Chicago White Sox batter Red Sox in division series win
Posted on: Tuesday, 4 October 2005, 18:52 CDT
By Andrew Stern
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The Chicago White Sox enjoyed a 14-2 rout on Tuesday over defending World Series champion Boston Red Sox in the first game of their best-of-five American League division series.
White Sox starting pitcher Jose Contreras masterfully silenced the formidable Boston line-up, scattering eight hits over 7-2/3 innings before two relievers finished the Game 1 win.
Red Sox starter Matt Clement surrendered three of the White Sox's five home runs in his 4-1/3 innings of work including a three-run, opposite-field blast by White Sox catcher A.J. Pierzynski in the first inning.
Before the home run, the White Sox scored two runs on two hit batsmen, a steal of third by fleet left fielder Scott Podsednik, a run-scoring ground-out by first baseman Paul Konerko and a line single by centerfielder Aaron Rowand.
Konerko came up again in the third inning and pulled a home run into the left field stands, doffing his cap from the dugout afterward in response to chants for the fan favorite -- the first of several White Sox curtain calls.
Shortstop Juan Uribe, who hit 16 home runs all season, hit a two-run home run with Pierzynski aboard in the fourth, ending Clement's outing.
Boston's heavy hitters were largely held in check by Contreras before sloppy play by the White Sox appeared to let Boston back in the game.
White Sox third baseman Joe Crede booted a bunt by Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek, and a Contreras wild pitch scored one run with the second run coming on a double by first baseman Kevin Millar.
BAD THROW
But the slick-fielding Crede made up for the gaffe with a pickup of a bad throw and tag of Millar who was trying to take third base on a ground out.
The biggest bats in Boston's line-up -- designated hitter David Ortiz and left field Manny Ramirez -- managed only two harmless hits by Ortiz against Contreras.
The White Sox piled onto their lead, getting home runs from the light-hitting Podsednik and another by Pierzynski.
The White Sox, who led the American League with 99 victories in the regular season but faded a bit late, consider themselves underdogs in this short series against the Red Sox.
The defending World Series champions narrowly captured the American League's wild card playoff spot after losing their Eastern division lead to the rival New York Yankees in the final stretch of the regular season.
Last year, the wild card Red Sox won four straight playoff games against the Yankees on their way to breaking their 86-year World Series drought going back to 1918.
The White Sox hope to break their own team's even longer World Series drought that dates back to 1917 -- a record of futility second only to the cross-town Chicago Cubs whose last World Series win came in 1908.
Source: REUTERS
Related Articles
- Visible Technologies Announces Online Reputation Webcast and White Paper Series
- Blunt: Two-Thirds of Americans Support Responsible Deep-Sea Energy Development - Too Bad 83 Percent of House Democrats Oppose
- Mazu Networks Announces White Paper Series on the Network Operations Benefits of Network Behavior Analysis Systems
- One third of Americans wouldn't flee a storm-study
- One Third of Americans Wouldn't Flee a Storm
- Phils' Bell Rings Out in Start Vs. Boston: The Third Baseman, Who Was Injured, Goes 4-for-5 Against Red Sox.
- White Sox Take 2-0 Lead in Red Sox Series
- White Sox batter Red Sox in division series win
- Santana sharp and Red Sox sloppy as Angels down Boston
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds