Matsuzaka back in time for Boston Red Sox to face Santana, New York Mets
Daisuke Matsuzaka returns from the DL to start for the Red Sox in Boston, and Mets ace Johan Santana will make for a tough first opponent as the interleague weekend opens.
A lot of pitchers would love to have their worst game of the season include a linescore of 7 IP, 4 ER, 0 BB, 7 K and a win. All players, pitchers and position players alike, would like to be in such demand that a team would spend $51 million just to earn the rights to try and sign you to a contract.

Interleague play invades the MLB schedule this weekend with several geographic rivalries on tap. Among those series are the Buckeye Battle in Cincinnati between the Reds and Indians, the Sunshine State matchup in Miami with the Marlins hosting the Rays, and the Freeway Series out in La-La Land where the Dodgers and Angels meet. But for my money the series with the most intrigue is in Boston with the Red Sox (25-16, +3.10 units) taking on the New York Mets (21-19, -3.50 units).
The numbers opened with the Mets favored in the -125 to -130 range and Boston drawing the +115, +120 dog price. The total was 8½ or 9, depending where you shop, with the Over generally drawing the chalkier price.
Just mentioning the Mets and Red Sox together in the same sentence should bring back memories of their Fall Classic from 23 years ago. One can only guess Bill Buckner won’t be checking into the broadcasts to see his fielding gaffe from Game 6 of that World Series rerun ad nausea over the weekend.
While the ’86 Series might be at the back of my mind for this matchup, at the front of my mind is Friday’s pitching battle to get the series underway with the two players I alluded to in the opening paragraph, Johan Santana and Daisuke Matsuzaka.
The Mets ace is coming off his worst start of the season with Santana (5-3, 1.36 ERA) working seven frames and allowing four earned in last Saturday’s win over Randy Johnson and the Giants. Despite it being his worst start, Johan and the Mets still picked up the win with a 9-6 triumph.
In addition to the four earned runs charged to Santana, two more unearned plate crossings also scored during his time on the mound bringing to the number of unearned allowed to eight for Santana this season. The four earnies given up equaled the number of earned runs he had allowed in his previous seven starts.
Though this will be his first start against the Red Sox as a member of the Mets, Santana faced them several times while pitching for the Twins. The last time he saw them was in May of 2007, and in nine starts against the Sox for the Twins, Minnesota was 5-4. Of note here is Santana has lost all three starts he has made at Fenway, the last coming in Sep ’06, while sporting a rather bloated 6.60 ERA, due in large part to one particularly bad outing in only his second major league start in 2000.
Matsuzaka (0-2, 12.79) is coming off the DL from a shoulder injury that shut him down just two starts into the season. He looked to be in good shape entering the season after another strong showing in the World Baseball Classic when he helped Japan to its second WBC Championship and earned the tournament’s MVP honors for a second time. Dice K was the winning pitcher in Japan’s semifinals win over the USA, tossing 4.2 innings and allowing two runs.
He’s never faced the Mets before, though he has seen two of their hitters from their AL days. Gary Sheffield has owned Matsuzaka in 11 at bats, stroking six hits including a home run. Jeremy Reed is 0-for-3 against the Boston righty. That’s it for official MLB stats, though David Wright was 1-for-3 with a double and a K during this spring’s WBC action.
The two squads come into this one heading in opposite directions with the Mets dropping their last four while the Red Sox are off a big three-game sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays. Both teams are about even in the run differential category this year with Boston checking in at +28 (223 runs scored, 195 allowed) and New York +21 (195-174).
Jose Reyes is nursing a sore calf and is listed as day-to-day, but with the off day on Thursday I am expecting him to be at short for the start of Friday’s game. It would seem to be a no-brainer that Sheffield will serve as the Mets' DH for this one, especially given his track record vs. Matsuzaka.
This will be the seventh time the Mets and Red Sox have met for a regular season series. Boston owns an 11-7 edge, including a 3-0 sweep the last time the two met at Fenway in 2006, and the home team has won the series five of the previous six meetings. The only time the visitors won was in 1997, the first year of interleague play, when the Sox took two of three at Shea.
The weatherman is calling for a 20% chance of some showers, though it shouldn't be anything significant or game-threatening. It's going to be a warm one in Boston today, with temps reaching the 90s, but then it cools off pretty quick into the 50s this evening. Except for the chance of a stray shower, it should be pretty nice at first pitch with a temperature in the mid-to-upper 70s and a NNW wins of 5-10 MPH (in from left-center).
NOTE: The W-L records shown for starting pitchers are their team's W-L mark when they start games. Statistical sources for this article were Retrosheet.org, Baseball-Reference.com and ESPN.com
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Daisuke Matsuzaka returns from the DL to start for the Red Sox in Boston, and Mets ace Johan Santana will make for a tough first opponent as the interleague weekend opens.
A lot of pitchers would love to have their worst game of the season include a linescore of 7 IP, 4 ER, 0 BB, 7 K and a win. All players, pitchers and position players alike, would like to be in such demand that a team would spend $51 million just to earn the rights to try and sign you to a contract.

Interleague play invades the MLB schedule this weekend with several geographic rivalries on tap. Among those series are the Buckeye Battle in Cincinnati between the Reds and Indians, the Sunshine State matchup in Miami with the Marlins hosting the Rays, and the Freeway Series out in La-La Land where the Dodgers and Angels meet. But for my money the series with the most intrigue is in Boston with the Red Sox (25-16, +3.10 units) taking on the New York Mets (21-19, -3.50 units).
The numbers opened with the Mets favored in the -125 to -130 range and Boston drawing the +115, +120 dog price. The total was 8½ or 9, depending where you shop, with the Over generally drawing the chalkier price.
Just mentioning the Mets and Red Sox together in the same sentence should bring back memories of their Fall Classic from 23 years ago. One can only guess Bill Buckner won’t be checking into the broadcasts to see his fielding gaffe from Game 6 of that World Series rerun ad nausea over the weekend.
While the ’86 Series might be at the back of my mind for this matchup, at the front of my mind is Friday’s pitching battle to get the series underway with the two players I alluded to in the opening paragraph, Johan Santana and Daisuke Matsuzaka.
The Mets ace is coming off his worst start of the season with Santana (5-3, 1.36 ERA) working seven frames and allowing four earned in last Saturday’s win over Randy Johnson and the Giants. Despite it being his worst start, Johan and the Mets still picked up the win with a 9-6 triumph.
In addition to the four earned runs charged to Santana, two more unearned plate crossings also scored during his time on the mound bringing to the number of unearned allowed to eight for Santana this season. The four earnies given up equaled the number of earned runs he had allowed in his previous seven starts.
Though this will be his first start against the Red Sox as a member of the Mets, Santana faced them several times while pitching for the Twins. The last time he saw them was in May of 2007, and in nine starts against the Sox for the Twins, Minnesota was 5-4. Of note here is Santana has lost all three starts he has made at Fenway, the last coming in Sep ’06, while sporting a rather bloated 6.60 ERA, due in large part to one particularly bad outing in only his second major league start in 2000.
Matsuzaka (0-2, 12.79) is coming off the DL from a shoulder injury that shut him down just two starts into the season. He looked to be in good shape entering the season after another strong showing in the World Baseball Classic when he helped Japan to its second WBC Championship and earned the tournament’s MVP honors for a second time. Dice K was the winning pitcher in Japan’s semifinals win over the USA, tossing 4.2 innings and allowing two runs.
He’s never faced the Mets before, though he has seen two of their hitters from their AL days. Gary Sheffield has owned Matsuzaka in 11 at bats, stroking six hits including a home run. Jeremy Reed is 0-for-3 against the Boston righty. That’s it for official MLB stats, though David Wright was 1-for-3 with a double and a K during this spring’s WBC action.
The two squads come into this one heading in opposite directions with the Mets dropping their last four while the Red Sox are off a big three-game sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays. Both teams are about even in the run differential category this year with Boston checking in at +28 (223 runs scored, 195 allowed) and New York +21 (195-174).
Jose Reyes is nursing a sore calf and is listed as day-to-day, but with the off day on Thursday I am expecting him to be at short for the start of Friday’s game. It would seem to be a no-brainer that Sheffield will serve as the Mets' DH for this one, especially given his track record vs. Matsuzaka.
This will be the seventh time the Mets and Red Sox have met for a regular season series. Boston owns an 11-7 edge, including a 3-0 sweep the last time the two met at Fenway in 2006, and the home team has won the series five of the previous six meetings. The only time the visitors won was in 1997, the first year of interleague play, when the Sox took two of three at Shea.
The weatherman is calling for a 20% chance of some showers, though it shouldn't be anything significant or game-threatening. It's going to be a warm one in Boston today, with temps reaching the 90s, but then it cools off pretty quick into the 50s this evening. Except for the chance of a stray shower, it should be pretty nice at first pitch with a temperature in the mid-to-upper 70s and a NNW wins of 5-10 MPH (in from left-center).
NOTE: The W-L records shown for starting pitchers are their team's W-L mark when they start games. Statistical sources for this article were Retrosheet.org, Baseball-Reference.com and ESPN.com
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