The following instant analysis of game 3 of the 2013
World Series may not be not be rebroadcast, retransmitted, or in any way
rewritten without the express, written consent of Doug Dunnevant….unless a
sizable check changes hands between you and me.
Top of the first: The guy on the mound pitching for
the Cardinals, the one who looks like an accountant, is throwing 98 mph cheese
with movement. Might be a long night for the Sox.
Bottom of the first: Peavy looking a little shaky.
When he goes to his mouth with that chaw in there, is the tobacco in his spit
considered a foreign substance? 2-0 already. Red Sox nation ready to “trade da
bum!!”
Top of the second: Carpenter makes an amazing play
robbing Nava of a hit. Without Napoli in this lineup, there isn’t much to scare
you. Without the DH, St. Louis is a better team.
Bottom of the second: First Erin Andrews sighting,
always a good thing. Peavy settling down. Also saw the Clydesdales. Instantly
wanted a beer.
Made it through 2 full innings without seeing an
erectile dysfunction commercial.
Top of the third: Stephen Drew looks like an out.
Poor kid doesn’t have a clue at the moment, but plays a mean short stop. 4 for
43 in the post season ain’t gonna cut it. The kid is one error away from death
threats in Bean Town.
Ahh yes, Cialis commercial. Suggestion for their marketing
people...nothing happening with separate bathtubs. Just saying.
Bottom of the third: Can’t decide which was more
little-leagueish, Ellsbury’s drop or Hollidays’ horrible base running. Bad call
on the strikeout of Adams. Ball was low. Peavy looking better.
Top of the fourth: Ellsbury gets first Sox hit.
Victorino looks terrible at the plate. Love watching Pedroia swing the bat. He’s
the toughest player on the field. Need Big Papi to hit one out here. Smart
strategy by St. Louis. No way I’m letting Papi beat me. Make Nava be the hero.
Yep, coulda used Napoli in that spot.
Verizon commercial about the family who goes trick
or treating while obsessively looking into their smart phones is one of the
things wrong with America. Leave the phones at home Mom and Dad!!
Bottom of the fourth: How come every time I see
Yadiar Molina play I think he’s the best player on the field? Maybe because he
is. Best defensive catcher I’ve ever seen. Bases loaded, nobody out. Strike
out, pop up, pop up. Great job by Peavy!!
Top of the fifth: Leadoff triple by Boegarts. Yeah
baby. Momentum shifting. Walk. Very large Cardinal pitching coach to the mound.
Cardinal relief pitchers begin in-game Yoga, or synchronized stretching. Either
way, creepy. Poor Drew. Carp pinch hitting for Peavy, looks like an out waiting
to happen, and grounds out but scores the run. 2-1. Umpire suddenly blind to
outside corner. Great at bat for Ellsbury…but strikes out. Time for some
snacks.
Triscuits and Colby jack cheese with a Jonathan
apple.
Bottom of the fifth: Two out double brings Molina to
the plate. Nervous. Walk him? Yes! Make Freese beat you. At some point in this
game a ball is going to be hit to Ortiz at first, I just hope it’s not now.
Doubrant has just made two great pitches that were both called balls, but
overcomes by getting Freese on a flyout. Now for the 16th commercial trying to sell me a pickup truck.
Top of the sixth: Who looks worse at the plate right
now? Drew or Victorino? V gets a walk,
so I guess it’s still Drew. Pedroia lines out. New pitcher for the Cardinals.
But first a word from Geico. I was tired of the green lizard two years ago. Oh,
and the 865th airing of the Taco Bell PlayStation 4 commercial.
Ortiz is soooo clutch. 1st and 3rd, one out. Somebody
besides Big Papi is going to have to get a big hit. Whose it gonna be? Daniel
Nava!! Base hit scores the run 2-2.
Bottom of the sixth: Doubront looks hittable, but
isn’t. Cardinal crowd is stone cold quiet. Don’t think a silent crowd is part
of the “Cardinal way.”
Top of the seventh: Battle of the bullpens. Fourth
of the night for St. Louis is on the mound throwing 98. Drew put out of his
misery, pinch hit for. Three up, three down. Navy man just belted God Bless
America out of the park. Wow. Stretch time.
Bottom of the seventh: Third Sox pitcher, Breslow.
Check swing base hit. Now Beltran. Nervous. Ball grazes him. Two on, no out.
Bye Bye Breslow. Tazawa coming in, Japanese pitcher number one. High cheese,
then ripped down the line to left, 4-2 Cardinals. Big hit by Holliday. Tazawa
looks uncomfortable.
Top of the eighth: Sox have six outs left. Better
get cracking. Lead off single by Ellsbury will help! Victorino looks terrible,
then gets hit. Huge gift! Come on Pedroia! Ferrell starts the runners so Peedy’s
ground out advances the runners. Now they load em up by walking Ortiz. Good strategy,
make Nava beat you. Rosenthall coming in. This guy is unbelievable. 100 and
nasty. What a great game! Nava scores a run on a groundout. 4-3. Now it’s the kid’s
turn. He comes through!! Tie game baby. Where the heck is Erin Andrews?
Bottom of the eighth: Bench player for Cardinals
leads off with a hit. Isn’t that always the way it is with baseball? Pop up.
Two outs. Beltran. Nervous again. Always nervous with Beltran. The rookie
steals second. Single scores the go ahead run. Now they walk Beltran to pitch
to Holliday, a guy who has already knocked in 3. Hmmm…. Glad I’m not a big
league manager. GOT HIM!!! Let’s go to the ninth tied at 4. Why yes, I think I
will!
Top of the ninth: One, two, three. Heck of a time to
ask a relief pitcher to have his first career at bat!? “At least he didn’t get
hurt,” the announcer says. Haha!!
Bottom of the ninth: Let’s see if we can get Molina
out. Nope. Japanese pitcher number two coming in. Hopefully Uehara will equal
sayonara. Craig rips a double to left. Runners on second and third with one
out. Fly ball wins the game. Why are we pitching to Jay?? WHAT?????? Thrown out
at the plate, then a wild throw past third then another throw out at the plate
but interference is called. The game ends on an obstruction call? Great play by
Pedroia. Wow! Amazing game ends with the most obscure call in the rulebook.
Holy Cow.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why I love baseball.
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