Games

Recap
 
Ramirez powers Red Sox past Rays in brawl-marred contest
BOSTON 7, TAMPA BAY 1
 


By Tony Lee
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BOSTON (Ticker) -- Manny Ramirez was late to one fight, in the
middle of another and found just enough time to deliver
haymakers with his bat during a wild Thursday night at Fenway
Park.

Amid a chippy affair that saw a bench-clearing brawl in the
second inning and a scuffle in the Boston Red Sox dugout between
Ramirez and teammate Kevin Youkilis, the Red Sox slugger smashed
a three-run homer in the first and had five RBI before leaving
with an apparent leg injury in Boston's 7-1 victory over the
Tampa Bay Rays.

Five players were hit by pitches, three ejected and two Red Sox
- Ramirez and rookie outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury - hurt in a
three-hour, 40-minute affair that saw Boston extend its home
winning streak to 13.

"What we wanted to do was win the game and that's what we did,"
Boston manager Terry Francona said. "I know a lot happened in
between."

That may be the understatement of the year.

Following a contentious meeting the night before that suggested
the tense but one-sided rivalry would remain so, the teams
wasted little time getting into it Thursday.

Rays starter James Shields plunked Red Sox center fielder Coco
Crisp with a pitch to open the bottom of the second inning,
carrying on a dispute between Crisp and Tampa Bay that started
Wednesday night. Shields, Crisp and Rays designated hitter
Jonny Gomes were ejected after what amounted to a violent fight.

Crisp slid hard into Tampa Bay second baseman Akinori Iwamura in
the eighth inning Wednesday. Crisp called it a premeditated
move made in retaliation for a hard play at second earlier in
the game that left him with an injured thumb.

"I thought what he did yesterday was absolutely a dirty move,"
said Shields, who hit Crisp in the right leg. "I thought it was
bush league. I think it's not supposed to be in the game of
professional baseball. I'm out there to protect my players no
matter what the cost is. If I have to get out in the second
inning than I have to get out in the second inning. But I
thought I did it the right way and he came out at me and things
went down."

Crisp actually agreed, giving Shields credit for hitting him low
and taking care of business, but blasted Gomes and Rays left
fielder Carl Crawford for dirty play at the bottom of the pile.

"We went down to the ground, the scratches on my face were like
we're playing football," Crisp said, marks on his cheek and
forehead clearly visible after the game. "After that people
were trying to pull my hair like little girls instead of
throwing some real punches or something like that. The fight is
pretty much over, you wanna come in late and get some extra
blows in, that's cool. Pull some hair, that's all right. It
was between me and Shields and everyone tried to get their low
blows in."

Shields was waiting for Crisp but missed wildly with the first
punch as Boston's center fielder moved out of the way. Crisp
was wayward with an answer before a rush of players and coaches
swallowed the brawlers into a pile on the mound.

In the mix, Red Sox third base coach DeMarlo Hale took down
Shields from behind while Gomes jumped on Crisp, throwing
punches that mostly tagged the back of his own catcher, Dioner
Navarro, who was atop Crisp.

Gomes was a key figure in a spring training brawl with the New
York Yankees, sprinting in from his right field position to
fight Shelley Duncan at second base.

"In this game for 100 years you've been seeing that," Gomes
said, insisting he was only protecting his teammates. "Is it the
right thing? Is it the wrong thing? I don't know. It just
seems in this game that's how messages are sent. From the slide
that (Crisp) took the other day, I don't know if he took it upon
himself, but that's what it's from.

The designated hitter Thursday, Ramirez likely was in the
batting cage when fists started flying and was among the last to
reach the mound.

However, the enigmatic slugger was not through making his
presence felt. His two-run single in the fourth finished the
scoring and, after Youkilis and he exchanged words in the dugout
following the frame, Ramirez slapped Youkilis with a backhand
before both players were separated.

Neither player spoke with media following the game, and Francona
said only that the two "were just exchanging some views on
things."

Speculation arose that Youkilis was either upset that Ramirez
failed to hustle on a force-out to end the fourth, or for not
taking an outfield spot after Crisp was ejected and rookie
Jacoby Ellsbury left with a strained right wrist.

Regardless, Francona said it was settled.

"We had a lot of testosterone going tonight," he said. "It was
a hectic night. Sometimes those things happen. It wasn't really
a big deal, it won't be a big deal, it happens."

Ramirez, whose home run was the 503rd of his career and fifth in
nine games, appeared to tweak his knee holding up a swing in the
seventh. He went to first on a walk but was replaced by Kevin
Cash one batter later, ending his first five-RBI performance
since July 1, 2006.

Overshadowed by the fights and injuries was a steady performance
by Jon Lester (4-3), who yielded a run and eight hits in 6 1/3
innings. Lester struck out five and walked none in improving to
8-2 in his career at Fenway Park.

Lester was a relative afterthought in a game that ran Boston's
home winning streak against Tampa Bay to eight. The Red Sox
lead the Rays in the American League East by 1 1/2 games.

Shields (4-4) was charged with four runs in one-plus innings in
dropping his second straight decision against the Red Sox since
shutting them out April 27.

With Dustin Pedroia and J.D. Drew aboard in the first, Ramirez
clubbed a Shields offering in the first far over the "Green
Monster" where it landed on the top of a parking garage.

Willy Aybar delivered the Rays' only run of the night with an
RBI double in the second, but Boston managed a quick answer
following the brawl.

Rookie Chris Carter made his major league debut pinch-running
for Crisp. A walk, groundout and fly ball by Pedroia brought
Carter in to make it 4-1, and Carter's single in his first
career at-bat ignited a three-run rally in the fourth.

Ellsbury rolled over his right wrist making a diving catch in
the fourth, his glove getting caught under him as he landed.
X-rays were negative and it was labeled a strain.

"When we got out to see him, it hurt and you saw how it looked
but I think that we're very hopeful that that's all it is,"
Francona said.

Youkilis, Crawford and Iwamura were each hit by pitches later in
the game, and Lester buzzed Cliff Floyd in the seventh before
staring the lefthander down.

Perhaps those acts will help the ill feelings simmer until they
meet in Tampa Bay later this month. Shields, for one, is not
prepared to be intimidated by the world champs.

"We've been getting stomped around the last 10 years and it
isn't going to happen anymore," he said. "I had to let them
know early and let them know right away."

Major League Baseball likely will serve suspensions for the
three ejected, and may have some penalties for Crawford or
Iwamura, who were active in the pile.

 
Free Sports Scores and Odds by Phone - All New Numbers!
AKRON
800-682-6222
ALBANY
800-355-0004
ALEXANDRIA
703-660-8700
ATLANTA
404-842-1313
BALTIMORE
410-484-1818
BIRMINGHAM
205-945-5544
BOSTON
617-723-1818
BUFFALO
716-824-2525
CAMDEN
800-878-8736
CHARLOTTE
704-342-1313
CHARLESTON, SC
843-769-7200
CHICAGO
312-609-1313
CINCINNATI
800-682-6222
CLEVELAND
216-623-1313
COLUMBIA, SC
803-765-1313
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DAYTON
800-682-6222
DOTHAN, AL
800-524-4116
EVANSVILLE
800-711-0002
FORT LAUDERDALE
800-524-4116
GREENVILLE, SC
864-370-2828
HARRISBURG, PA
800-711-0002
HARTFORD
800-828-4455
HOUSTON
713-774-1200
HUNTSVILLE, AL
800-524-4116
INDIANAPOLIS
800-711-0002
KNOXVILLE
800-524-4116
LAS VEGAS
702-979-1844
LEXINGTON, KY
800-711-0002
LITTLE ROCK
800-682-6222
LOS ANGELES
800-711-0002
LONG ISLAND
800-355-0004
LOUISVILLE
800-711-0002
MEMPHIS
800-524-4116
MIAMI
305-669-5433
MILWAUKEE
800-682-6222
MOBILE
251-666-5400
MONTGOMERY
800-524-4116
NASHVILLE
615-244-8888
NEW HAVEN, CT
800-828-4455
NEW YORK CITY
800-355-0004
NEWARK
800-878-8736
NORFOLK
757-461-1818
PHILADELPHIA
215-471-3000
PHOENIX
800-878-8736
PITTSBURGH
412-645-9800
PROVIDENCE
800-828-4455
RICHMOND
804-359-9400
ROCHESTER
585-454-1616
SAN FRANCISCO
800-711-0002
SCRANTON, PA
570-342-6500
SOUTH JERSEY
800-878-8736
SPRINGFIELD, MA
800-828-4455
SYRACUSE
315-437-1313
TAMPA
800-524-4116
TRENTON
609-528-2500
TULSA
800-682-6222
TUSCALOOSA
800-524-4116
WASHINGTON, DC
202-898-1818
WORCESTER, MA
800-828-4455
YOUNGSTOWN
800-682-6222
OTHER - NATIONWIDE
412-645-9800

Disclaimer