Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Boston's Starting Lineup For Tonight's Bruins-Senators Exhibition Game


The Bruins' 2011-12 Stanley Cup defense run (damn that sounds good to say) begins tonight in Ottawa at 7:30, as they will skate with the Senators in their first exhibition game.

Here are the line combinations for the Bruins:

Forwards
Benoit Pouliot-Patrice Bergeron-Jamie Tardif
Jordan Caron-Chris Kelly-Chris Clark
Max Sauve-Tyler Seguin-Jared Knight
Lane MacDermid-Ryan Spooner-Jamie Arniel/Shawn Thornton

Defensemen
Andrew Ference-Colby Cohen
Matt Bartkowski-Adam McQuaid
David Warsofsky-Dougie Hamilton/Steven Kampfer

Goaltenders
Tuukka Rask
Anton Khudobin

*It's going to be interesting to see how the guys who played last night in the intersquad scrimmage will bounce back in real game action tonight against NHL competition. I'm looking forward to seeing Jordan Caron play, as I think he has a lot to give to the third line, although he's skating with the second line tonight.

*I will also be monitoring Matt Bartkowski, as I think he can challenge for a seventh defensemen spot on the big club. Word from last night was that he flattened Jared Knight in Providence. Bartkowski is a legit blueliner and I think he can compete with Kampfer and Colby Cohen for a roster spot.

*The game will be carried live on the radio-98.5 FM the Sports Hub-and tape delayed on the NHL Network beginning at midnight tonight.




Second Round Pick Khokhlachev Scores Twice in Black and White Game


Bruins hockey is back, as they held their annual Black and White game last night in Providence.

The Black team beat the White team 4-1 at the Dunkin Donuts Center. The split-squad scrimmage gave some of the younger B's a chance to showcase their talents both in front of the organization and the Providence fans, where most of the participants will be playing for the Providence Bruins (their top minor league affiliate) this winter.

Alexander Khokhlachev scored twice for the Black team in his Bruins debut. The second round pick from Russia made a great impression on his new team, adding to goals by Daniel Paille and Lane MacDermid for the Black team. Ryan Spooner scored the only goal for the White team.

Tim Thomas and Tuukka Rask both started the game and each let in a goal before being removed midway through the second period.

The one negative came when Joe Corvo left the game with an injury described as a "lower body injury". The team has listed the new Bruins defenseman as day-to-day.

The Bruins' preseason kicks off tonight in Ottawa at 7:30.




Tuesday, September 20, 2011

I Guess It Was Papelbon's Turn To Blow It


You know where this is all leading don't you? The Red Sox will back into a playoff spot say next week in Baltimore as the Tampa Bay Rays run out of gas and finally hand over the AL Wild Card to an undeserving Boston squad.

Tonight it was closer Jonathan Papelbon's turn to blow a game-giving up his first run in 21 games (July 16)-as the Orioles (64-90) won 7-5 over the Red Sox (88-67) at Fenway Park.

Terry Francona is scared to death of making Papelbon work more than an inning so this was only his fourth save opportunity of over one inning. Naturally, summoned with one out in the eighth Papelbon gave up a bases-loaded double to Robert Andino (3 hits, run), who is a shoe in for the Baseball Hall of Fame.

This result was dulled by the fact that a few minutes earlier in the Bronx, the Yankees blanked the Rays 5-0. As it stands, Boston leads Tampa Bay by two games (one in the loss column) with the regular season ending next Wednesday.

Erik Bedard returned from his fake injury (lat), not to be confused with my favorite solider Carl Crawford who bravely put his name in the lineup tonight after missing yesterday's doubleheader with a stiff neck, and as usual, Bedard worked slowly and ineffectively.

Bedard went 2.2 innings (really), allowing four runs (one earned) on five hits with two walks. For the second game in a row, Scott Atchison was great. This time he threw 2.1 scoreless innings and even Matt Albers pitched in a 1-2-3 sixth. Sadly, the usually reliable duo of Daniel Bard (2-9) and Papelbon didn't get it done. Bard was charged with two runs that crossed home against Pap.

Did I mention that a Dutch pitcher started for Baltimore? Yup, none other than Rick VandenHurk made the stoners in Amsterdam smile. He went three innings, allowing five runs (four earned) on seven hits with three walks and four strikeouts.

Adrian Gonzalez's (3 hits, 3 RBIs) RBI double in the first got the Red Sox out to a good start, it felt like they hadn't scored a game's first run since August.

Luckily the Orioles piled on four runs in the third as Nick Markakis (3 hits) had an RBI double, Vlad Guerrero reached on Josh Reddick's error (scoring Markakis) and Mark Reynolds (2 hits) drove in two with an RBI single.

However, no lead is safe with Baltimore's Double A caliber rotation and bullpen. Gonzalez crushed his MLB-leading 12th opposite field homer of the season (27th overall), a two-run blast in the third. The Red Sox went ahead with a pair of runs in the fourth on Mike Aviles' (2 hits) RBI single and a fielding error by Reynolds (his 30th of the season; what a five-tool player).

For the second time in three games, the O's new closer Jim Johnson got a 1-2-3 ninth for his eighth save of the season.

Josh Beckett and Tommy Hunter square off tomorrow night in Boston's regular season home finale. It makes me sick to write it but the Red Sox need to win to earn the series split with the AL East's sisters of the poor. Tampa Bay and New York have a day-night doubleheader tomorrow. Fun times, baseball!




Monday, September 19, 2011

The World Ends For A Few Hours & Then The Red Sox Crush The Orioles


The Boston Red Sox suffered one of their most soul-crushing defeats of the season this afternoon (6-5 to the Baltimore Orioles)-luckily few were probably watching-but they bounced back for an 18-9 win tonight at Fenway Park.

For my own sanity, I can't go into great deal about a pair of games started by Kyle Weiland (0-3) and John Lackey so I'll just talk about some assorted highlights for the Red Sox (88-66) and the Orioles (63-90).

The loss let New England simmer for most of the afternoon as Carl Crawford mysteriously sat out with a stiff neck (really dude?) and Boston's AL Wild Card lead fell to 1.5 games over the Tampa Bay Rays. The nightcap win allowed the Red Sox to go up two games on the idle Rays with eight games left in the regular season.

Jeremy Guthrie (9-17) a middling MLB pitcher but one of the best tweeters in baseball got the win in game one. He went six innings, allowing four earned runs on 10 hits with a walk and three strikeouts.

Baltimore grabbed an early 5-1 lead thanks to a two-run double by Matt Angle (Kurt's brother?) in the third and back-to-back homers by Robert Andino and Nolan Reimold-the 2004 Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz for the O's-in the fourth sandwiched around Darnell McDonald's solo shot.

Jarrod Saltalamacchia hit an RBI triple in the fourth to bring the Red Sox within 5-2 but J.J. Hardy's solo shot in the fifth turned out to be pivotal.

In the home half of the fifth, Adrian Gonzalez's (2 hits, 2 RBIs) RBI double plated Marco Scutaro (3 hits, 2 runs) and Dustin Pedroia's RBI triple scored Gonzo. Gonzalez's run-scoring single in the seventh brought Boston within 6-5 but Jim Johnson got a 1-2-3 ninth in seven pitches for his seventh save of the season.

Alfredo Aceves' three scoreless innings in relief were enough to make Ortiz wonder why his Mexican pal doesn't get some more spot starts, I don't know instead of Weiland?

The Red Sox tied a season-high for runs in the second game that like every game in the last few weeks, was a must-win. Thankfully, save for last Friday night, they actually decided to come out on top in one of those.

Lackey did his best to give it away immediately, allowing three runs in the first but the Red Sox responded with four in the first including a three-run shot by Jed Lowrie (his fifth of the season) off O's youngster Brian Matusz who has had a nightmarish season (10.68 ERA).

With two in the second and five in the third, Boston opened it up to an 11-5 advantage but as always, that wasn't good enough for Lackey. He left in the fifth with Baltimore closing to a three-run deficit (11-8). The O's added a run in the sixth before the hometown team exploded for seven in the seventh including two of the most exciting plays in baseball.

Jacoby Ellsbury (3 runs, 3 hits, 2 RBIs) hit his first career inside-the-park homer (his 28th of the season) as a shot to the triangle got away from Baltimore's center and left fielders. After RBI singles by Pedroia (4 RBIs, 3 hits, 2 runs) and Lowrie (4 RBIs, 3 runs, 2 hits), Conor Jackson cranked a grand slam (his fifth homer of the season; first with Boston) over the Monster. It only took a few weeks but Jackson finally did something for his latest club. He also made a great diving catch earlier in the tilt.

Scutaro (3 hits, 3 runs, 2 RBIs) continued to get on base, even hitting from the two-hole with Crawford MIA. Gonzalez added three more hits and Ortiz had two runs, two hits and an RBI.

Scott Atchison (1-0) got the win by cleaning up Lackey's mess with four straight outs in the fifth and sixth.

Erik Bedard returns from his own shady injury break to face Rick VandenHurk tomorrow night. Who the hell knows what to expect at this point? The Rays and Yankees have a four-game series starting tomorrow including a day-night doubleheader of their own on Wednesday, fun times. Baseball!

After losing this afternoon, I was resigned to watching my team completely fade but tonight's win gave me a temporary elixir to believe that they can do this-mostly because they play Baltimore five more times.




Brady is Still the Man, Patriots Beat Chargers 35-21


If this headline starts becoming a recurring theme, don't be surprised.

Tom Brady was unstoppable once again, throwing for 423 yards and three touchdowns yesterday at Gillette Stadium, defeating the Chargers and improving their record to 2-0.

Brady started the scoring on a fantastic strike to Aaron Hernandez in the first quarter. Hernandez beat Bob Sanders down the field, curling behind Sanders' outside shoulder and made a great leaping catch to put the Pats on the board. Sanders didn't even look back for the ball as Brady put it where only Hernandez could make the play.

The Chargers tied the game on a 10-yard run by Ryan Matthews and they made it look easy, dumping the ball off to Tolbert and Matthews when their wideouts were covered.

The Patriots owned the second quarter, as they had a 99-yard scoring drive for the second straight game. After a Mayo stop on Tolbert at the Patriots' 1-yard line, Brady led the offense down the field on an impressive drive which ended with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Rob Gronkowski, extending the Patriots' lead to 17-7.

The Patriots had another Dan Connolly moment late in the first half, when Vince Wilfork picked off Philip Rivers and rumbled 28 yards in the opposite direction. It was his first career interception, but the massive Wilfork didn't seem to be tired. "I'm a well-conditioned athlete. I didn't need any oxygen," said Wilfork after the game.

The Patriots were able to end the first half with a last second, 47-yard field goal from Steven Gostkowski and went into the locker room up 20-7.

After a scoreless third quarter, Rivers connected with Vincent Jackson early in the fourth, cutting the Patriots lead to six. Jackson was an absolute beast all game long, making great catch after great catch even in tight coverage.

After Patriots punter Zoltan Mesko hurt his knee in the third quarter, the Patriots were forced to go for it on 4th-and-4. An incomplete pass intended for Deion Branch ended their drive and gave the Chargers new life.

The Pats defense bailed out the offense just three plays later, as Rob Ninkovich recovered a Tolbert fumble. Brady took just four plays to make the Chargers pay, as he delivered another strike to Gronkowski. Danny Woodhead ran in the two-point conversion to give the Patriots a two-touchdown lead.

Rivers and Jackson hooked up once again on the ensuing drive, as Rivers floated an absolute beauty into double coverage that reached the diving Jackson.

The Patriots got the ball back with just over two minutes left in the game and bled the clock, using timely running from BenJarvus Green-Ellis and big plays from Gronkowski to ice the game with a BGE TD run, effectively closing the door on any San Diego comeback attempt.

Game Notes

*Did anyone else shit their pants when Brady's surgically repaired knee was rolled up on in the third quarter? While I don't think it was a dirty hit, it's still something that you never want to see. Brady never left the game but appeared to be walking gingerly in between plays, while not making any unnecessary movements in the pocket. Something to keep an eye on I guess. Expect to see Brady on the injury report as "Probable-Lower Body" for the next two years.

*While the Pats defense didn't get to Rivers, they did a decent job collapsing the pocket and forcing bad throws. On the Sergio Brown pick, Andre Carter bullrushed the Chargers' right tackle into Rivers, causing him to take a little bit off the throw. Brown was right there to make the play and I still thought it was Meriweather (since he's wearing the Big Bang Clock's old No. 31).

*The defense is starting to make me nervous however. For the second straight week, they have allowed over 400 yards in the air, which must come to an end. I'll chalk this up to the new defensive backfield, for now. If Ryan Fitzpatrick throws for more than 250 next week, then i'll admit that the pass defense, like last year, is a legit cause of concern.

*What really sucked was the Chargers going 10-12 on 3rd down. Yikes. I can't do another year of "bend but don't break". Yes, they made some huge plays on defense when it matters, but Brady isn't going to throw for 400+ every game. This has got to change and fast.

*My favorite part of the broadcast was a tie between the slow motion replay of Vince's interception return and Phil Simms explaining why Andre Carter was flagged for an unnecessary roughness penalty. The Wilfork replay was clearly only broadcast to show his stomach bouncing up and down. Literally no other reason. Carter got flagged for "leading with the hairline of the helmet" whatever the fuck that means. Simms was hilarious and said that he got a penalty for "wrapping him up and driving him into the ground." In what looked like a perfect tackle, Simms kinda poked fun at the rule, which was hilarious.

*Another negative from the game was the injuries. Aaron Hernandez sprained his MCL and is expected to miss 1-2 weeks. Patrick Chung missed some time in the second half, and Kyle Arrington got his bell rung on a big hit late in the game. The good news is the Pats have the Bills and Raiders in the next two weeks, so hopefully they can get healthy before their huge Week 5 matchup with the Jets.

*Chad Ochocinco had a decent game, making a couple nice catches on the only times he was targeted. The Patriots clearly don't need him to be THE guy for this offense, so I'm not going to freak out over a two-catch performance. Now if this was Randy Moss underperforming that one thing but the offense doesn't revolve around Chad, so that's a good thing.

*Man, I'm glad that the 4th-and-4 didn't come back to haunt the Patriots like the 4th-and-2 did against the Colts in 2009. Granted, the Patriots had an excuse this time because Mesko was hurt but the media would've had a field day with that.

*I love how they closed out the game too. They needed to run the ball and keep the clock moving so that's exactly what they did. Great gameplanning and execution all around.




Sunday, September 18, 2011

Oh Norv Turner, You Always Have The Most Well-Prepared, Smart Teams


Stop me if you've heard this before: an NFL team coached by Norv Turner that is full of talent yet continues to underachieve thanks to costly turnovers and dumb plays/penalties.

Yes the San Diego Chargers were at Gillette Stadium this afternoon for the New England Patriots' 2011 home-opener and as always, they were in a giving mood. The Chargers (1-1) had four turnovers to zero for the Patriots (2-0) and wouldn't ya know, New England won 35-21 in a very entertaining game.

The NFL is undoubtedly run by quarterback play so it's no surprise that Tom Brady (31 of 40, 423 yards, 3 touchdowns) and Philip Rivers (29 of 40, 378 yards, 2 touchdowns, 2 interceptions) both had great performances.

As you can tell from Rivers' numbers, he made three critical mistakes (also a fumble) and for good measure, Mike Tolbert (73 yards receiving) had a killer fumble.

New England's defense is still a work in progress but they displayed some real improvement from Monday night when they made Chad Henne look like an All-Pro. At least Rivers is legitimately a star. It helps too that he had Vincent Jackson (10 catches, 172 yards, 2 touchdowns) on a day when Antonio Gates was held without a catch by Patriots safety Patrick Chung and his teammates.

Six New England players had two or more catches, led by Deion Branch (8 catches, 129 yards), who continues to be on the same page as Brady and can always be counted on to pick up key first downs and Wes Welker (7 catches, 81 yards). Second-year tight ends Rob Gronkowski (4 catches, 86 yards, TD) and Aaron Hernandez (7 catches, 62 yards, TD) also have quickly become the best pair of pass catchers at their position. Chad Ochocinco doubled his production from last week as he had two catches for 45 yards, including a nifty 30-yard grab.

After forcing San Diego to punt on its first drive, New England went 93 yards in 12 plays, capped off by a 14-yard jump ball from Brady to Hernandez that he grabbed over the ghost of Bob Sanders. Stephen Gostkowski's PAT made it 7-0 Patriots.

The Chargers answered on the ensuing drive as Ryan Matthews (64 yards rushing, 62 yards receiving) ran it in from 10 yards out. Nick Novak tied it up with his PAT.

New England's next drive stalled in the red zone and they were forced to settle for a 22-yard kick by Gostkowski, 10-7 Patriots.

San Diego drove down to the 1-yard line on their next possession but Tolbert was tackled on fourth-and-goal by Jerod Mayo (11 tackles, 8 solo). New England cashed in on that momentum with Brady finding Gronkowski for a 10-yard touchdown pass after a 10-play, 104 yards (with penalties) drive. Gostkowski's PAT gave the Pats a 10-point lead (17-7).

The Chargers looked to get some points before halftime but none other than Vince Wilfork made his first career interception. One of the game's best defensive tackles showed off his athleticism as he knocked down Rivers' pass, caught it then raced 28 yards. The super slo-mo replay of Wilfork returning it was like watching similar replays of Serena Williams at the US Open a few weeks ago, lots of jiggling. After two passes to Branch (11 yards, 7 yards) Gostkowski extended the lead to 20-7 at halftime.

New England's first drive of the second half resulted in a punt and for the second drive in a row, San Diego's ended with an interception. This one was near the goal-line as Patriots safety Sergio Brown likewise made his first career pick by stepping in front of Gates.

New England went three-and-out and San Diego was driving as the third quarter ended with no scoring in it.

Rivers finally threw his first touchdown pass early in the fourth, a 3-yard toss to Jackson. Novak's PAT brought the Chargers within six at 20-14.

San Diego's defense forced another stop on New England's suddenly ineffective offense but Tolbert fumbled after getting hit by Mayo, Rob Ninkovich (1 sack) recovered it. Brady and Co. wouldn't let that chance pass them by as he hit Gronk for 17-yard touchdown. Danny Woodhead added the two-point conversion rush up the middle for a 28-14 advantage.

Rivers wouldn't go down easily though as he responded with another strike to Jackson, this time from 26 yards away. It was a perfect pass and a perfect catch, high level stuff from one of the NFL's top QB-WR duos. Novak's PAT cut it to a one score game again (28-21).

When it counted, New England's offense marched 75 yards in nine plays with BenJarvus Green-Ellis (17 carries, 70 yards) going in untouched from 70 yards out.

The Chargers got the ball one more time but Rivers was strip-sacked by Mark Anderson with Kyle Love recovering the ball.

New England is tied atop the AFC East with the Buffalo Bills and New York Jets. The Miami Dolphins lost again to fall to 0-2; Tony Sporano is on the hot seat for sure.

Next Sunday, the Patriots travel to Ralph Wilson Stadium to take on a team that they have owned for the last decade. Ryan Fitzpatrick is playing well and the Bills have picked up two impressive wins (blowing out the Chiefs and getting a big comeback against the Raiders today) but that group has to prove they can get it done against Brady and the Pats. Buffalo goes into the game having lost its last 15 straight games to New England.

Good luck to any defense trying to stop the Pats this season.




Hey Rays, Get Out Of Our City!


I already posted my love letter to the Tampa Bay Rays last night so I'm not going to write any more unnecessary platitudes and slurping.

There's no need to dress anything up when Tampa Bay (85-67) closed out its season series with the Boston Red Sox (87-65) this afternoon at Fenway Park with a 8-5 win.

The victory propelled the Rays to a 12-6 advantage over the Red Sox this season and most importantly, it put Tampa Bay just two games behind Boston with 10 games left in the 2011 regular season. If necessary, Game 163 would be at the Trop next week.

If you can think of something nice to say about a team that lost six of its last seven against a divisional foe, including a four-game sweep this weekend at home, I'd like to hear it. To say the Red Sox are struggling is the understatement of the month. A split of the four games probably would have buried the Rays but now, Boston has to fight until the end of the regular season.

David Price didn't figure into the decision as he left after four innings (he was hit in the chest by a line drive). He allowed two earned runs on three hits with three walks and two strikeouts.

As expected, Tim Wakefield (7-7) was no match for Price or Tampa Bay. Career win No. 201 had to wait as he went five fruitless innings. He allowed six runs (two earned) on six hits with a walk and five strikeouts. Two throwing errors by third baseman Mike Aviles proved to be particularly costly.

Tampa Bay took any intrigue out of it early on an NFL Sunday and we'll thank them for that since the Patriots were playing at 4:15 p.m. Johnny Damon had an RBI double, Matt Joyce (3 hits, 3 RBIs) had an RBI single and Desmond Jennings (2 hits) had an RBI single all in the second inning.

Sean Rodriguez's sacrifice fly in the fourth made it 4-0 before Darnell McDonald got Boston on the board in the frame with a two-run double.

Things got sloppy in the fifth (a trend in Boston's death spiral) as Jennings scored on Jarrod Saltalamacchia's passed ball and Evan Longoria scored on Aviles' error.

Joyce's two-run single in the seventh put it out of reach at 8-2 in favor of Tampa Bay.

Aviles (2 hits) had a great series as he added a three-run bomb (his seventh of the season) in the seventh.

Joel Peralta got four outs (what a concept) to record his fifth save and his second in the last two contests.

So it's all come down to this: 10 more games to decide who gets the AL Wild Card. While the Rays are playing so much better at the moment, the Red Sox do have a distinct advantage schedule-wise.

Boston has four more games at home against the Orioles, three against the Yankees next weekend in the Bronx and then closes with three against Baltimore in Camden Yards. Tampa Bay has four in New York followed by three at home against Toronto and they end with three at the Trop vs. New York.

No rest for the weary as the Red Sox have a day-night doubleheader tomorrow with the O's. Kyle Weiland takes on Jeremy Guthrie at 1:05 p.m. and John Lackey faces Brian Matusz at 7:10 p.m. Two awful matchups in a season that is quickly dissolving into a complete debacle.