When I bought the PSP I got a baseball game too, and it let me order a free baseball hat from NewEra. They were all out of stock of Brewer hats (probably cus we're so friggin' popular now ) so I ordered a Red Sox hat instead. I figure they're my AL team
I was so excited last night. My brother called me after the 3rd homerun, and said "ARE YOU WATCHING THE GAME?".... Of course I was, and then I hung up and Jason Varitek hit one out to make it 4 in a row.... You are right Rigg's what a game!! I've been watching the highlights of it all morning, and this is the first time since 1990 we've swept the NY Yankees in Fenway Park!! Did you see Theo Epstein's reaction? Priceless.... !!
Sox tie mark with four straight homers 04/23/2007 2:30 AM ET By Mike Petraglia / Special to MLB.com
BOSTON -- There have been many powerful teams in the long and illustrious history of the Boston Red Sox. But none of them put on the fireworks show like the one seen on Sunday night at Fenway Park. With two outs in the third inning, nobody on and the Red Sox trailing the Yankees, 3-0, Manny Ramirez, J.D. Drew, Mike Lowell and Jason Varitek homered in consecutive at-bats against Yankee left-hander Chase Wright, a first in Red Sox history.
Ramirez started the long ball avalanche by hitting a 2-1 pitch over the Green Monster Seats in left-center field.
Drew was next, and little did he know that he was about to make Major League history.
When Drew launched a 1-2 pitch into the right-center-field seats, the Red Sox had gone back-to-back for the first time this season.
The Red Sox were far from done, or satisfied.
Lowell stepped to the plate next and took a called strike and a ball. He then drilled a breaking ball into the Monster Seats for the third consecutive homer. The Red Sox had tied the game on three swings of the bat and had homered in three consecutive plate appearances for the first time since May 31, 1980, when Tony Perez, Carlton Fisk and Butch Hobson went deep.
"Total disbelief in the dugout, because usually four straight hitters don't square up a ball for base hits, let alone home runs," said Lowell, who later added a three-run round-tripper that proved the decisive blow in Boston's 7-6 win, Daisuke Matsuzaka's first at Fenway Park.
"Then, being down three, you get there, you tie it, and then you go ahead, that's a big momentum shift, because you're doing it in a way that kind of gets the crowd going and they're totally on our side. I think it kind of pumps up Daisuke because you're not looking for a couple of bloops and a blast," Lowell added.
Then Varitek walked to the plate with a chance at history. After taking a ball, the Red Sox catcher swung and connected, driving the 1-0 pitch into the Monster Seats. Four home runs, a huge momentum shift and a place into the record books -- all in 10 pitches.
"You don't see that too often," said the understated Varitek. "It electrified this place a little bit. Odds were against us, though. During a ballgame, you're not aware of it, but it's a fun thing to be a part of."
As he sat in the dugout moments after following a long Ramirez home run with a long ball of his own to right field, Drew felt a sense of déjà vu.
FOUR IN A ROW On Sunday night, the Red Sox became one of five teams to belt four consecutive home runs in a game: Team Date Opponent Players Red Sox 4/22/2007 NYY Manny Ramirez, J.D. Drew, Mike Lowell, Jason Varitek Dodgers 9/18/2006 SD Jeff Kent, J.D. Drew, Russell Martin, Marlon Anderson Twins 5/2/1964 KC Tony Oliva, Harmon Killebrew, Bob Allison, Jimmie Hall Indians 7/31/1963 LAA Woody Held, Pedro Ramos, Tito Francona, Larry Brown Braves 6/8/1961 CIN Eddie Mathews, Hank Aaron, Joe Ad****, Frank Thomas "I hit mine and didn't think much about it," Drew said. "Mikey hits a big home run, and then I looked down [the bench] and told Coco [Crisp] that we're one pitch away from doing what happened in L.A. last September. Then 'Tek has a good at-bat, hits a home run, and you smile and laugh and wonder, 'How in the world is that possible?' I'm the common denominator, I guess, has to be the second [batter] in the mix."
Last Sept. 18, Drew's Dodgers trailed the San Diego Padres, 9-5, heading into the bottom of the ninth. Jon Adkins entered the game and promptly gave up homers to Jeff Kent and Drew. Trevor Hoffman relieved and surrendered two more homers on the first two pitches he threw to Russell Martin and Marlon Anderson.
"I don't want to take anything away from [Sunday's game] because it was a really cool thing to be a part of," Drew said. "The situation we were in, in September of last year, with chasing the Padres in the middle of that pennant race and [using] the bottom of the ninth to do it [was special]. I think with the way the game had played out to that point was a little different situation [than Sunday]."
There couldn't have been a better birthday gift to Red Sox skipper Terry Francona, who turned 48 on Sunday.
"I was feeling better as the number mounted," Francona said. "I guess on one hand, we were fairly efficient that inning, but on the other hand, we, up to that point, didn't really have a lot to show for it. I mean, we did it with two outs. It certainly brought some life back into the ballpark in a hurry."