MLB Odds: Red Sox host Yankees in home opener
Boston and New York split their 18 regular season meetings in 2010.
The Boston Red Sox nightmare start to the 2011 season doesn’t get any easier with the New York Yankees coming to town for a weekend series beginning Friday.
Boston’s home opener from Fenway Park is an early 11:05 a.m. (PT) start. The pitching matchup is John Lackey against Phil Hughes.
Manager Terry Francona’s guys are off to a horrific 0-6 start following Thursday's 1-0 defeat in frigid Cleveland. Boston was trying to avoid a second-straight sweep after starting in Texas. That wasn’t expected from the solid preseason AL favorite (plus 170).
Oddsmakers at Bookmaker.com aren’t pushing the panic button yet, even if Red Sox fans are. Boston is now plus 205 to win the pennant, with the Yankees (plus 250) and Texas Rangers (plus 300) drawing closer.
A dissection of Boston’s start places blame across the board. Team ERA was an MLB-worst 8.33 before Thursday's loss, with the starters (8.53) and relievers (7.98) almost equally bad.
The offense was supposed to be a juggernaut after adding Carl Crawford and Adrian Gonzalez to a nucleus of Kevin Youkilis, Dustin Pedroia, Jacoby Ellsbury and David Ortiz. Gonzalez (.981 OPS) has performed well, but the team is scoring just 3.2 runs per game.
Ace Jon Lester started Thursday. Lackey was a curious choice as the No. 2 starter after going 14-11 with a 4.40 ERA last year after signing from the Angels. Most thought Clay Buchholz deserved the nod or even Josh Beckett, but Francona chose Lackey, citing he was in great shape.
The 32-year-old Lackey did little to silence his critics at Texas last Saturday, allowing nine earned runs over 3 2/3 innings in a 12-5 loss. No hurler likes an ERA over 22 to start the year, but that will shrink quickly with a strong outing.
The right-hander went 11-5 at Fenway last year, but a big reason was run support with just a 4.34 ERA. He did fare pretty well against the Yankees in three starts (1-1, 3.20 ERA). The two in Fenway were six innings of shutout ball back in April (3-1 loss). He then limited them to two earned runs over 7 2/3 in October (8-4 win).
Lackey will be pitching on an extra day’s rest. He had a 5.83 ERA in that situation last year, compared to 3.83 on regular rest.
The Yankees are 3-2 pending their Thursday finale with Minnesota. The teams split the first two with Wednesday's game postponed. New York went 2-1 against Detroit in its opening series.
New York hasn’t left Yankee Stadium and the offense has exploded for 6.2 runs per game. One loss came this past Tuesday against Minnesota after Rafael Soriano and the bullpen blew a great start by C.C. Sabathia.
A main culprit in the other defeat was Hughes. He ruined a potential sweep of Detroit by surrendering five earned runs last Sunday (10-7 loss). He was pulled after four innings and 90 pitches.
Hughes’ velocity has been down since spring training and it hurt him in his first outing in addition to location. The 24-year-old righty went 18-8 with a 4.19 ERA last year, but those numbers were much more pedestrian after the All-Star break (7-6, 4.90 ERA).
Hughes was 2-1 with a 3.60 ERA in five appearances against Boston last year. Only one start came at Fenway when he allowed two earned runs over seven innings last May. The Yankees won 10-3.
The Red Sox were just 46-35 at home last year (minus 6.3 units). They won 56 games there each of the prior two years. New York was 43-38 away last season.
New York went 4-1 in its first five games at Fenway last year before Boston finished 3-1 there. The ‘over’ was 8-1 in those games. The teams split 18 games overall.
Neither team is reporting any significant injuries.
Weather should mostly sunny and in the low 50s. The pitching matchup on Saturday is Buchholz vs. Ivan Nova and it will be Beckett vs. Sabathia on ESPN Sunday Night Baseball.
Boston and New York split their 18 regular season meetings in 2010.
The Boston Red Sox nightmare start to the 2011 season doesn’t get any easier with the New York Yankees coming to town for a weekend series beginning Friday.
Boston’s home opener from Fenway Park is an early 11:05 a.m. (PT) start. The pitching matchup is John Lackey against Phil Hughes.
Manager Terry Francona’s guys are off to a horrific 0-6 start following Thursday's 1-0 defeat in frigid Cleveland. Boston was trying to avoid a second-straight sweep after starting in Texas. That wasn’t expected from the solid preseason AL favorite (plus 170).
Oddsmakers at Bookmaker.com aren’t pushing the panic button yet, even if Red Sox fans are. Boston is now plus 205 to win the pennant, with the Yankees (plus 250) and Texas Rangers (plus 300) drawing closer.
A dissection of Boston’s start places blame across the board. Team ERA was an MLB-worst 8.33 before Thursday's loss, with the starters (8.53) and relievers (7.98) almost equally bad.
The offense was supposed to be a juggernaut after adding Carl Crawford and Adrian Gonzalez to a nucleus of Kevin Youkilis, Dustin Pedroia, Jacoby Ellsbury and David Ortiz. Gonzalez (.981 OPS) has performed well, but the team is scoring just 3.2 runs per game.
Ace Jon Lester started Thursday. Lackey was a curious choice as the No. 2 starter after going 14-11 with a 4.40 ERA last year after signing from the Angels. Most thought Clay Buchholz deserved the nod or even Josh Beckett, but Francona chose Lackey, citing he was in great shape.
The 32-year-old Lackey did little to silence his critics at Texas last Saturday, allowing nine earned runs over 3 2/3 innings in a 12-5 loss. No hurler likes an ERA over 22 to start the year, but that will shrink quickly with a strong outing.
The right-hander went 11-5 at Fenway last year, but a big reason was run support with just a 4.34 ERA. He did fare pretty well against the Yankees in three starts (1-1, 3.20 ERA). The two in Fenway were six innings of shutout ball back in April (3-1 loss). He then limited them to two earned runs over 7 2/3 in October (8-4 win).
Lackey will be pitching on an extra day’s rest. He had a 5.83 ERA in that situation last year, compared to 3.83 on regular rest.
The Yankees are 3-2 pending their Thursday finale with Minnesota. The teams split the first two with Wednesday's game postponed. New York went 2-1 against Detroit in its opening series.
New York hasn’t left Yankee Stadium and the offense has exploded for 6.2 runs per game. One loss came this past Tuesday against Minnesota after Rafael Soriano and the bullpen blew a great start by C.C. Sabathia.
A main culprit in the other defeat was Hughes. He ruined a potential sweep of Detroit by surrendering five earned runs last Sunday (10-7 loss). He was pulled after four innings and 90 pitches.
Hughes’ velocity has been down since spring training and it hurt him in his first outing in addition to location. The 24-year-old righty went 18-8 with a 4.19 ERA last year, but those numbers were much more pedestrian after the All-Star break (7-6, 4.90 ERA).
Hughes was 2-1 with a 3.60 ERA in five appearances against Boston last year. Only one start came at Fenway when he allowed two earned runs over seven innings last May. The Yankees won 10-3.
The Red Sox were just 46-35 at home last year (minus 6.3 units). They won 56 games there each of the prior two years. New York was 43-38 away last season.
New York went 4-1 in its first five games at Fenway last year before Boston finished 3-1 there. The ‘over’ was 8-1 in those games. The teams split 18 games overall.
Neither team is reporting any significant injuries.
Weather should mostly sunny and in the low 50s. The pitching matchup on Saturday is Buchholz vs. Ivan Nova and it will be Beckett vs. Sabathia on ESPN Sunday Night Baseball.
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