No complaints here
A day game at lovely (if drenched) Fenway Park. A doubleheader (weather-permitting, anyway). A five-game Red Sox winning streak (whoops, make that six).
Nope, we've got none of usual grievances to air here. All -- okay, most -- is well with the Red Sox. Funny how long ago that 2-6 start seems now. Sure, it was a bumpy beginning, but this is the well-rounded, winning team we expected to see coming out of Fort Myers.
With all of the good vibes around the Red Sox at the moment, it seems only appropriate to get in the spirit and accentuate the positive. So here's a look at a half-dozen players who have made a good impression in the season's early days . . .
Justin Masterson: Here's an intriguing question for you: What's the ceiling for this talented and versatile 24-year-old righthander? Workhorse, 225-inning starter good for 16-20 wins per year? Old-fashioned rubber-armed relief ace who puts out all the fires before the closer arrives on the scene for his one inning of glory? Dependable No. 2 starter? Future closer? Hard-throwing, easier-living version of Derek Lowe? At this stage, I'm not sure, but I do know this: He is a tremendous weapon for Terry Francona in whichever role he chooses to use him, and I'm not going to be surprised by anything he accomplishes. I mean . . . 96 miles per hour, with a sick slider and that motion? What an asset to have. You could tell me he's going to lead the Sox in wins this year and I'd probably nod and say, "I can see that."
Kevin Youkilis: He finished third in the AL MVP race, won the Hank Aaron Award as the top offensive performer in his league, and yet he's still something of an afterthought, at least outside of Youuuuuuuuukkk-lovin' Boston. Part of it, I suppose, is logical -- he nearly doubled his career high in home runs last season at age 29, and a slight regression toward his previous norm is possible. But given how he has started -- .462, four homers, 12 RBIs as of the seventh inning today -- perhaps an enjoyable encore is in the making. Anyway, at least David Ortiz has stopped griping about having no protection. It's a start.
Mike Lowell: I can't be the only one who still cringes whenever he has to lunge or dive or do anything that gives you flashbacks to him nobly/hopelessly trying to play through his hip injury last postseason while looking like an extra from the "Night of the Living Dead." But while he's running like he borrowed Doug Mirabelli's legs, the rest as been remarkably encouraging. He's been as steady as always at third base, and he came into today's early game on an absolute tear at the plate, batting .421 with two homers and 11 RBIs in the past six games -- then promptly clubbed a homer, double, and single while driving in three runs. He looks like the same ol' dependable Mike Lowell, which is some of the best news we could have hoped for early in the season.
Jason Varitek: A .250 average, three home runs in 36 at-bats, and a .925 OPS? Redemption! While, as you might have suspected, I'm somewhat skeptical that Varitek can sustain his solid start through the summer, he has looked like a different hitter than he was last year, quicker and more comfortable from the left side, and the cause for optimism might just be legitimate. I'm not a daydream believer quite yet, but I'm getting there. Hey, if there's going to be a catcher in history who actually improves his production at age 37, it might as well be him.
Ramon Ramirez: I like to think there aren't too many mysterious names to me in the Who's Who In Baseball annual, but I guess I should admit it: Before the Red Sox acquired Ramirez for Coco Crisp, I couldn't have picked him out a lineup of obscure Kansas City Royals relievers. ("Are you sure you're not Leo Nunez?") His numbers certainly were intriguing upon a first glance -- particularly that he held righthanded hitters to a .153 average last season -- but for all the wonders of sabermetrics, I have this thing where I'm never really sure about a pitcher until, you know, I've actually seen him throw a baseball a few times. And now that I have? WHY DIDN'T YOU GUYS TELL ME ABOUT THIS GUY?!?! Sorry for the outburst there, but Ramirez has been everything his KC numbers suggested he might be and beyond -- his WHIP is a ridiculous 0.48 -- and he's all business on the mound, an apparent mix of poise and confidence. So far, it's been a blast getting to know a pretty darn good relief pitcher.
Tim Wakefield: The importance of his complete-game two-hitter at Oakland just can't be underestimated. The bullpen was cooked. The Sox were 2-6. The talking heads were practicing their worried looks and polishing their 2-minute bits titled "What's Wrong With the Red Sox?" The Sox required a win that day, at least as much as a ball club can in the first 10 games of the season. And what does Wakefield do? Nothing less than deliver one of the finest performances of his 14-plus seasons with the Red Sox -- and I still think he would have completed the no-hitter had the Sox not had such an extended turn at at-bat in the eighth inning. Nonetheless, he was masterful at the perfect time, and considering they're yet to lose since, it's appropriate to acknowledge that yet again.
As for today's Completely Random Baseball Card:
Happy half-century, Tito. Also, nice job getting the bunt down. Attaboy.
ABOUT TOUCHING ALL THE BASESIrreverence and insight from Chad Finn, a Globe/Boston.com sports writer and lifelong and incurable sports nut. Yes, he realizes how lucky he is. You can e-mail him at chadfinn4@yahoo.com.
browse this blog
by categoryTHE BEST OF TATB
- Vote for Pedro
- The best day ever
- 'David Ortiz has done it again!'
- Better man
- End of the idiots
- U gut male
- Questions we'd have asked the Texas Con Man
- Anniversary of an Angel
- The Air Coryell Chargers
- The top 10 Maine Guides
- The 1985 L.A. Clippers
- The day Yankees fans discovered TATB
- 'Without a doubt, I'll be part of the Celtics' tradition'
- The empire strikes out
- Shortstops: The boy band
- For Greenie, and Brian Denman, too
- The Big Ticket comes to Boston
- Do not bat this man second
- TATB Live: World Series, Game 4
- Josh Beckett, and that time I was right about everything
- Eau de Intangibles
- The loneliest number
- Sleep through the static
- Shining moments
- This place is meant for me
- I don't like the drugs but the drugs like me
- Red Sox All-Time Dirtbag Team
- Live from Ft. Myers
- Quiz me
- Turn, turn, turn
- Happy trails, No. 11
- Two great seasons
- Fireworks on Cloud 10
- The enemies list
- Ultimate Patriots Quiz, Part 1
- Ultimate Patriots Quiz, Part 2
- Guess that '70s Ballplayer, Part 1
- Guess that '70s Ballplayer, Part 2
- Guess that '70s Ballplayer, Part 3
- Guess that '70s Ballplayer, Part 4
- Reeling in the years
- Daddy's girl
- It was the best of times . . . "
- As Teixeira turns
- Dave Bourque
- The 20 most important Red Sox
- Tito's parting thoughts
- About last night
- A brief tribute to ancient pitchers
- Manny moments
- Pied Papi
- Superiority complex
- Seventeen so sweet
- Lefthanded compliment
- I'm a believer
R.I.P., 'OT'
MORE WRITING FROM CHAD
- Where have you gone, Tom Newell?
- Our favorite obscurities
- Everything I know about baseball I learned from Strat-O-Matic
- Lyman Bostock: Fallen Angel
- America's Team
- Roger the Dodger
- Thanks, mom
- The Pitino Dynasty
- Aim blame at Little
- Why the Patriots will beat the Rams
- Patriots 20, Rams 17
- The case against Lawyer Milloy
- Remembering Reggie Lewis
- Extraordinary Joe Johnson
- A very Brady sequel?
- Brady's the QB now - and in the future
- Curtis Martin: The one who got away
- Sweet, embraceable you
- James gives Sox strength in numbers
- These sports books have the write stuff
links
THE FUNDAMENTALS
- Barstool Sports
- Baseball Analysts
- Baseball Cube
- Boston Dirt Dogs
- Boston Sports Media
- Dave D'Onofrio
- Jenna Fischer
- Joe Posnanski
- Ken Levine
- Maine Headlines
- Maple Street Press
- Office Tally
- Seamheads
- Sons of Sam Horn
- Sports Pickle
- Surviving Grady
- The Big Lead
- SI Vault
- Cardboard Gods
ROLE PLAYERS
CHICKS DIG BLOGS
- Baseball Card Blog
- Baseball Desert
- Basegirl
- Bloop Single
- Boston Red Thoughts
- The Boston Score
- Bronx Banter
- Can't Stop The Bleeding
- Card Junkies
- Celtics Blog
- Central Maine Sports Blog
- The College Baseball Blog
- Cursed and First
- Empyreal Environs
- El Guapo's Ghost
- Fenway Fanatics
- Fenway Nation
- Firebrand of the A.L.
- For Love of the Sox
- Hardball Heaven
- The House That Dewey Built
- The Joy of Sox
- Over The Monster
- Papel-blog
- Red Socks Diaries
- Roto Authority
- Singapore Sox Fan
- Small White Ball
- Sox and Pinstripes
- Sox1Fan
- Sports Couch Potato
- Sportsthodoxy
- Tossing Batting Practice
- TLBR
- Yanks Fan vs. Sox Fan
THE OMBUDSMAN









