Watching the Red Sox show incredible poise despite a strong late challenge from the Angels in pulling out a 3-2 win on rookie shortstop Jed Lowrie’s walkoff base hit to right knocking in a sliding Jason Bay for the ALDS clincher at a pumped up Fenway, it was just the latest example of how clutch this team has become since being down 0-3 to the Yanks in the 2004 ALCS.

Nothing fazes them. Not even unloading one of the truly great hitters of our time in Manny Ramirez for Bay and having the former Pirate who never came close to October fitting right in with a pair of homers and big hits plus a one out ninth inning double off Scot Shields and the winning run last night to setup an all AL East ALCS versus the Rays- who earned their place with a 6-2 Game Four road win at Chicago featuring two homers from B.J. Upton plus two RBI’s from Carlos Pena with much overlooked setup Grant Balfour closing out the White Sox in style getting Ken Griffey, Jr. swinging on some outside cheese.

It should be a great series. However, will Tampa’s inexperience show despite home field against a team that never panics? There they were having dropped a great Game Three in 12 innings four outs away from making the amazing Jon Lester a winner after he did enough to outpitch John Lackey, who again had shoddy D which allowed Boston to cash in their two runs. The unlucky Angel ace did everything to keep his team there though second baseman Howie Kendrick muffed a double play ball having to get Jacoby Ellsbury at first instead allowing the Red Sox to go ahead.

Dustin Pedroia made them pay with a clutch two out RBI double making it 2-0 for his first postseason hit in 19 at bats dating back to last year’s World Series. The second baseman still got the love from the crowd who chanted, “M—V—P, M—V—P, M—V—P!”

Game over? Not exactly cause tho Lester finished strong retiring the last eight, he was done for the night after the seventh having tossed 109 pitches (69 strikes) forcing Terry Francona to opt for Hideki Okajima, who got the first two of the eighth before walking Mark Teixeira on four pitches. Francona didn’t wait bringing in rookie Justin Masterson to face Vlad Guerrero. After getting ahead 0-2, he couldn’t finish off Guerrero, who fouled off pitches before drawing a walk putting the tying runs on base.

Masterson also didn’t get strike three against Torii Hunter instead crossing up Jason Varitek with a wild pitch moving the tying runs into scoring position. The ex-Twin center fielder then delivered an opposite field tying two-run single making it a brand new game.

Suddenly, here was Mike Scioscia’s pesky club refusing to go so quietly like the Cubs did versus Manny’s Dodgers. If they somehow could push across one more run, it looked like they’d sweep the two road games at Fenway which seemed impossible and get that final home game back in Anaheim. There was pinch hitter Kendry Morales coming through with a leadoff double off Masterson to start the ninth. Kendrick then sacrificed pinch runner Reggie Willits over to third. That was all for Masterson as Francona handed the ball to another farmhand Manny Delcarmen to face unlikely Game Three hero Erick Aybar.

It was obvious after Delcarmen missed badly inside twice what the Angels’ strategy would be with Aybar at the plate and the speedy Willits leading off third. I said they’d squeeze trying to get the run in. Sure enough. Delcarmen came with his third pitch and the LA shortstop went to lay it down only he missed entirely leaving his teammate hung up in a rundown. He tried to get back to third ahead of Jason Varitek’s tag and nearly did but the hustling veteran Boston catcher wisely put the ball in his glove and lunged forward applying the tag before the ball fell out of his glove afterwards. Of course, Scioscia came out to debate it but TBS replays showed that he got the tag down and as he fell to the ground, that’s when the ball finally jarred loose making it the right call.

Such is the luck of these Red Sox who never seem to be in trouble or have much go against them anymore. A big part of it is that they’re really that good. They execute at the plate in money situations with an amazing 15 of 18 runs in the series coming with two out. Something that used to be the Yankees MO. Even when a diving Teixeira made the defensive gem of the night robbing ex-Brave teammate Mark Kotsay of a certain one out walkoff extra base hit, they had the Halos right where they wanted them. Here came rookie Lowrie, who knocked in more runs in the second half than any other AL shortstop swinging at Shields’ bread and butter curve which caught too much of the plate allowing him to place it perfectly between the hole into right. Here came Bay around third with Willits charging and coming up throwing but a little too late as Bay slid in safely with teammates piling out of the dugout to celebrate the latest Boston hero.

This is who the Red Sox have become. Sometime shortly after David Ortiz reversed their fortunes forever against the Yankees in a memorable Games Four and Five, they suddenly traded places with the team that’s won the most world championships in baseball history. Only those 26 the Pinstripes won no longer matter and have now turned into a chant from the Fenway supporters mockingly saying, “20—00, 20—00, 20—00″ during the final meaningless regular season series.

As silly as it sounds compared to the old reliable “19—18″ fans in the Bronx used to own like the familiar “Potvin” chant at the Garden, they have every right. Especially when you look at how pathetic the Yanks have been since the biggest choke in sports history.

2005. Eliminated in Rd.1 by Angels/Rally Monkey again this time in 5 games. Same team the Sox own having now taken 11 of 12. Will another first round win mean a third World Series title in five years?

2006. Eliminated in Rd.1 by Tigers including a humiliating performance versus former Yankee stiff Kenny Rogers and a no show in Game Four with ALCS Game Six goat Alex Rodriguez batting eighth. Think Boston fans aren’t counting their blessings these days he never became a member of the Red Sox?

2007. Eliminated in Rd.1 by Indians with help in the form of gnats in Game Two causing Joba Chamberlain to lose focus when it looked like they’d even the series. Stiff Paul Byrd beats them in Game Four at Stadium.

2008. Under new skipper Joe Girardi, who clueless Yankee Mgt. including buffoon Hank SteinWhinebrenner were convinced would make the team play with more enthusiasm than the disrespected Joe Torre, team suffers injuries but quits in August allowing even the Blue Jays to pass them before finally saving their best baseball for too late in what Marv Albert refers to as, “Garbage Time,” missing their first October since 1993.

Yankee October Futility

Record After Game 3 vs Red Sox ALCS 2004: 4-13

Since that point, Boston’s won two World Series sweeping both in dominating fashion. Ironically, they cameback from 3-1 down versus Cleveland in last year’s ALCS drawing on their ’04 experience eventually reeling off seven straight with a sweep of the Rockies who prior entered a perfect 7-0 versus the Phillies and Diamondbacks. In 2004, they took the last eight finally ending The Curse in St. Louis.

Maybe, it’s now reversed when you see the dissension from Yankee brass not appreciating Torre for what they had continuing to build the wrong way with way too many voices from Tampa including nerd Randy Levine having say.

Just look at the Red Sox. They got a great GM in Theo Epstein, a calm influence in Terry Francona, who’s similar to Torre running the dugout. And a great owner in John Henry who lets his baseball people do their jobs without any circus-like distractions.

It all adds up to a great team who gets it done on the field and doesn’t miss a beat even when they rebuild bringing in the right prospects like Pedroia, Lowrie, Lester, Jonathan Papelpon, Ellsbury, Delcarmen, Masterson along with another MVP candidate Kevin Youkilis. And why are they able make it work? Because they still have an experienced championship caliber core which includes Big Papi, J.D. Drew and Mike Lowell, who tried to play with a torn labrum in his hip before they shut him down. There’s Varitek too who isn’t the hitter he once was but there he was delivering a hit and run single in a two-run inning and making a great defensive play to save his team’s bacon when the series could’ve been in jeopardy.

Even Coco Crisp have been part of the success. There’s Josh Beckett, who when right is the best pitcher you want on the mound in October. Dice-K turned out a lot better than Kei Igawa. Don’t ya think?!?!?!?!?! And then you wonder why everything’s so right in the Red Sox world while the Yanks has suddenly become too confusing for words with only the Mets saving them from real embarrassment.

Does it really matter which big names the Yankees chase in November and December? They’ll never be on par with what Boston has in place. A potential dynasty in the making. If they win the required eight more games this postseason, you have to consider it almost on par with what those Torre clubs did winning four in five years.

You look at how these playoffs have evolved with the Red Sox facing the Rays in one championship series while the Phillies prepare for Torre’s Dodgers for the NL pennant and wonder how the Yankee hierarchy feels knowing three of the four are teams they don’t want to see win it all.

Tell ya something else. It’s not much better for a Met fan having to see Jimmy Rollins take his hacks against the Dodgers knowing full well that the Phillies are the team with real character as they’ve proven the last couple of Septembers. Now, they’re aiming for their first World Series in 15 years.

Speaking of those Phils, which roster would you rather have? Theirs with young established stars like Rollins, probable NL MVP Ryan Howard, Chase Utley along with underrated grinders Shane Victorino and Jayson Werth plus ace Cole Hamels or what the Yankees have with Derek Jeter aging and A-Rod not getting any younger with their one young hitter Robinson Cano becoming a headcase. Then there’s still uncertainty surrounding Phil Hughes and Ian Kennedy and the same Yankee-esque indecisiveness on whether Joba should start or relieve. I’m only taking ageless wonder Mariano Rivera over Brad Lidge.

Is this what you want running an organization which once was about winning? Oh. They’re running it alright. Right into the ground with an overpriced new Stadium on deck.

Whatever happens between AL East rivals Boston and Tampa over the next couple of weeks, neither are going anywhere.

So, where does that leave the Yankees? Not exactly where they envisioned.

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