Their team was down 7-4,
but Red Sox fans who stuck around for the end of Friday's game against the
Rays at Fenway Park had to be intrigued by what they saw in the top of the
ninth inning.
The fight that ignited after Boston pitcher Franklin Morales
drilled Tampa Bay's Luke Scott in the leg with a fastball had a lot more energy
than your typical baseball fracas. The pushing, shoving, and yelling lasted far
longer than normal, and managers and coaches played a prominent role in the
scrap.
Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine was in the thick of the action,
having to be restrained by several of his players. Usually mild-mannered Boston
coaches Tim Bogar and Bob McClure were also among those doing a lot of the
screaming, most of it directed at their Tampa Bay counterparts.
The home crowd got to see a strong peace-making presence by David
Ortiz, who came under scrutiny for his "I get no respect" comments
earlier in the week and looked like a leader during the melee. In a season that
has lacked the sense of urgency and commitment fans were hoping to see after
last September's Red Sox collapse, this may be just the spark the team needs.
So might Valentine's comments after the game about Scott, who earlier
this year was quoted as calling Fenway fans "vulgar" and the
100-year-old ballpark "a dump."
"Boys will be boys," Valentine said. "It seemed
like both teams were on the field. With the guy getting hit? Maybe it was the
Ghost of Fenway Past remembering he bad-mouthed all our fans and our stadium,
directing the ball at his leg."
t's
way too early to know if a fight with one of their AL East rivals will have a
positive impact on the underachieving, injury-riddled Red Sox, who fell to
22-23 with the loss and once again failed to get over .500 for the first time
this season. But there is an example from the not-so-distant past that suggests
it could.
Tek gives A-Rod a mouthful of mitt.
In
2004, the Red Sox were 52-44 (.542) and trailing in the Wild Card race when
Boston catcher Jason Varitek and Yankees third baseman Alex
Rodriguez came to blows at Fenway after A-Rod was hit by a pitch. The Sox
went 46-20 (.697) the rest of the season, beat New York in the ALCS, and won
their first World Series title in 86 years.
There
was no "glove in the face" moment in this fight, but Scott, like
A-Rod, is a guy Fenway fans (and likely more than a few Boston players) love to
hate. Can the Red Sox channel that hatred into a streak similar to 2004?