In the Playoff Pulse series, our MLB editor takes on a hot October topic.Josh Beckett has authored many great starts in the postseason. He's been a part of two separate 3-1 playoff comebacks. He slayed the Yankees in the World Series in 2003. But what he accomplished in Game 6 Saturday might just be his finest October moment of all.
It's a strange thing to say considering what he did just a year ago against the Indians, considering he only threw 78 pitches, made the Rays swing and miss just five times and lasted a mere five innings, but, of course, context is everything.
Beckett hasn't been himself this month. The strained oblique he suffered on the final weekend of the regular season has clearly been affecting him in his three postseason starts, dropping his fastball velocity from the mid to low-90s and damaging his normally tremendous command and control.
Sometime between Game 2, when he was bombed by the Rays, and Game 6, he figured out a way to be successful. In an odd way, it was the only path that Beckett could take to add to his postseason legacy.
He is the quintessential ace -- a hard-throwing Texan, who seemingly always wears a scowl and always has a curse word at the ready. Oh, and he simply blows hitters away.
But that's not the Beckett we've seen this October. His stuff isn't good enough to waste opposing hitters right now. Managing to win with guts and guile is right up there with what Curt Schilling did in 2004 and 2007 and what Pedro Martinez did in Game 5 of the 1999 ALDS against the Indians.
If Thursday night was about the Red Sox proving that they can never be counted out at Fenway Park with their offense, then Saturday was about redemption for Beckett and Jason Varitek -- heroes of Boston's recent playoff successes that had done little to help them so far in this postseason. It wasn't as dramatic as the Game 5 rally, but it had to be just as satisfying.
And what about the Rays? Things would appear to line up favorably on paper in Game 7. Matt Garza got the better of Jon Lester last time around. He has electric stuff and Lester looked out of gas last time around. Lester isn't the only Red Sox pitcher who is running on fumes either. Closer Jonathan Papelbon, Boston's great equalizer in this series, was also throwing notably softer in Game 6.
But at this point, I think we can all agree that the paper has been thrown out the window and has been fluttering in the wind like one of the many popups Tampa Bay hit in Game 6 for a few days now. If any team can bounce back from this, it is the Rays. We'll find out if they can tonight.
Yesterday's Hero: Beckett. Read above. Honorable mention to Jason Varitek, Kevin Youkilis, Hideki Okajima and B.J. Upton.
Yesterday's Goat: James Shields. He's a great pitcher and an even better guy, but simple rhyming doth not a nickname make.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-19-2008 @ 12:03PM
Wayne said...
As was mentioned on the post-game show last night, a single bad start doesn't necessarily indicate that a pitcher has hit a wall. Lester had a couple of bad innings (according to Eckersley, I was on a plane). I completely expect Garza and the Rays to melt under pressure tonight. The Sox should win in a romp.
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10-19-2008 @ 12:15PM
brownpride57 said...
the red sox are going to win it all,rays you are cooked, hm ive never had sting rays soup before, hm i wonder if ill need crackers with it
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10-19-2008 @ 1:17PM
ct said...
wow what a comeback guess we should not be surprised. Love them in game 7 picked them in 6 before series started guess was one game off. get all my free picks http://www.ctsportspicks.com
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10-19-2008 @ 2:44PM
Jason said...
REDSOX are going to the WS again. Sorry Rays, but the veterans experience and heart will win out.
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10-19-2008 @ 4:13PM
Bill B. said...
This should not be a surprise to anyone that follows baseball. Josh thrives on pressure and he showed why he handles it better than most. The Rays started to get a little cocky and too full of themselves and now they are back to earth. Not sure who will win tonight but it should be a good game. I will say the Rays are a good team with a bright future. They need to learn a little humility. I will end by asking the fraud Manny Ramirez how it looks now that his old team is still playing despite the antics that he pulled. If anyone is foolish enoguh to buy into his rhetoric let me know how that works out after the first year or two of a new contract. he only cares about one thing and that is himself. Just askk the kids he would not go see, the soldiers he would not honor and the little league team he promised to help and never did.
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10-19-2008 @ 5:07PM
the cooker said...
Andrew, don't you and the other writers ever get tired of sucking up to the Yanks and Red Sox?? If we all had the train car loads of cash that those two have it would be different and no I am not a Rays fan.
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