Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us  
  U.S. SPORTS
  scoreboards
baseball S
pro football S
col. football S
pro basketball S
m. college bb S
w. college bb S
hockey S
golf plus S
tennis S
soccer S
olympics 2000
motor sports
women's sports
more sports
 WORLD SPORT  

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Video Plus
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Tuesday March 20, 2001 3:27 PM

     
2. Boston Red Sox
Team Page | Schedule | Roster

The rotation is rearmed and dangerous -- but to opponents or themselves?

By Tom Verducci

 

Pedro's compadres in the starting rotation are iffy, but he'll get a boost from a retooled lineup; last year's scored seven runs in his six losses.  Damian Strohmeyer
ENEMY LINES
An opposing team's scout sizes up the Red Sox
"The Sox are probably the league's biggest "wait and see" club -- they could be good or they could implode. They're trying hard to make deals because they don't think they can win with the guys they have now. Their biggest problem is they have two guys they don't like, Mike Lansing and Rolando Arrojo , chewing up roster spots and payroll.... They have talent -- the best pitcher in baseball [ Pedro Martinez ], a dominant closer [ Derek Lowe ] and thunder in the middle of the lineup [ Nomar Garciaparra , Manny Ramirez , Carl Everett ] -- but there are caveats. Everett missed a team bus in camp, and you always have to see how he affects team chemistry.... The bullpen is good from the right side, with Rich Garces and Hipolito Pichardo , but they're going to miss Rheal Cormier from the left side.... The infield defense was dreadful this spring; the $12.5 million tandem at second base, Lansing and Jose Offerman , is porous. If Garciaparra is out for a while, it hurts big time. They're in the market for a backup shortstop with a good glove.... How will Ramirez ever play rightfield at Fenway Park? Trot Nixon is their best defensive outfielder, but he gets aced out of the starting lineup unless Troy O'Leary is dealt.... You wonder how Ramirez will react when the fans get on him the first time he peels off into the dugout instead of running hard down the line? You can get away with that in Cleveland, not in Boston.... Jimy Williams is a superior manager, but he has a tough juggling act in terms of talent, and an even tougher juggling act in terms of team cohesion."
Joe Kerrigan left his middling career as a professional pitcher in 1982, taking a bum shoulder home to Philadelphia. He was 28. "My arm was dead," he says. This was before managers and pitching coaches cared much about pitch counts and how many days in a row you worked. Kerrigan took a job pouring concrete at a construction site for a waste management facility. To supplement his income he would scavenge his mother's attic and basement for knickknacks to sell at a flea market. On a good weekend he would pocket 50 bucks.

All these years later Kerrigan's labor still reflects the lessons learned from his early exit from the game. Now the pitching coach savant of the Red Sox, he not only is fanatically protective of his pitchers' health, but also continues to dabble in the consignment business -- though he no longer must root around the recesses of his mother's house. Boston general manager Dan Duquette finds him plenty of second-hand merchandise from the unwanted bin. This year is no different, with the young (Paxton Crawford, Tomo Ohka), the aged (Rolando Arrojo, David Cone, Hideo Nomo) and the infirm (Frank Castillo, Bret Saberhagen) all vying for spots in the rotation behind Pedro Martinez.

"We went to the playoffs two years ago by piecing the staff together," says Kerrigan, under whom Boston has finished second, first and first in the league in ERA,
its best run in nearly a century (1902-04). "I'm as comfortable with this group as any."

The Red Sox are a contender despite what the behavioral scientists might call "issues." The middle of the order is fearsome -- shortstop Nomar Garciaparra, rightfielder Manny Ramirez and centerfielder Carl Everett ranked 5-3-4 in the league in slugging against righthanders last year. Atop the order, however, there are unsettling questions. Second baseman Jose Offerman, the preferred leadoff hitter, must rebound from the worst of his five AL seasons, during which he was thrown out in all eight of his stolen base attempts. Other potential trouble spots include a shaky infield defense, a bullpen in need of a lefthander and questions about the durability of Garciaparra, who has sat out 77 games over the past four seasons and has been sidelined since Feb. 26 with a right wrist injury that may require surgery.

What's most uncertain, though, is who will follow the inimitable Martinez in the rotation. Nothing new there. In 2000 Boston starters threw the fewest innings of any rotation in the majors, and other than Martinez, the Red Sox haven't had a pitcher win as many as 11 games in either of the last two seasons. Do they have anybody who can give their ace better support? "Yes," Duquette says. "My pick would be either Nomo or Ohka." Here's the best of the bric-a-brac that the Boston G.M. has given Kerrigan.

Nomo. He still has quality stuff. "But he threw only 54% first-pitch strikes," Kerrigan points out. "After the count's 0 and 1, batters hit .192 against him. After it's 1 and 0, they hit .298."

Cone. The 38-year-old righty won four times in 29 starts last year, and hitters pounded him at a .306 clip. After 2,745 career innings he plans to empty whatever's left in his tank. "I'd rather stay around too long and suffer a little embarrassment than walk away too soon," says Cone, who is battling soreness in his pitching shoulder. Says Kerrigan, "If he can throw his fastball 86 to 88 [mph], he'll be fine."

Castillo. "He's pitched only 22 [big league] games over the last three years in the second half. Now why is that?" says Kerrigan, who has been examining Castillo's routines between starts, his conditioning and his weight training. "If he stays healthy, we've got a good pitcher."

Ohka. "He can put that cross-seam fastball on the outside corner on lefthanders any time," Kerrigan says. "We've got to get him to settle on a breaking ball [curve or slider] and go to it."

Arrojo. "Seventy-two percent of his pitches were fastballs," Kerrigan says of Arrojo, who will start the year in the bullpen. "I've never heard of a number that high. Between pitches 30 and 50 they hit .319 against him. That tells me, the second time around the order, hitters know what to expect. They're getting fastballs. We've got to get him to use his slider and changeup."

So another season full of tinkering looms for Kerrigan. For now, his staff is better suited for a lyricist than matching up with the Yankees. Pedro, Nomo, Tomo, Arrojo, Castillo. Oh, no!

Issue date: March 26, 2001

 
Related information
Multimedia
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day
Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.


CNNSI Copyright © 2001
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.