Boston Red Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels
Associated Press
A look at the best-of-five American League division series between the Boston Red Sox and Los Angeles Angels:
PROJECTED LINEUPS
Red Sox: CF Jacoby Ellsbury (.280, 9 HRs, 47 RBIs, 50 SB, 18-game hitting streak to end season), 2B Dustin Pedroia (.326, 17, 83, 213 H, 118 R, 54 2B, 20 SB), DH David Ortiz (.264, 23, 89), 1B Kevin Youkilis (.312, 29, 115), RF J.D. Drew (.280, 19, 64), LF Jason Bay (.293, 9, 37 in 49 games with Red Sox after July 31 trade from Pittsburgh; .286, 31, 101 overall), 3B Mike Lowell (.274, 17, 73), SS Jed Lowrie (.258, 2, 46), C Jason Varitek (.220, 13, 43).
Angels: 3B Chone Figgins (.276, 1, 22, 34 SB), LF-DH Garret Anderson (.293, 15, 84), 1B Mark Teixeira (.358, 13, 43 in 54 games with Angels after July 29 trade from Atlanta; .308, 33, 121 overall), RF-DH Vladimir Guerrero (.303, 27, 91), CF Torii Hunter (.278, 21, 78), 2B Howie Kendrick (.306, 3, 37), DH-OF Juan Rivera (.246, 12, 45) or Gary Matthews Jr. (.242, 8, 46), C Mike Napoli (.273, 20, 49) or Jeff Mathis (.194, 9, 42), SS Erick Aybar (.277, 3, 39).
PROJECTED ROTATIONS
Red Sox: LH Jon Lester (16-6, 3.21 ERA), RH Daisuke Matsuzaka (18-3, 2.90), RH Josh Beckett (12-10, 4.03).
Angels: RH John Lackey (12-5, 3.75 in 24 starts), RH Ervin Santana (16-7, 3.49), LH Joe Saunders (17-7, 3.41).
RELIEVERS
Red Sox: RH Jonathan Papelbon (5-4, 2.34, 40/45 saves), LH Hideki Okajima (3-2, 2.61), RH Manny Delcarmen (1-2, 3.27), RH Tim Wakefield (10-11, 4.13, 0 relief appearances this season), LH Javier Lopez (2-0, 2.43), Paul Byrd (11-12, 4.60), Mike Timlin (4-4, 5.66), Justin Masterson (6-5, 3.16).
Angels: RH Francisco Rodriguez (2-3, 2.24, major league-record 62/69 saves, RH Scot Shields (6-4, 2.70), RH Jose Arredondo (10-2, 1.62), LH Darren Oliver (7-1, 2.88), RH Jered Weaver (11-10, 4.33 in 30 starts), RH Jon Garland (14-8, 4.90 in 32 starts), RH Kevin Jepsen (0-1, 4.32 in 9 appearances).
MATCHUPS
Boston won the first meeting this season, then manager Terry Francona's team lost the next eight. ... The Red Sox beat the Angels in the 1986 ALCS when they rallied from a 3-1 deficit to win the last three games, keyed by Dave Henderson's home run off Donnie Moore in Game 5. Boston also swept the Angels in the 2004 and 2007 AL division series, going on to win the World Series both times. ... The Red Sox were outscored 22-9 when they were swept in a three-game series by the Angels at Fenway Park, the last time the teams met. The next day, the July 31 trade deadline, Boston traded disgruntled slugger Manny Ramirez to the Los Angeles Dodgers and obtained Bay from Pittsburgh in a three-team deal. ... Beckett had his second-worst outing of the season July 30 against Los Angeles when he allowed eight runs in 5 1/3 innings of a 9-2 loss. Matsuzaka also lost in that series. ... The Angels hit .305 and averaged 6.8 runs in the nine regular-season meetings, while the Red Sox batted .252 and averaged 3.7 runs. Los Angeles' ERA was 3.60, Boston's was 6.23.
BIG PICTURE
Red Sox: Beckett, a proven star in the postseason, was pushed back to Game 3 after hurting a muscle in his side during his regular bullpen session Friday. ... The Red Sox could be missing Lowell, with a sore left hip, and Drew, who had a strained lower back but played Sunday. Lowell was the World Series MVP last year when Boston won its second championship in four years by sweeping Colorado. ... If Lowell can't play, Youkilis would move to third base and Sean Casey or Mark Kotsay would play first. ... Boston (95-67) earned the wild-card berth and finished 2 games behind Tampa Bay in the AL East after winning the division last year. ... Papelbon has been solid again as the closer. The rest of the bullpen has struggled at times but was strong late in the season.
Angels: AL West champs for the fourth time in five years, which hasn't necessarily boded well for their postseason chances. The only time the Angels made it to the World Series was as a wild card in 2002, when they beat San Francisco for their lone title. ... This year, the Angels head into the playoffs looking like the team to beat. They were the first team to clinch a division crown, wrapping it up on Sept. 10 and finishing with a franchise-best 100-62 record that was tops in the majors. ... Their lineup is scary stuff for opposing pitchers, especially since they added Teixeira and Hunter to the middle of the card. Figgins and Kendrick, sidelined by injuries at various times, both are back and add depth to the offense. The speedy Figgins is a dangerous leadoff man.