4.20 vs Houck 0-0/3.00
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 3:00:03 GMT -5
Red Sox catcher Kevin Plawecki, two staff members, test positive for COVID-19 By Julian McWilliams Globe Staff,Updated April 18, 2022,
Catcher Kevin Plawecki and two Red Sox staff members tested positive for COVID-19, manager Alex Cora said prior to Monday morning’s 8-3 loss to the Twins.
Many Sox staff members chose to wear masks inside the clubhouse Monday, with Plawecki in one as he showed up at Fenway Park. He changed into his Red Sox gear before leaving the clubhouse for some time. When he returned, Plawecki immediately changed back into his street clothes and left.
“I’m not going to be concerned about stuff I can’t control,” Cora said before the loss. “We went through the whole protocol. There were a few close contacts. They got tested. They’re good. So we live today and we’ll see what happens.”
After the game, Cora said no other players or staff members had tested positive.
Plawecki, who is fully vaccinated, could miss up to 10 days. But if he presents two negative PCR tests, has no fever, and receives approval from the joint COVID medical committee, he could return sooner.
Catcher Connor Wong was called up from Worcester to take Plawecki’s spot on the roster. Rafael Devers, or a star from the Matrix?
In the bottom of the sixth inning, Rafael Devers provided a Red Sox highlight in a game that featured very few.
With one out and Devers on first following a single, Xander Bogaerts ripped a two-hopper off the Green Monster. Devers raced around second, looking to take the extra bag.
Trevor Larnach fielded it cleanly and when third baseman Gio Urshela received the throw, Devers was just starting a head-first slide, some six feet short of the base. Urshela, however, was slightly off the base line toward left field and couldn’t reach Devers, who tagged the base with each of his hands, was pulled off it by his momentum, pulled his left arm away from a sprawling Urshela, then reached over him with his right to hit the bag without being tagged.
The Twins challenged the call, but it was upheld after review.
“I want to see it again,” Cora said. “I wanted to see it because it looked like ‘The Matrix,’ like the movie. I didn’t know he was able to move that way.”
Said Devers: “I know how to swim, but I wasn’t trying to swim. I was just trying to get safely to the base.”
“We were playing — what’s the game with spots on the floor? — Twister,” Urshela told the Minneapolis Star Tribune, admitting he knew he didn’t make the tag. “It was like Twister.” Getting Kutter Crawford right
The Red Sox liked Kutter Crawford’s stuff coming out of spring training, which was a big reason why the team decided to make him part of their Opening Day roster. They also liked Crawford, who came through the minor leagues as a starter, could give them multiple innings. With Chris Sale (right rib cage fracture) out, Crawford and Garrett Whitlock were two relievers the Sox could maneuver for two-plus innings during high-leverage situations.
The Whitlock part has worked out so far. Crawford? Not so much — at least not yet.
The Sox were easily within striking distance, down just 4-2, when they called Crawford to the mound Monday in the seventh. After working around a walk and a single in his first inning, Crawford imploded in the eighth. Opening with back-to-back walks on nine pitches, Crawford got to two outs with runners on the corners, but threw a wild pitch to allow a run, walked two more (one intentionally) to load the bases, and allowed a single to put the game out of reach.
The rookie has six walks in just four innings. He’s allowed 10 hits and seven earned runs.
“We’re not that off. We’re close,” Cora said. “We’re close enough. We just need to be a little more aggressive early in the count. And then after that, expand. Stuff-wise, he’s good.
“Obviously, it’s not easy. This is something he hasn’t done in his career, but he’s a guy we trust.”
The Sox want to keep building up his pitches because at one point, Cora said, they will have to let Crawford go more than two innings. Ryan Brasier says he will make trip to Toronto
Ryan Brasier said he will make the trip to Toronto next week for the series with the Blue Jays, meaning he’s fully vaccinated for COVID-19. Teammate Tanner Houck told the Globe Sunday that he wasn’t, meaning the Sox need a replacement Tuesday starter at Rogers Centre. Players have to receive either one dose of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine or the second dose of either Moderna or Pfizer at least 14 days before entering Canada. As for pitching, Brasier said he feels like he’s getting close to feeling normal again on the mound considering the shortened spring training. Brasier worked two-thirds of an inning Sunday, working around a walk and a hit. “It’s getting there,” Brasier said. “I’m getting better every time out. It was just a quicker ramp up” . . . Pitching probables for the home series with the Blue Jays beginning Tuesday are Nate Eovaldi vs. Toronto’s Yusei Kikuchi, Nick Pivetta vs. José Berríos, and Houck vs. Kevin Gausman . . . Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is batting .289 with five homers in 10 games, and has 51 blasts in his last 162 . . . Eovaldi went five innings in his last start against the Tigers, allowing two runs. The Sox split his two starts against Toronto last season, with Eovaldi holding the powerful Jays to three hits in 6⅔ innings on June 14 at Fenway . . . The Red Sox are 2-2 in a 17-game stretch over as many days, with the remaining games all against division competition.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 3:09:08 GMT -5
Boston Red Sox promoting catching prospect Ronaldo Hernández to majors as fears over more COVID issues arise Updated: Apr. 18, 2022, 9:37 p.m. | Published: Apr. 18, 2022, 9:28 p.m.
By Chris Cotillo | ccotillo@MassLive.com
For the second straight day, the Red Sox will be changing up the mix of catchers on their active roster Tuesday.
Boston is expected to promote catching prospect Ronaldo Hernández to the majors before Tuesday’s game against the Blue Jays, according to multiple sources. It’s unclear what the corresponding move will be, but there are whispers that more players could be placed on the COVID-19 injured list after Kevin Plawecki (and two staff members) tested positive Monday.
On Monday, Plawecki left Fenway Park in street clothes shortly before first pitch once he received his positive test result. The club called up catcher Connor Wong to take his spot on the active roster. It’s unclear if Hernández is replacing Wong or another player. Hernández has shared multiple Instagram stories of friends and family members congratulating him on his promotion Monday evening.
After Monday’s loss to Minnesota, manager Alex Cora said no players other than Plawecki had tested positive. Late Monday night, multiple team officials declined comment on COVID-related issues within the Red Sox. The expectation is that the club will update the media on the matter at some point Tuesday.
Plawecki, who is vaccinated, was the first member of the Red Sox to be placed on the COVID IL in 2022. Late last season, more than a dozen players, including stars Xander Bogaerts and Chris Sale, missed games after testing positive for the virus. The Red Sox are known to have multiple unvaccinated players, including Sale and fellow starter Tanner Houck. Any unvaccinated players are ineligible to play in Toronto this year and will miss Boston’s four-game series there next week.
Hernández, 24, is the 24th-best prospect in Boston’s system, according to MLB Pipeline. The Red Sox acquired him last February from the Rays in a trade that sent pitchers Chris Mazza and Jeffrey Springs to Tampa Bay. The Colombia native hit .284 with 16 homers, 58 RBIs and an .827 OPS in 99 games split between Double-A Portland (92 games) and Triple-A Worcester (7 games) last season. He’s a former top-100 prospect who was ranked 56th in all of baseball by Baseball America before the 2019 season.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 9:36:01 GMT -5
Red Sox vs. Blue Jays Series Preview
A look at this week’s three-game stint against Toronto. By Matt_Collins@MattRyCollins Apr 19, 2022, 10:30am EDT
The opponent in one sentence
The Blue Jays entered the 2022 season as the tentative favorites in a loaded AL East, finally getting to play at home (against often shorthanded teams, to boot) again for a full season while boasting intriguing pitching along with one of the scariest lineups in the game. Record
6-4 Trend
The Blue Jays have sort of been similar to the Red Sox this season in that they haven’t really gotten into a trend in either direction quite yet, more or less altering wins and losses on a daily basis. In fact, that’s exactly what has happened since winning their first two games to start the season. In their most recent series, they took two of three at home against the Athetlics. Pitching Matchups
4/19: Nathan Eovaldi vs. Yusei Kikuchi, 7:10 PM ET (MLB Network for out-of-market)
The Red Sox get their ace on the mound for this series-opener against the nominal division favorite, and Eovaldi has had a bit of a strange start to his season. In terms of controlling the zone with strikeouts and walks, he’s been every bit the staff ace we’d expected, striking out 30 percent of opponents through two starts with a walk rate under five percent. However, he’s also given up four home runs already after allowing 15 in 32 starts a year ago. It’s still a small enough sample to write off as noise for now, but it’s also something that is worth keeping in the back of your mind, especially against a lineup like Toronto’s.
Since the middle of last season, the Blue Jays have worked to revamp their rotation, and all three of their starters in this series have been acquired since last summer’s deadline. Kikuchi, the team’s starter on Tuesday, was signed this past winter after spending his entire major-league career prior to 2022 with the Mariners. This will only be his second start of the season, having allowed three runs (two earned) to the Yankees over 3 1⁄3 innings in his first start of the year, striking out two with a pair of walks as well. Historically, the 30-year-old has done a solid job of missing bats, but has struggled at times with both walks and home runs. Kikuchi will feature a mid-90s fastball along with a cutter, slider, and changeup, all of which were used at least 10 percent of the time in 2021.
4/20: Nick Pivetta vs. José Berríos, 7:10 PM ET (MLB Network for out-of-market)
For the second game of this series, the Red Sox will be looking to their nominal number two started and hoping for a bounce back after he struggled a bit in his season-opening outing last Friday. Pivetta only made it through two innings in that game, and like Eovaldi has had some homer issues already this season with three allowed in just 7 2⁄3 innings of work. We know at his best he can miss bats with the best of him, but early in this season he hasn’t even done that while also showing the poor command that can get him in trouble. Keep an eye on his fastball and slider in particular, both of which are giving up batted balls on average over 100 mph off the bat, obviously in a small sample.
Berríos was Toronto’s big acquisition last summer, getting him from Minnesota in a trade and quickly locking him up to a long-term deal to make sure he’s near the top of their rotation for years to come. We’ve seen him dominate the Red Sox in the past when still with the Twins, and he has the stuff to do that to any lineup at any time. So far this season, the righty has struggled mightily, though, only throwing 5 1⁄3 innings through two starts, allowing seven runs. Much of that damage came from his first start when he allowed four runs while only recording a single out, but even in his second start he was more decent than good. Berríos will feature a pair of fastballs in the 92-94 range along with a curveball that was his go-to pitch a year ago and a changeup.
4/21: Tanner Houck vs. Kevin Gausman, 1:35 PM ET
One of the big stories from the weekend was Houck being unable to travel with the team next week when they travel to Toronto due to his not being vaccinated, but he will be on the mound at home against the Jays in the series finale on Thursday. After looking shaky in his first start of the year in New York, the righty settled down in a big way last time around against Minnesota, tossing 5 2⁄3 shutout innings, though working around three walks in that process. He does need to get that control back in, well, control if he’s going to be the difference maker this rotation needs behind Eovaldi. Houck did throw his splitter more in his last outing, which is good news as he needs to be confidence in that offering if he’s going to pitch as well as he can.
Gausman was the team’s big addition from this past winter, replacing reigning Cy Young winner Robbie Ray, who headed west to Seattle. Gausman should be familiar to Red Sox pitchers from his days in Baltimore, but he’s transformed his career over the last couple of years with the Giants. It’s fair to wonder how much of that improvement will carry over after leaving the pitcher’s haven in San Francisco, but the early returns are positive for Toronto. Gausman has had some trouble on balls in play which has led to a lackluster 4.22 ERA through two starts, but he also has 14 strikeouts without issuing a walk or giving up a homer through 10 2⁄3 innings. Boston should be aggressive here, looking to make hard contact on mistakes, as the further behind they get in the count the easier the job will be for Gausman. The righty will feature a mid-90s fastball to go with a nasty splitter and a good slider.
Old Friends
Santiago Espinal was never a big name in the Red Sox farm system, but he ended up having an impact on the organization as he was traded to Toronto in 2018 in exchange for Steve Pearce, who would of course go on to win the World Series MVP. Since then, Espinal has blossomed into a clear major leaguer and in fact a starter on this contending roster, though even with that information the Red Sox would not re-do that deal. Notable Position Players
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is only 23 years old, but he’s already right in the thick of the “best hitter in baseball” conversation and was runner-up for AL MVP a year ago. His strikeout rate is a bit higher than you’d expect early in this season, but he’s got great plate discipline and hits the ball as hard as just about anyone in the game.
George Springer was unavailable for long stretches of last season, which had a big impact on their lineup as he’s a center piece for this group. You can get him to swing and miss at times, though even that has improved as his career has gone on while still showing off plus power.
Bo Bichette is yet another guy in this lineup who can absolutely smoke the ball off any pitcher in the game, though the shortstop is more aggressive than the two hitters above, and can be exploited with good pitches just off the plate.
Matt Chapman was acquired via trade after the lockout and added an elite defender to their infield. Offensively, he’s coming off a down year in which he was merely an average hitter with his strikeout rate going way up the last few years.
Lourdes Gurriel Jr. has watched his power drop the last couple years, but he’s still been able to make enough contact to keep his OBP respectable and keep the overall line above water.
Espinal is another guy who won’t add much power at all, but he’ll put a lot of balls in play while drawing a decent amount of walks.
Alejandro Kirk has stepped into a starting catcher role due to an injury, and while his defense is a bit shaky back there he’s got excellent plate discipline with the bat in his hands.
Cavan Biggio hasn’t blossomed like Toronto once hoped, still drawing a ton of walks but striking out too much for a guy with his lack of power.
Raimel Tapia has also been forced into the lineup due to injury, and the former Rockie is another low-power player who will put pressure on this Red Sox defense with contact. Bullpen Snapshot
Jordan Romano is taking a leap among the game’s best relievers, a conversation whose periphery he was entering last season. He cane be slightly prone to the long ball, but his control is improved early this season and he still misses bats at an elite rate. He’ll handle closing duties this year for the Jays.
Yimi García generally is not going to put batters on for free, and at his best can miss plenty of bats, but he also tends to leave pitches in the zone that can be hit a long way.
Tim Mayza is the top lefty in this bullpen, and while there’s no one skill that particularly stands out he’s solid across the board. Injuries
Teoscar Hernández is a big loss for this Blue Jays lineup, with the slugger suffering an oblique injury late last week that is likely to keep him out for at least a couple of weeks, but with this kind of injury it could always be longer.
Danny Jansen is an underrated catcher in the league, and he suffered his own oblique injury just a few days before Hernández hit the IL with his.
Hyun-Jin Ryu is dealing with some forearm inflammation, causing Toronto to cut into their rotation depth.
Nathan Pearson is an enticing young arm on this staff who has just not been able to stay healthy, and right now has been trying to come back from mono. He’ll need a few rehab starts to get ramped up for a full workload again. Weather Forecast
The weather should get better as this series goes along, with the only game to maybe monitor would be the opener on Tuesday. They should definitely play, but there’s some chance there’s a slight delay to start the game with some showers in the forecast around game time. I don’t expect it, but it’s not an impossibility.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 13:12:10 GMT -5
RochieWBZ Dan Roche @rochiewbz 10m RT @sarahwroblewski: A chilly one this evening if you are heading to @fenwaypark for the @redsox game!
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 13:13:25 GMT -5
Jason Mastrodonato @jmastrodonato · 51m For the Red Sox, Kevin Plawecki is vax'd, tested positive yesterday. Club expects to know more about COVID outbreak today.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 13:20:24 GMT -5
Game 11: Blue Jays at Red Sox lineups and notesBy Andrew Mahoney Globe Staff,Updated April 19, 2022, 9:14 a.m. After dropping the series finale against the Twins Monday, leaving them with a split, the Red Sox open their first home series against an American League East opponent as the Toronto Blue Jays come to Fenway Park Tuesday. Nate Eovaldi will be on the hill for the Sox, making his third start of the season. Lineups BLUE JAYS (6-4): 1. George Springer (R) CF 2. Bo Bichette (R) SS 3. Vladimir Guerrero (R) 1B 4. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. (R) LF 5. Zack Collins (L) DH 6. Matt Chapman (R) 3B 7. Alejandro Kirk (R) C 8. Raimel Tapia (L) RF 9. Santiago Espinal (R) 2B Pitching: LHP Yusei Kikuchi (0-1, 5.40 ERA) RED SOX (5-5): 1. Enrique Hernandez (R) CF 2. Trevor Story (R) 2B 3. Rafael Devers (L) 3B 4. Xander Bogaerts (R) SS 5. J.D. Martinez (R) DH 6. Alex Verdugo (L) LF 7. Bobby Dalbec (R) 1B 8. Christian Arroyo (R) RF 9. Connor Wong (R) C Pitching: RHP Nate Eovaldi (1-0, 4.50 ERA) Time: 7:10 p.m. TV, radio: MLB Network, NESN, WEEI-FM 93.7 Blue Jays vs. Eovaldi: Bo Bichette 5-12, Cavan Biggio 2-7, Matt Chapman 0-4, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 2-11, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. 4-10, Alejandro Kirk 1-1, George Springer 1-12, Bradley Zimmer 1-5 Red Sox vs. Kikuchi: Christian Arroyo 0-2, Xander Bogaerts 3-6, Jackie Bradley Jr. 0-2, Bobby Dalbec 1-1, Rafael Devers 0-4, Kiké Hernández 1-4, J.D. Martinez 2-6, Trevor Story 0-3, Alex Verdugo 2-3, Christian Vázquez 0-4 . Notes: The Red Sox went 10-9 last season against the Blue Jays. After this week’s three-game set, the division foes will play four more next week starting Monday at Toronto. … Tuesday marks Eovaldi’s ninth career start against Toronto. He is 1-2 with a 4.56 ERA and has 48 strikeouts in 49 ⅓ innings against the Blue Jays after facing them twice in 2021. He pitched 6 ⅔ shutout innings in a June 14 home start against Toronto last season but had a no-decision in an eventual 2-1 win. … Kikuchi makes his second start after being charged with a loss at Yankee Stadium last Tuesday, allowing three runs (two earned) on five hits in 3 ⅓ innings. Kikuchi has allowed 10 hits and eight runs (seven earned) in two career starts against Boston, while going 0-1 with a 5.92 ERA. … With Teoscar Hernandez (oblique) out, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. has performed well behind Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the batting order, collecting at least one hit in eight of 10 games this season. He was 2-for-3 Sunday. RUSH- Subdivisionswww.youtube.com/watch?v=EYYdQB0mkEU
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 14:07:32 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 9m #RedSox have placed Christian Vazquez and Jonathan Arauz on the Covid-19 IL.
RHP Tyler Danish and OF Rob Refsnyder called up.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 14:09:49 GMT -5
Chris Cotillo @chriscotillo · 5m No 40-man roster spot for any players placed on COVID IL.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 14:29:25 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 12m Catcher Ronaldo Hernández also is here.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 14:44:20 GMT -5
Sean McAdam @sean_McAdam · 23m C Ronaldo Hernandez is here, too, as expected, providing Sox with second catcher. Question remains: who goes to make room?
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 15:04:26 GMT -5
Bill Koch @billkoch25 ·
The Red Sox have no other real options. Kole Cottam has played 30 games above Class A -- the most advanced player at Double-A Portland.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 15:40:09 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 12m Rich Hill on bereavement list. That allows Ronaldo Hernandez on the roster. Christian Vázquez and Jonathan Araúz are vaccinated but tested positive.
|
|
|
Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Apr 19, 2022 15:41:29 GMT -5
Jen McCaffrey @jcmccaffrey · 14m -Plawecki, Vazquez and Arauz are fully vaccinated -Wong will catch today and tomorrow. Ronaldo Hernandez is here too -The corresponding move for Hernandez is Rich Hill to the bereavement list -Cora said he’s been at a hotel for seven days because one of his kids tested positive
|
|