[b:1911ef72d0]The Steamer is steaming[/b:1911ef72d0]
"Furious... Disgusted." That was all Red Sox reliever Bob Stanley could say in response to questions about his performance in games 3 and 4 of the Championship Series. In the last two games Stanley has been credited with two blown saves and two loses. The Red Sox feel like they should be up 3 games to 1 and looking at a chance to close out the White Sox. Instead, they find themselves facing elimination at Comiskey tonight.
Game four was a particularly difficult loss to swallow. Eddie Cicotte pitched the Red Sox to a 2 to 1 lead going to the bottom of the 8th. The Red Sox had been out hit 7 to 4 through the first 7 innings, but Cicotte was able to pitch out of trouble and Carl Yastrzemski made a great throw to cut down Luke Appling at the plate in the fifth with the potential tying run. The decision to try to score Appling from first on Dick Allen's one out double was questionable and White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen could be seen screaming at his thrid base coach Jeff Cox in the dugout when the inning ended.
The game remained 2 to 1 until Stanley entered to start the eigth. Despite Stanley's struggles the night before, Red Sox manager Joe Cronin decided to try to get six outs from his closer. After getting Appling to fly out, Stanley walked Allen who advanced to third on a single by Harry Lord. Tommie Agee followed with a deep fly to right field that Reggie Smith was able to track down, but Allen trotted in with the tying run.
Neither team threatened in the ninth. In the tenth Rico Petrocelli drew a one out walk after Terry Forster struck our Rich Gedman. Cronin then decided not to pinch hit for his struggling closer, and Stanley was able to sacrifice the Red Sox short stop into scoring position. The fleet footed Patsy Dougherty ran for Petrocelli and Pete Runnels came to the plate. Runnels had given the Red Sox the lead with his RBI single in the fifth and it looked like he'd come through again when he singled up the middle. With two outs Dougherty was off at the crack of the bat and looked like he'd score easily, but he stumbled rounding third and Agee's one hop throw to Mike Tresh nipped him at the plate.
Appling opened the home half of the tenth with a single to left and Stanley then walked Allen. The White Sox three and four hitters seemed to be involved in every Chicago threat all night, and the winning rally would be no different. Cronin had seen enough and went to Bill Lee to face the left-handed hitting Lord. Lord lined Lee's first pitch right back through the box, but with nobody out Cox didn't dare try to score Appling despite the fact that Appling got to third base well before Fred Lynn got to the ball in center field. When Agee fouled out to Gedman, Cox wondered briefly if he'd been too conservative with Appling. But Tresh singled to left to bring in the game winner and save Cox from Guillen's wrath.
Cicotte looked particularly dejected after the 3-2 loss. He hadn't had his best stuff, but he got big outs when he needed them and even contributed with the bat driving in the first Red Sox run. Asked if he thought he should have been pulled, the Boston junk-baller said, "Of course I thought I could finish the game, but we'll never know. Don't pin this one on Bob though, we win as a team and we lose as a team."
Game three was no better for the Old Towne Team. They lost by an identical 3 to 2 score, once again in walk off fashion. Stanley entered this game in the 9th with a 2 to 1 lead. Tony Lupien pinch hit for Earl Caldwell who had given up a solo home run to Runnels in the 8th to give the Red Sox the lead. Lupien barely made contact with a Stanley sinker, advancing the ball about 20 feet in front of home plate, but he was able to beat Gedman's throw to first for a single.
Guillen then put himself in the game to pinchrun. As it turns out, the old guy still has some wheels, and he was able to score from first on Tim Raines' double into the right-center field gap. Dougherty, who had replaced Lynn defensively in centerfield in the eighth, appeared to be shaded too far to left-center. Lynn got up limping after trying to break up a double play in the top of the seventh. He was able to play the field in the bottom of the seventh, but didn't come out for the eighth. He could be seen on the top step of the dugout yelling to Dougherty to shade Raines toward right, but with the boisterous Comisky crowd, he couldn't get the outfielder's attention. Dougherty was able to cut the ball off just shy of the wall. He wheeled and threw home, but his throw was up the first base line. Guillen scored easily and the wide throw allowed Raines to take third. That proved critical as Wally Moses followed with a weak ground ball to short. Raines never hesitated, breaking on contact and beating Petrocelli's throw with a great slide around Gedman's tag.
The Red Sox had jumped out to an early 1 - 0 lead in the second inning when Dick Stuart tripled off the top of the wall in center and scored on Gedman's RBI ground out. George Winter pitched brilliantly for the Red Sox, holding the south siders scoreless until the seventh when Appling singled in Rip Radcliff with the tying run.
The White Sox now have a three games to one lead, the teams having split the first two at Fenway. The Red Sox only win came in game 2 when Jack Quinn beat Sloppy Thurston 6 to 3 on the strength of home runs by Yastrzemski, Smith and Lynn.
Dick Allen had two home runs and four RBI to pace the White Sox to a 10 - 6 win in game 1. Billy Pierce got the win over Bruce Hurst in the opener. The two lefties square of again tonight at Comisky, where the Red Sox either win or go home.