By going all in, gambling Red Sox may have doubled their losses
8:02 am | October 27, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
10:00 AM ET
LOS ANGELES — Who cares about tomorrow? The Red Sox certainly don’t. Tomorrow is for the hesitant and the lost. Tomorrow is for the meek and the undecided. There’s a special place in purgatory for those who worry about tomorrow.
These guys go all in, every day. Today is the thing. Alex Cora manages like a guy on a solo trip to Vegas; he’s either coming home on the overnight Greyhound or he’s getting a monthlong comp in the best suite.
If all in means you run out of position players and end up with one pitcher sitting by himself in the bullpen for six long innings, oh well. It’s the price you pay for glory. If all in means you’re one more Eduardo Nunez pratfall away from having to fit Chris Sale for a first baseman’s mitt, so be it. It’s better than folding with a winning hand.
For the first two games of the World Series, Cora did everything right. He couldn’t make a mistake if he tried. Pinch-hitters hit game-deciding homers and a succession of 100 mph relievers, one of them starter Nathan Eovaldi, got the last nine outs without much resistance. His moves served to make the Dodgers nearly irrelevant and caused the Boston fans to repeatedly chant, “Yankees suck,” as if they were yearning for a more appropriate competitor. Everything worked so ridiculously well it prompted someone in Friday’s pregame press conference to ask Cora, “Can a manager get on a hot streak?”