Eduardo Rodriguez

Game 79 Recap: Red Sox 4, Blue Jays 3

#Ed #MOOK #TurningPoint #LoveThisTeam

Top Play (WPA): The game got a little scary for the Red Sox in the seventh. The inexplicably solid Tommy Layne came on to face a lineup of right handers, and who’d have thunk, it went poorly. The exclamation point was a two-run home run off the bat of Jose Reyes (.176) that brought the Jays within a run. Stupid Blue Jays taking the top play in a game they lost. Let us enjoy this, Canada.

Boston, meanwhile, did all their damage at the start of the game. Their first two runs came in the first against an impressively unimpressive Marco Estrada, who allowed both runs without allowing a hit. They were scored on bases loaded walks from Mike Napoli (.095) and Alejandro “Turning Point” De Aza (.097).

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Bottom Play (WPA): Although this was a relatively close game throughout, it never really felt like the win was in question for most of the game. The fact that Reyes’ homer brought it within one was a little shocking. This is my way of saying the bottom plays were wholly uninteresting. The worst was when Danny Valencia hit a routine fly ball to right field to lead off the ninth (-.088). This was followed by yet another routine fly ball to right field, this time from Dioner Navarro (-.065).   This was the bottom play on opposite day:

Key Moment: The key moment here came in the fifth inning. Eduardo Rodriguez had a good outing overall, but there were still some hiccups along the way. As Jerry Remy pointed out many times on the broadcast, he was still tipping his pitches. Devon Travis led off that inning by smashing a double off the right field wall, and moved over to third on a grounder. Rodriguez now had a man on third with one out and Josh Donaldson, Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion coming up. Then, the young pitcher turned on #Ed mode. He finished off an impressive at bat by blowing away Donaldson with a fastball to record the second out, and got Bautista to ground out to end one of Toronto’s few legitimate threats.

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Trends to Watch: Rodriguez had a much-needed bounce back last night. After getting lit up for most of this month, he made some necessary adjustments and beat the best offense in the league. He was still tipping his pitches a bit, but it was at least much more subtle than his last few times out. One start doesn’t heal all wounds, but being able to string a few of these together will be huge for him.

Remember when Pablo Sandoval was really bad at defense for a little while? That was weird. He’s back to being his old above-average self, it appears, as he made a few really nice plays last night. He’ll never have plus range, but his footwork is outstanding and he has plenty of arm strength to make the tough throws.

Mookie Betts just keeps hitting. After some expected first-full-year struggles, it looks like he’s made the key adjustment and is destroying baseballs. He had a couple of hits last night, including a double, and also showed off his impressive speed.

Boston has now won four of its last five in a key stretch against divisional rivals. There is still a long way to go back to contention, but scoring more runs than their opponents lately has been neat.

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Coming Next: The Red Sox and Blue Jays will continue their series this afternoon with a matinee while our neighbors to the north celebrate Canada Day. Rick Porcello will look to get back on track against a potent lineup in an extreme hitters’ park. Should be fun. Mark Buerhle will take the hill for Toronto. The veteran lefty, while not intimidating, is having yet another quietly solid season, something he’s done for the last 300 years. The series will wrap up on Thursday with Wade Miley taking on Matt Boyd before Boston heads back home to welcome the Astros to town.

And hopefully more of this:

Photo by Dan Hamilton/USA Today Sports Images

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