NEW YORK -- With the Red Sox able to expand their roster with minor league call-ups starting Saturday, manager Terry Francona said it was unlikely the team would make a roster move for this afternoon's game against the Yankees to make up for the absence of left fielder Manny Ramírez, who did not play last night and is expected to be out indefinitely.
"I don't think it's going to be a couple of days," Francona said after last night's 4-3 loss. "It's more likely to be multiple days as opposed to tomorrow . . . I think we need to play this one out."
Red Sox chief internist Laurence Ronan examined Ramírez yesterday, and the team later announced that Ramírez had a strained left oblique (side) muscle, which he aggravated with a swing during his last at-bat Tuesday. "He's still pretty sore," said Francona, who said Ramírez has had back problems off and on for six weeks.
"He's done an admirable job of playing through it," Francona said of Ramírez, who came out of Tuesday's 5-3 loss to the Yankees in the seventh inning, one inning after he was charged with an error for failing to pick up Jorge Posada's single. "I don't want people taking unfair shots at him."
If the Sox should change their mind overnight, one plausible option would be to send Javier Lopez, who pitched last night, back to Pawtucket, and recall outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury.
Eric Hinske played left field in Ramírez's absence and went 0 for 3 with a walk while batting ninth. Mike Lowell hit in Ramírez's cleanup spot and singled ahead of Kevin Youkilis's home run to extend his hitting streak to 11 games.
Ramírez hit his 20th home run Tuesday in his first at-bat, struck out in his second, then grounded a single to center in the sixth, jogging to first after wincing in pain.
Ramírez has played in 127 of 133 games, most on the team. He is batting .309 with 9 home runs and 41 RBIs since the All-Star break, but in the last month, he is batting just .253 with 2 home runs and 18 RBIs in 95 at-bats. His home run Tuesday was his first in 71 at-bats.
The Sox continue to await the first draft of the 2008 schedule before making a decision on whether they will agree to go. The schedule has been held up, Orza said, for technical reasons.
"Very simply," Orza said, "there is a new computer program that they're having difficulty running properly, mainly a quirk of its newness. It's a technical matter. It's no one's fault. It's a new complicated computer program, which is why we gave [Major League Baseball] another extension. I expect we'll have one by the end of the month."
The Sox do not want to go to Japan to open the season unless they then have the traditional opener on the West Coast, preferably in Seattle or Oakland, Calif. The baseball operations side of the team, from the general manager to the manager to the players, has very little enthusiasm for a trip to Japan. MLB, however, is putting considerable pressure on the team to go because of the marketing benefits of having Daisuke Matsuzaka and to a lesser extent Hideki Okajima on the roster. And Sox CEO Larry Lucchino, a member of MLB's international committee, has long been a proponent of playing games overseas.
Part of the negotiations may involve additional compensation from the Japanese commercial sponsors of the tour to the players on both teams. There are indications the Sox may be seeking $60,000 per player, which would undoubtedly go a long way toward breaking down player resistance. The Devil Rays and Yankees were compensated when they opened the 2003 season in Japan.
The Athletics have been mentioned as the likely opponent for the Sox if they go to Japan. If form holds, the Sox and Athletics would play two games in Japan, although there have been indications that the Yomiuri Giants and Chiba Lotte Marines, the team with which Boston has just entered a working agreement, would like to play exhibitions against the Sox.
"It may not be as chaotic as the metaphor suggests," Orza said, "but the schedule is like a house of cards. You move the queen of diamonds, you move the entire deck.
"The Red Sox have a right to be concerned about the schedule," added Orza. "We have a right to be concerned. Going to Japan is not a foregone conclusion."
Gordon Edes can be reached at edes@globe.com; material from the Associated Press was used in this report. ![]()
