By David Bray
Well, that was underwhelming. After what had been the most fun Red Sox regular season in three years, after David Ortiz had a farewell tour that actually lived up to the great career he had, after the Red Sox made it back to the postseason for the first time since winning the World Series in 2013 and finally giving Big Papi one final chance to snag one final World Series Ring, the Red Sox were swept out of the American League Divisional Series by Terry Francona and the Cleveland Indians. As a lifelong Red Sox fan who has been through it all with this team, I’m disappointed, but I’m not mad.
The Red Sox have their flaws, and those flaws will have to be addressed by team president Dave Dombrowski and general manager Mike Hazen in the offseason. Their pitching was unreliable most of the year, and as well as they played in September, they came crashing back to reality in October. Rick Porcello had a career year, posting a record of 22-4 wins/losses record, while David Price found his groove in the second half of the season after signing a seven year, $217 million contract with Boston last winter. However, both looked like different pitchers, and not in a good way, on the road in Cleveland in the first two games of the ALDS. In Game 1, Porcello gave the Sox 4.1 innings with 5 earned runs on 6 hits, including 3 back-to-back home runs. The Red Sox would go on to lose the game 5-4. In Game 2, Price gave the Sox 3.1 innings with 5 earned runs on 6 hits, including a back-breaking 3-run homerun in the 2nd inning. Needless to say, there would be no final exclamation point on the incredible 2016 season David Ortiz had.
Usually the term “farewell tour” is associated with guys that should have retired a few years earlier and their final, overhyped season features a has-been shell of that former player, like we’ve seen in recent years with Derek Jeter and Kobe Bryant. The other alternative is that great players will go out without fanfare, announcing that they are done weeks or months after they played their last game like Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett did this summer. David Ortiz was different. He announced before the season started that 2016 would be his last year and he played like his normal Big Papi-self all year anyway. The Red Sox rightfully spent all of 2016 celebrating him, and have already announced their plans to retire his #34 in 2017, rather than wait for him to get inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame like they did with Carlton Fisk, Jim Rice, and Pedro Martinez.
Ortiz will best be remembered for what he did in 2004, 2007, and 2013, as the only player on all three World Series Champion teams Boston has had this century. He succeeded where so many of the other Red Sox greats never could. It’s not entirely fair to someone like Ted Williams, who only played in the postseason one time in his career because the playoff format was different, and the 2004 Red Sox who reversed the Curse never would have even made the playoffs if they played in the 1940s, but Ortiz capitalized on the chances he was given. Time and again, from the extra inning walk-off against the New York Yankees in 2004 to the series altering grand slam that turned the Fenway Park bullpen cop into an Internet sensation, David Ortiz was the guy leading the charge for the biggest moments of my baseball fandom and some of the greatest sports successes Boston has ever had.
In the David Ortiz Era in Boston, 2003 to 2016, there were only three outcomes for the team when they made the postseason: they either won the World Series (as they did in 2004, 2007, and 2013), lost the American League Championship Series in seven games (as they did in 2003 and 2008), or they got swept in three games in the American League Divisional Series (as they did in 2005, 2009, and 2016). This fact crossed my mind over the weekend after the Red Sox dropped the first two games of the ALDS in Cleveland. I thought about the fact that the only other semester the Red Sox made the playoffs and I was a student at Fitchburg State (2009), the Red Sox got swept in the first round (I never set foot on campus during the World Series winning 2013 season).
I also thought about how the Red Sox have been through this before. In the Ortiz Era, they had an 0-2 series deficit in the ALDS against the Oakland Athletics in 2003, a 1-3 series deficit in the ALCS to the Indians in 2007, and most of all, a 0-3 series deficit against the New York Yankees in the ALCS in 2004. All three times they went on to win that series. All three times, David Ortiz played an enormous role in their turnaround. Not this time. This is it. The ride is over. With Ortiz riding off into the sunset, I cannot help but shake the fact that this must be what most fans of most baseball teams feel most of the time. Who is that good for that long? Who is that good in the game’s biggest moments with that kind of consistency? Nobody.
For the first time since I was in middle school, the Red Sox will go into next season without the luxury of penciling Big Papi into the middle of their lineup. While there are good, young players for fans to be excited about, there will not be a “David Ortiz” for them to fall back on when other bats go cold and when the pitchers struggle to hold a lead. It will be a lot like what Patriots fans went through for the first four weeks of this football season without Tom Brady, except this time, it’s forever.
The legend David Ortiz.
Categories:
A Farewell to Papi
October 22, 2016
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