BOSTON. – The Boston Red Sox try to build on their new image
of success while the Colorado Rockies write the first chapter of their Fall
Classic history in Major League Baseball’s World Series starting on Wednesday
(Thursday in Manila).
The Red Sox shed their lovable losers label in 2004 when
they became baseball’s first team to overcome a 0-3 playoffs deficit, winning
four straight from the Yankees, before sweeping the Cardinals for their first
Series crown in 86 years.
Boston showed its grit once again in battling back to beat
Cleveland for the American League pennant after falling behind three games to
one, outscoring the Tribe 30-5 in taking three in a row.
Colorado hopes to pen a happy ending to a Cinderella run to
a first World Series in their 15th year in existence.
The soaring Rockies have won 21 of their last 22 games and
10 straight, including playoff sweeps against the Philadelphia Phillies and
Arizona Diamondbacks to go from longshot playoff hopefuls to National League
champions.
Colorado has also mastered the art of the comeback this
season, getting great pitching in their charge to the NL title with a
postseason earned run average of 2.08 to go along with young sluggers like Matt
Holliday and Troy Tulowitzky.
The Colorado comeback kids were 4.5 games out of the
wildcard chase on Sept. 15 before climbing back. In a one-game playoff against
San Diego Padres for the postseason berth, the Rockies overcame a two-run
deficit in the 13th inning to win.
Josh Beckett, the ALCS MVP winner of two games against the
Indians, is expected to start the best-of-seven Series opener at Fenway Park
against Colorado lefty Jeff Francis.
Beckett, who won World Series MVP honors in Florida’s 2003
triumph over the Yankees, said he is focused and full of confidence when he
takes the mound in the postseason.
"Nobody wants it more than me," the hard-throwing
righthander said after Sunday’s pennant-clinching 11-2 over the Indians on
Sunday.
"When I’m out there, I feel like the guys are all behind me,
and I just feel like we’re better than everybody else."
That sort of bravado was often missing in other talented
Boston teams, which seemed doomed by the so-called "Curse of the Bambino" that
saw them fail to win after dealing legendary Babe Ruth to the fierce rival New
York Yankees in 1920.
Time and again Boston came agonizingly close to bursting
through, losing a string of memorable World Series in climactic seventh games
in 1986, 1975, 1967 and 1946.
Now the Red Sox, with prodigious sluggers David Ortiz and
Manny Ramirez, have a swagger associated in the past with the Yankees.
Supremely confident, Boston has won 14 times in the last 17
elimination games they have faced.
"I do think that games of a huge magnitude, our guys don’t
get overwhelmed," said Boston manager Terry Francona. "It does not assure that
you’re going to win, but it’s a good feeling."
The Red Sox have been getting contributions from the top of
the order, too. Rookie second baseman Dustin Pedroia’s two-run homer in the
seventh provided a 5-2 lead on Sunday and the leadoff hitter added a three-run
double in the eighth.
Pedroia expected a good series against the Rockies, who won
two of three games by a cumulative 20-5 against the Red Sox in Boston during
interleague play this season.
"Obviously they have a great team," Pedroia said. "They’ve
been playing great baseball for a long time. We’re excited about the
opportunity.
"We get to keep playing, and it’s definitely going to be fun on Wednesday."