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[personal profile] rsc
Remember how I was wondering what would happen to our next Red Sox game, scheduled for Friday (last night)? Well, Despite the threat of thunerstorms (which never materialized in boston, although it had been raining fairly hard for half an hour or so when we left Gloucester), we got to the game, and I'd say that .

A variety of factors conspired to make us arrive a few minutes late, so that we entered the park as the concourse TV screens were showing the third Marlins batter singling in a run. Shortly after I settled into my seat, and while John was coming down the aisle from the men's room, a double play ended the top of the first. Our late arrival had prevented us from doing anything about food, so we decided to wait until after the Red Sox' first to deal with something to eat.

Well.

50 minutes later, we were once again able to address the question of food. During that time, the Sox had batted around twice and scored 14 runs (tying the American League record), 10 of them before the first out was recorded (setting a new major league record). By the time that first out came, the Marlins were on their third pitcher. Johnny Damon had a double, a triple, and a single, on the last of which Bill Mueller took pity on the Marlins and tried futilely to score from second, making the third out at the plate.

And that was just the first inning.

When the first inning takes an hour, you know that it's not going to be a two-hour game. Still, it was a little frustrating how the pitchers for both sides managed to drag out innings (the top of the 4th was the only 1-2-3 inning in the entire game), walking people, batters fouling off what seemed like an exceptional number of two-strike pitches, etc. After the 5th, the Sox seemed to be "auditioning" various relievers who are likely candidates to be sent down when the several pitchers currently on the disabled list are activated, and most of them did their best to demonstrate how well-qualified they are to be the first to go. Oh, and the Sox scored in every inning except the 6th, although they never came close to matching the first (fortunately).

The only real drama (of a rather disturbing kind) came in the bottom of the 7th, when a line drive off the bat of Todd Walker bounced off the head of Kevin Olsen, the Marlins pitcher, and landed over by the third-base dugout. Olsen lay on the ground for nine minutes while medical personnel attended to him, eventually loading him onto a collapsible stretcher and wheeling him off the field. We later learned that he was not seriously hurt (the ball hit him just behind the ear), and was conscious and capable of movement the whole time he was down (which was not apparent from our seats, as he was surrounded by doctors, trainers, and teammates). Everyone hates to see this kind of thing; it's amazing how quickly about 20,000 people (a bunch of the original 34.000+ had left by this point) can get almost completely silent.

As if that weren't enough. in the next inning David Ortiz (who had doubled, homered, and singled) was hit in the knee by a pitch, and went down for a couple of minutes. He turned out to be all right, and stayed in the game, but the plate umpire must have warned the benches, because when Red Sox pitcher Hector Almonte threw too close to Marlins batter Andy Fox in the 9th, he was immediately thrown out of the game. Both benches and both bullpens then emptied, whereupon all the players stood around on the field as though wondering what they were supposed to do next; it was one of the strangest "bench-clearing" incidents I've ever seen. Eventually the game was resumed, and finally ended.

We probably wouldn't have stayed for the whole thing, but we wanted to see if Damon would hit a homer to complete his cycle. (He didn't, having to content himself with two more singles to go 5 for 7).

Final score: Red Sox 25, Marlins 8. Time of game: 4 hours, 7 minutes. This is not the record for a 9-inning game; it's not even the loingest 9-inning game we've ever iattended, which was a 4:11 game between the Red Sox and the White Sox in the early '90s (a record at the time, eclipsed later that season, I believe). And it's far from the longest game we've ever sat through (18 innings in May of 2001, not likely to be exceeded).

Still, we didn't get home until about 1:00 AM. We slept rather late this morning.

Date: 2003-06-28 10:09 am (UTC)
lcohen: (lego)
From: [personal profile] lcohen
i saw reports on that game and wondered if you had been there.

it's raining up here after a gorgeous sunny morning--i wonder if they're going to get the cubs-white sox game in today.

Date: 2003-06-28 10:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jwg.livejournal.com
This time during the seventh inning stretch it was possible to hear the organ and they didn't have the out-of-synch words on the screen so the crowd sang Take me out to the ball game a lot better. Still it is nothing like in Wrigley Field (Cubs, Chicago) where the crowd belts it out - because it used to be that broadcaster Harry Karry (Caray) leaned out of the booth and sung it at the top of lungs - now they use well-known (to some people) guests for this task since he died several years ago.

HC singing HC logo

Date: 2003-06-28 10:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pinkfish.livejournal.com
We got home just before midnight, and noticed a lot of available parking. We figured the game must have finished - we even wondered if there had been one. I didn't notice the ballpark lights being on.

We were caught in a cloudburst on our way home from Medford; did that ever make it to the Fenway at all? It rained hard enought that I could imagine it would have stopped the game for a couple minutes in any case.

Date: 2003-06-29 09:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rsc.livejournal.com
There was no rain during the game; apparently it never rained in Boston at all. We noticed when we got to Wellington (where the car was parked) at about 12:15 that it had rained there recently.

The game was over at about 11:15. The reason it took as so long to get to Wellington is that the Fenway-Ruggles shuttle hung around just a bit too long and missed one too many lights, so we just missed an Orange Line train.

Date: 2003-06-28 01:03 pm (UTC)
susandennis: (meflowers)
From: [personal profile] susandennis
They were reporting on your game last night during hours and I had totally forgotten you had said you were going. Wild. Thanks for the report. Amazing.

Date: 2003-06-29 09:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rsc.livejournal.com
It was pretty amazing to arrive home, check the web, and discover that all the West Coast games were already over.

Date: 2003-06-28 07:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bitty.livejournal.com
yeah, we were in icecreamsmith last night, and teh servers were watching the game. speculation in the shop was along the lines of "is there a mercy rule in professional baseball?"
i didn't think the score too mercy-causing until i saw what inning it was.

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