Archive | Boston Red Sox RSS feed for this section

Luke Scott has more anti-Red Sox sentiment

15 Apr

During the offseason Luke Scott changed from one AL East to another as he left the Baltimore Orioles for the Tampa Bay Rays. When he got to Tampa he relived the moment he had as a member of the Orioles when they knocked the Boston Red Sox out of the playoffs on the last night of the season. In the process Scott had some anti-Red Sox sentiment as he revealed how he felt about the Red Sox fans.

The Rays are taking on the Red Sox this weekend and Scott still isn’t afraid to speak his mind. In an interview with Scott Chastain of MLB.com, Scott revealed how he felt about historic Fenway Park.

“As a baseball player, going [to Fenway Park] to work, it’s a dump,” Scott told Scott Chastain of MLB.com earlier this week. “I mean, it’s old. It does have a great feel and nostalgia, but at the end of the day, I’d rather be at a good facility where I can get my work in. A place where I can go hit in the cage. Where I have space and it’s a little more comfortable to come to work.


“You’re packed in like sardines there. It’s hard to get your work in. … You have to go to their weight room if you want to lift. From a fan’s perspective, it’s probably pretty cool to go see a game at a historic park. But from a player’s point of view, it’s not a place where you want to go to work.”


Scott once again fans the flames with his disdain for the Boston Red Sox.

Bobby Valentine has some unflattering things to say about the Red Sox

30 Mar

When the Boston Red Sox hired Bobby Valentine to be their manager they envisioned that he would lead them back to World Series glory and overtake the New York Yankees. There would be no epic collapses like last year. Good times would be back in Beantown.

The way Valentine talks though is as if the Red Sox are headed for a last place finish.

“I have great expectations with this group,” said Valentine Thursday. “(We’re) not the ‘best team ever assembled’ this year. I don’t know if that’s good or bad. I know that, over history, that’s been good for some and bad some for some.


“It’s just what it is.” 


I can’t translate this one. But here’s what I take out of that statement. I have expectations just like the fans. I want to make the playoffs, but don’t be surprised if we don’t.

Valentine has set up a cushion for himself in case of failure.Valentine should just shut up and manage.

Luke Scott takes shots at Red Sox fans

1 Mar

The Boston Red Sox choked away the American League wild card last season, which made for a joyous celebration in Tampa, Florida. But the Tampa Bay Rays weren’t the only team celebrating that final night of the season. The Baltimore Orioles were doing their part by taking out the Red Sox on the final night and celebrating when the Rays came back to beat the New York Yankees.

Former Oriole Luke Scott was injured for the last game, but he took much pleasure in the Red Sox not making the playoffs. Scott became a Rays fan for those last few hours of the 2011 season.

“I’d already had [right-shoulder] surgery, so I was in the clubhouse during the game,” Scott said. “The guys were battling. I was sitting in the clubhouse watching the game with some of my teammates, guys that weren’t playing. We were following back and forth.


“We were pulling for Tampa Bay. They were down, 7-0, and we were like, ‘Dang-it, we’ve got to beat Boston, so we can force this playoff.’ And then the next thing you know the score [in St. Petersburg is] 7-6. Then it’s 7-7. And we’re going into the ninth against one of the best closers in the game.”

Scott isn’t one to hold his tongue though and had some parting shots for Red Sox fans. I’ll say this, he doesn’t like them very much.

“Just their arrogance,” Scott said. “The fans come in and they take over the city. They’re ruthless. They’re vulgar. They cause trouble. They talk about your family. Swear at you. Who likes that? When people do that, it just gives you more incentive to beat them. Then when things like [the last game of last season] happen, you celebrate even more. You go to St. Louis — classiest fans in the game. You do well, there’s no vulgarity. You know what? You don’t wish them bad.”


“The clubhouse afterward was like we’d just won the World Series — a lot of celebrating, a lot of high emotions,” Scott said.


“Everybody’s giving high-fives, then all of a sudden [Longoria] homers,” Scott said. “Everybody’s in the clubhouse and it’s like, Bam! And we’re like, ‘Go home Boston! Pack your bags. See you next year.”


I guess a last place team does have some kind of emotion, even though I don’t think Buck Showalter had the Orioles packing it in. Scott fired more shots at the Sox fans.

“I got to see a priceless thing driving back to my apartment,” Scott said. “I see all the Boston fans walking around, and I mean they were crying crocodile tears. People were like this, walking side by side.”


Scott wrapped his arm around a reporter’s waist and began to wail to demonstrate.


“It was like someone shot their dog. I rolled down the window and I’m like, ‘Ah, hah, sucks doesn’t it, when someone laughs or makes fun of you when things aren’t going your way.'” 


I can hear him saying that in a Boston accent. Scott isn’t one of the best players in the game, but I’m sure he’ll get showered with boos and more when the Rays visit Boston. It should make for interesting theater this season.

Ortiz Feels Sorry For Manny

17 Sep

David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez seemed inseperable during their time together as teammates with the Boston Red Sox. Ortiz and Ramirez might have been the most dyanamic one-two punch in Major League Baseball during their time in the same lineup. They were best friends and you could tell by the way they interacted with each other.

That’s probably why Ortiz said that he is “shocked and disappointed” by Ramirez’s recent actions. If you remember, Ramirez was suspended for 100 games for violating Major League Baseball’s drug policy a second time. Ramirez abruptly retired five games into the season on April 8. Ramirez was recently arrested for domestic violence.

Just like any other professional athlete faced with a life of normalcy, if you can call it that, Ramirez doesn’t know what to do with himself. Something that Ortiz touched on in a recent interview.

“To be honest with you, I’ve talked to some guys and when it comes down to retirement, even when they get prepared to do it, once they do it they’re not ready for it,” Ortiz said Friday. “And in Manny’s situation he retired from the game when nobody expected it, so I think it has to be a little hard for him just chilling and not playing the game that he loved.

“I mean, I’m not using that as an excuse for him to do what he did because you can never go that far. I’ve only heard comments about what happened and I don’t really know, nobody really knows what happened behind closed doors at his house. But everybody knows you cannot go that far and let that happen. Everybody knows how we, as humans, look at that.”

“When it comes down to the game, I can’t imagine how he feels about not playing,” Ortiz said. “He knows it’s all his fault. He can’t blame nobody but himself, so it might get even worse. When you can blame it on somebody else you at least have an argument but when you know it’s all your fault it’s got to be even harder.”



“It has to be [difficult],” Ortiz said. “The last time we talked was when we played each other in spring training. Manny’s a hard guy to reach. I think it’ll be easy for me to get in touch with Obama than it would be to get in touch with Manny. I would like to at some point and see how he’s doing.”

Ortiz also expressed his disappointment with Ramirez regarding the domestic violence sllegations surrounding him. Obvioulsy this is something Ortiz never thought would happen.

“They are a beautiful couple and they have great kids and a beautiful family, so hopefully they figure things out and he realizes that what he did was wrong,” Ortiz said. “He needs to regroup with his family and have a good life.



“He had a wonderful career, and it didn’t end the way he wanted it to, but he still had a great career. You marry your wife one day because you think that’s the right person to be right next to. Now that you need her the most, you don’t want to be going through things like that. It’s easier said than done, but Manny’s a good dude. He’s not a bad person. I hope everything works out for him and his family.”


Manny needs to reevaluate what’s important to him right now. He’s lost without the game of baseball and it’s starting to show. Witness the way he handled the media when they tried to interview him outside of his house. He needs to realize who cares about him. Ortiz has tried to reach out to him. It’s about time he returned the favor.

 

Sheen Says The Red Sox Will Be Just Fine

14 Apr

With panic starting to set in amongst Red Sox fans, there’s one person that feels that Boston will be just fine despite a 2-9 start. That person is Charlie Sheen.

Sheen appeared on the Toucher & Rich on  98.5 Sports Hub in Boston Wednesday morning and gave his assessment of the Red Sox.

“I’d tell everybody to shut up, that they’ll bounce back. It’s a long season and there’s a ton of talent there and a really bitchin’ hitter’s park they play in. Relax,” Sheen said.

He also said there’s a script written for Major League 3.

I didn’t know a role in a baseball movie made you an analyst on the sport.

Buckner Gets A Job…In Massachusetts

5 Jan

Nearly 25 years after one of the most famous mishaps in World Series history, Bill Buckner has a job in Massachusetts. They do say time heals all wounds but it took nearly 20 years for people in that state to forget about Buckner’s gaffe in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. Anyone that was around back then knows which play I’m talking about.

Buckner now has a job managing the Brockton Rox of the Independent League. Buckner says he excited to return to Massachusetts. I suppose he would now that the enormous monkey has been lifted off his back.
Rox president Chris Carminucci like Buckner’s vast baseball knowledge and called it a “great day for the Rox”. That’s fine as long as he’s not the one leading the fielding drills.

Personally I’m glad to see this is having a happy ending. I’ve always thought buckner got a raw deal. He wasn’t the one that allowed the Mets to get in a position to win the game. Good luck Bill and maybe this can lead to something greater.