Four Sox players to make All-Star appearance in Arizona
With a payroll of more than $160 million and a lineup hailed last winter as
one of the best ever, you'd think that the 2011 Boston Red Sox could
have field half an All-Star roster. Instead, the injury-plagued team is
sending just four players to the Midsummer Classic next week in Arizona.
It's
no secret that the Red Sox have had some great and not-so-great
moments, from starting 2-6 in early April to going 8-1 on their best
roadtrip since 1977 in early June. Boston's recent battle through injury
has been burdened by guys like David Ortiz, Adrian Gonzalez, Jacoby
Ellsbury, and Josh Beckett -- all of whom will play in this year's
All-Star Game at Chase Field in Phoenix.
Each
player has experienced a breakthrough in a different way for this team.
Ortiz has put a halt to retirement talks and re-emerged as one of the
AL's most potent hitters. Gonzalez has been everything the Sox hoped he
would be and more. Ellsbury's comeback story is nothing short of
spectacular as he leaves his troubled 2010 season in the rearview
mirror. And then there is Beckett, a key piece to Boston's 2007 World
Series team, who is starting to earn the $68 million extension that
kicked in this season.
Big
Papi grabbed over six million fan votes to earn his seventh selection
to the summer classic. And he'll also be captaining the AL Home Run
Derby squad when All-Star week festivities begin on July 11, part of a
revamped format this year.
After three consecutive years (2008-2010) as a National League reserve selection, Gonzalez (.348 BA/16 HR/75 RBI)
was selected a starter at first base for the American League.
"I've always said that it's great to make an All-Star Game," he told the Boston Globe earlier this week, "but you've still got another half to play so you have to continue to play hard."
Ellsbury
is having the best season of his career and it could not have come at a
better time. Just one year removed from the debacle that was a
season-ending rib injury, the electric center fielder is tied for third
in the AL with 104 hits and first in the league in steals,
with 27. As a first-time All-Star, Ellsbury deserves to be considered
as one of the top five leadoff hitters in the game today.
The
only Red Sox pitcher to make the All-Star Game this year, Beckett
started the season as a middle-of-the-rotation starter but has become
the de facto
ace on the heels of a Cy Young-caliber first half in which the
righthander has gone 7-3 with a 2.12 ERA. Beckett makes his third
All-Star appearance as a reserve after rebounding from a dismal 2010
(6-6, 5.78 ERA).
And
with injuries to the Sox' core pitching staff, the team will be riding
their ace's shoulders harder than ever as he attempts to pick up the
slack left by the disabled Clay Buchholz and soon-to-be-disabled Jon
Lester. Buchholz has been out since June 16 with a strained back. Lester
left last night's game against the Blue Jays in the fourth inning with a
strained left latissimus dorsi muscle.
At
50-35, the Red Sox are1.5 games behind the AL East-leading Yankees.
With just five games left before the All-Star break, the team will be
looking to pick up some easy wins versus the Blue Jays and Orioles,
while giving their battered roster a couple of extra days off. After
all, can you imagine this squad heading down the stretch having to rely
on J.D "I can't-hit-the-ball" Drew and John Lackey?
Video: 2011 All-Star starters announced