Thursday, October 21, 2004
Reversing 'The Curse'
Boston gets shot to end its Ruthian frustrations
The Associated Press
![[photo]](alcs.jpg)
Johnny Damon is congratulated after his two-run homer in the fourth inning. He hit a grand slam in the second as Boston won 10-3. The Associated Press/CHARLES KRUPA
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NEW YORK - Boston blew away decades of defeat with four sweet swings.
Believe it, New England, the Red Sox are in the World Series. And they got there with the most unbelievable comeback of all, shaming the New York Yankees, the Evil Empire to the south.
David Ortiz, Johnny Damon and Derek Lowe made sure of that.
Just three outs from getting swept out of the AL Championship Series three nights earlier, the Red Sox finally humbled the dreaded Yankees, winning Game 7 in a 10-3 shocker Wednesday night to become the first major-league team to overcome a 3-0 postseason series deficit.
"All empires fall sooner or later," Boston president Larry Lucchino said.
Since beating the Chicago Cubs for the 1918 World Series, and then selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees in 1920, Boston has been cursed. But these Red Sox just might be charmed.
There is no torture this time, no hour of humiliation. Better yet to Boston fans, it's the Yankees left to suffer the memory of a historic collapse.
"It's very amazing," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said.
Boston didn't need any of the late-inning dramatics that marked the last three games, leading 6-0 after two innings.
Ortiz started it with a two-run homer in the first off Kevin Brown, and Damon quieted Yankee Stadium in the second inning with a grand slam on Javier Vazquez's first pitch.
After Derek Jeter sparked hope of a comeback with a run-scoring single in the third, Damon put a two-run homer into the upper deck for an 8-1 lead in the fourth and the Yankees were all but finished.
Lowe, pitching on just two days' rest, silenced the Yankees' bats. He allowed one hit in six innings. Then Pedro Martinez started the seventh, his first relief appearance in five years, sparking chants of "Who's Your Daddy?"
Three hits and two runs got the crowd going, but the rally stopped there, and Mark Bellhorn added a solo homer in the eighth for a 9-3 Boston lead.
"The greatest comeback in baseball history," Red Sox owner John Henry said.
Yankees players slowly walked off after the game, eliminated on their home field for the second straight season.
"They had a lot of heart. They never gave up," Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said. "That team never dies. I give them a lot of credit."
The World Series will start at Fenway Park on Saturday night against St. Louis or Houston.
Now that the Babe's team has been beaten, Boston can try to reverse The Curse and bring happiness to the Hub which can scarcely believe the tumultuous turn of events.
From Fenway Park to Faneuil Hall, from Boston Common to Beacon Hill, the 11th pennant for the Red Sox, the first since 1986, will be remembered as the best for one reason: Beating New York in Yankee Stadium, site of last year's Game 7 meltdown.
This was for Williams and Pesky, for Yastrzemski and Yawkey, for Fisk and Rice and even Buckner and Nomar, just a few of the hundreds who suffered the pain inflicted by their New York neighbors in a rivalry that has become baseball's best.
None of the previous 25 major-league teams to fall behind 3-0 even forced a series to seven games. The wild-card Red Sox became only the third of 239 teams in the four major North American leagues to overcome a 3-0 deficit in a best-of-seven series and win, joining the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs and the 1975 New York Islanders.
It had been 100 years since Boston last won a pennant in New York on the final possible day, a 3-2 victory in a doubleheader opener at Hilltop Park in 1904. New York overcame the Red Sox by winning the final two games of the 1949 season at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees won a one-game playoff for the AL East in 1978 behind Bucky Dent's three-run homer at Fenway Park, and Aaron Boone hit the 11th-inning homer that won Game 7 last year.
New York, which dropped to 10-2 in the LCS, no doubt will face a bitter winter.
Brown and Vazquez, who faded in the second half of the season, were booed by the sellout crowd of 56,129, accustomed to perpetual success from their pinstriped heroes. The Yankees won the AL East for the seventh straight year, and the Red Sox were runners-up each time.
Ortiz had three homers and 11 RBI in the series to win MVP honors.
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