MAX MUNCY ENDS
LONGEST GAME IN WORLD SERIES HISTORY WITH GAME 3 HOME RUN
The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Boston Red Sox 3-2 in
Game 3 of the 2018 World Series on Friday night. It was an 18-inning affair
that doubled as the longest game in World Series history. As a result, the Red
Sox now lead the best-of-seven series by a 2-1 margin. The two sides will play
again in Los Angeles on Saturday.
But before we learn whether or not the series will last that
long, let's focus on what happened Friday -- and, well, into Saturday. Here are
11 things you need to know about Game 3.
1. MUNCY WALKS IT OFF
It took until the 18th, but Max Muncy ended the game with a
walk-off homer against Nathan Eovaldi, who Earlier in the game, in the 15th, Muncy had nearly ended the
game on a long flyball that went foul. With one swing, Muncy seemed to breathe new life into the
Dodgers' championship hopes. We'll see if it they remain.
2. NUNEZ CENTRAL IN UNUSUAL 13TH
Eduardo Nunez has been critiqued throughout the postseason
for a lack of production and poor defense. He's making up for it in this series,
including with a crucial Game 1 home run.
In Game 3, Nunez came to the plate in the top of the 13th
and was upended during the at-bat when Austin Barnes attempted to retrieve a
ball. Brock Holt was able to advance to second. It looked like Nunez was injured
and may have to exit -- which would've been an issue, considering the Red Sox
had exhausted their position player supply.
Soon thereafter, Nunez hit a grounder to the pitcher and
raced to first in an attempt to reach on an infield single. He was safe no
matter what, as the ball got away, but remained down once more. Again Nunez
stayed in. Perhaps the fact that Holt had scored the go-ahead run helped ease
whatever pain he was in at the time.
Brock Holt scores on an Eduardo Núñez grounder to give Boston
the lead in the 13th inning!
No one expected Nunez to play a big role in this series. Yet
he continued to do so in the bottom half of the frame. Nunez made a running
grab on a pop-up from his shifted position, causing him to go into the stands.
That allowed Max Muncy to advance to second, and he'd soon score on an error by
Ian Kinsler that would've ended the game had it been an out. Rather, the game
roared on, ensuring that Nunez's heroics would soon be overshadowed.
3. RED SOX BULLPEN KEEPS THEM IN IT
Speaking of unlikely heroes, the Red Sox bullpen started its
long night in the fifth, when Rick Porcello departed after 4 2/3 innings.
Porcello had allowed a run at that point, but the Dodgers wouldn't add to their
total in the frame. Rather, Eduardo Rodriguez escaped the fifth. Then Joe
Kelly, Ryan Brasier, Matt Barnes, David Price, Craig Kimbrel, Heath Hembree,
and Nathan Eovaldi -- who was originally scheduled to start Game 4 on Saturday
-- combined to keep the Dodgers off the board over the ensuing nine-plus
frames. Obviously Eovaldi gave up a run (unearned) in the 13th and then another
(earned) in the 18th, but the Red Sox bullpen essentially threw a hidden
shutout.
Despite the final result, Eovaldi in particular deserves
kudos for essentially throwing his start a night ahead of time.
4. BELLINGER REDEEMS SELF IN EVENTFUL 10TH
Cody Bellinger was picked off despite representing the
winning run in the bottom of the ninth. He made up for it in the 10th inning.
First, to set up the scene: the Red Sox had runners on the
corners with one out. If only it was that straightforward. Ian Kinsler, who was
on third, had nearly been picked off at first base (replay confirmed he was
safe), and later was almost tagged out after over-sliding third:
Kinsler attempted to score on a Nunez fly to center, yet
Bellinger made a strong throw on the catch. Austin Barnes was able to catch the
ball up the third-base line and apply the tag, sending the game into the bottom
of the 10th tied at 1-1. Take a look:
5. BUEHLER WAS FANTASTIC
It can be argued that Walker Buehler was the Dodgers' most
reliable starter in the regular season. He started eight more games than
Hyun-Jin Ryu did, and posted a better ERA and FIP than everyone else in Los
Angeles' rotation. Wherever he ranked, he looked like No. 1 on Friday.
Buehler threw seven innings, permitting two hits and no
runs. He struck out seven batters. Both the hits he allowed came in the third
inning, and each was a bases-empty single. Buehler generated 12 swinging
strikes on 108 pitches -- 10 of those came on fastball varieties. By the way,
he averaged 98 mph on his heater and maxed out at 100 mph.
Buehler has thrown 55
pitches in 1st 3 innings, nearly half (27) have come after there were 2
strikes.
Buehler overcame an elongated first inning to throw six more
efficient frames. He recorded just the sixth start of at least seven innings
for the Dodgers over the past two postseasons. He also made a little bit of
history:
Keep in mind; this was Buehler's first career World Series
start. His team was in a 2-0 hole. He was facing a lineup that tends to score
runs and doesn't tend to strike out. Add it all together and this was one of
the best pitching performances we've seen all month.
6. JANSEN STRETCHES, BLOWS SAVE
Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen had not appeared in the World
Series prior to Friday. It was a safe bet, then that he would get into the game
at some point, provided it was close. Boy did he. Dave Roberts tasked Jansen
with working the eighth and ninth for his seventh two-plus-inning appearance in
the last three postseasons.
Alas, Jansen didn't close the door. Instead, he allowed a
game-tying home run to Jackie Bradley Jr. in the eighth. He did recover to keep
the game tied through the rest of the eighth and the ninth. But his appearance
does raise questions about whether he'll be available -- or, perhaps, for how
long -- in each of the subsequent games in Los Angeles.
7. BRADLEY JR. COMES UP BIG ONCE MORE
Entering the night, Bradley Jr. had six hits this postseason.
Two were home runs, another two were doubles. He added two more hits on Friday,
with one being a game-tying homer against Jansen: win the World Series MVP, but
he played an important role in Game 3 all the same.
8. PEDERSON HOMERS
AGAIN
A Joc Pederson home run in the third inning represented the
only score for most of the game. For Pederson, it was his fourth home run in
six World Series starts. That's efficient, and notable: Pederson entered the
night a career .247/.340/.473 postseason hitter in 40 games.
9. MACHADO GETS IN TROUBLE OVER HUSTLE
Manny Machado raised eyebrows during the NLCS when he
disclosed that he knows he's not a big-time hustler -- and that he's unsure if
he can change that. Everyone is likely to be reminded of those comments after
what he did on Friday, watching a ball he perceived to be a home run -- then
regretting it after the ball banged off the wall and he was held to a single:
The next batter, Cody Bellinger, made an out to end the
inning. In a sense, it probably didn't matter either way. But reasonable people
can agree there's a difference between running out a routine grounder and
making an effort to leg out a potential extra-base hit in the World Series.
10. HISTORY SAYS ….
You might wonder what the empirical data says about a
best-of-seven series entering a 2-1 state like the one in front of us.
According to the Baseball Gauge, the host team -- the Red Sox, in this case --
goes on to win 73.2 percent of the time.
is here. Head to SONIC® today to experience OREO overload!
11. NEXT UP
The Red Sox and Dodgers will play Game 4 on Saturday night.
Nathan Eovaldi was scheduled to take on Rich Hill. Eovaldi pitched in Game 3,
however, meaning Drew Pomeranz or Chris Sale (on short rest) is likely to get
the start instead. Regardless, the game will begin at 8:09 p.m. ET. It will air
on Fox and you can catch the whole thing using a free trial of fuboTV. Make
sure you tune in -- it might be the last game of the year.
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