Red Sox Cap Forgettable Season at Fenway Park With Prolonged Power Outage

by abournenesn

Sep 27, 2012


Red Sox Cap Forgettable Season at Fenway Park With Prolonged Power Outage

Editor's
note: NESN.com is going to tell the story of the 2012 Red Sox in Bobby
Valentine's words. Each game day, we will select a Valentine quote that sums up
the day for the Red Sox.

BOSTON — This year, there was no home field advantage.

After falling to the Rays in a 4-2 loss on Wednesday, the
Red Sox finished with a 34-47 record at Fenway Park. It was the franchise's
worst home record since the 1965 team logged the same record.

Like the most of this month, the drawback was lack of run
support. Despite six solid innings from starter Jon Lester, the Red Sox only
mustered up four hits while striking out 12 times.

Always the optimistic, Boston manager Bobby Valentine tried
to unearth a positive from the negative situation.

"We
didn’t walk off many and we didn’t score enough runs here," Valentine
said. "We have a lot stored up for next year."

The
Red Sox can only hope they rebound, especially since they wasted an outstanding
start from Lester. He carried a no-hitter into the fifth inning before Jeff
Keppinger
singled to left field.

All
at once, the Rays picked up him apart. Once Keppinger trotted on base, Lester
surrendered a two-run blast to Carlos Pena in the ensuing at-bat. Then, the
lefty unraveled a second consecutive home run to Ben Francisco.

"Two
pitches," Lester said. "A good pitch to Keppinger. He did a good job
of keeping his hands inside the ball. I felt like I threw a pretty good
fastball down and away to Pena. The ball kind of backed up on me on the second
homer. But, yeah, two pitches."

Red Sox Cap Forgettable Season at Fenway Park With Prolonged Power OutageBut
he still flourished despite being under weather. During his postgame news
conference, the southpaw spoke with a nasally voice and admitted he was
battling sickness over the past few days.

"I
was down in the tank because I was sick," Lester said. "I’m still
taking the ball. I’m still grinding it out. I’ve just been under the weather
the last couple of days. That fifth inning really took a lot out of me. I
didn’t think it was fair for me to go back out there when I didn’t have anything.
I just went ahead and told them that."

Despite
the shortened outing, Lester allowed just three runs and four hits over six
frames. He tallied his 17th quality start of the season — including seven in
his last 11 starts — to lead the team.

Lester
also believed he executed with his best location of the season, even his
decisive pitch to Pena. But it simply didn't work out, leaving Lester with a
9-14 record heading on the road.

"Who
would have thunk it’s big Carlos Pena against left-handers that beat us?"
Valentine said. "But I guess that’s the way the season’s been going."

Especially at home.

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