22 Aug

table is set

Thursday’s appetizer was good, and the metaphorical salad and dessert that will follow should be also. But the main course, to be served up Saturday at Yankee Stadium, promises to be downright delicious. Boston beat New York 6-3 Thursday night in Game 1 of a four-course series. In Game 2 tonight, the menu gives us Brayan Bello (9-6, 3.23 ERA) against three-time All-Star Max Fried (13-5, 3.26), the former Mississippi Braves standout. And on Saturday, we get a tantalizing matchup of Mississippi natives: Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet vs. Will Warren, an unsung hero in pinstripes. Knives out. Crochet, from Ocean Springs, is a big left-hander, a former first-round pick out of SEC power Tennessee with a huge contract. Warren, from Brandon, is a second-year rookie right-hander, a former eighth-round pick out of Southeastern Louisiana. Crochet is 13-5, 2.43, and a Cy Young Award contender. He beat the Yankees at Yankee Stadium on June 7. Warren is 7-5 with a 4.25, with six of those wins coming at Yankee Stadium, one of them vs. the Red Sox. The series will wrap up as the Sunday night ESPN game. Thursday’s opener, which drew a rowdy crowd of 47,036, was a taut affair, ultimately settled in the ninth inning when Boston’s Roman Anthony mashed a two-run homer into the right-field stands. It was the Red Sox’s sixth straight win against the Yankees. “I love playing in an atmosphere,” rookie Anthony told mlb.com. “We know the rivalry, and it was exciting.” Nathaniel Lowe, the Mississippi State product who signed with Boston on Aug. 18, drove in two runs and made a couple of nice plays with his glove. It was the veteran first baseman’s first taste of Red Sox-Yankees. “It’s like a dream come true,” Lowe told yahoo.com of moving from last-place Washington to the heat of a playoff race. “It’s so exciting to join a team that’s as promising and as talented as what we have going on here.” The second-place Yanks are a half-game ahead of the Red Sox in the American League East, and they sit 4-5 in the wild card standings. P.S. Biloxi Shuckers alum Brice Turang’s 14th homer helped Milwaukee beat the Chicago Cubs 4-1, snap a three-game skid and maintain a 7-game lead in the National League Central. Turang had nine hits, six RBIs and four runs in the Wrigley Field series as the Brewers won two of the five games. … Atlanta announced that Austin Riley had surgery for his abdominal injury, ending the season for the former DeSoto Central star. He hit .260 with 16 homers this year. … Houston, having lost closer Josh Hader for an extended period, signed Craig Kimbrel, the former M-Braves star who has been released by Atlanta and Texas this season. … In the minors, MSU alum J.P. France got the win and ex-Madison Central star Spencer Turnbull took the loss as Triple-A Sugar Land beat Iowa 5-2. France, who just came off a rehab assignment, went five innings (no earned runs) in relief and improved to 1-1 with a 5.52 ERA in his fourth appearance for Houston’s Triple-A club. Turnbull, signed by the Cubs as a free agent on July 12, is 0-5, 8.16, for the I-Cubs after yielding five runs in 4 2/3 on Thursday. … Congrats to Rick Sweet, Jackson Generals manager in 1991-92, for moving into third place on the all-time list with 2,418 minor league wins. Sweet is currently running Milwaukee’s Triple-A Nashville club in his 35th season as a skipper.

08 Jul

sweet!

Ran across a good story on milb.com about former Jackson Generals manager Rick Sweet, who notched his 2,000th career minor league managerial win on June 25. Only 12 others have reached that milestone. Sweet was the manager of the first two Generals clubs in 1991 and ’92, winning 131 games overall with the Houston Astros’ Double-A affiliate. Sweet, 66, a former big league catcher, has logged 30 seasons as a manager and is now at Triple-A San Antonio in Milwaukee’s system. Sweet has had some other jobs in the game, including two stints as a big league coach, but managing apparently suits him best. “I love going to the ballpark every day,” Sweet said in the article. “The fact that I get to help and be a part of so many young people’s lives, even when I started managing 30-something years ago, that’s what resonates with me. That’s what drives me every day.” The mustachioed “Sweetie,” as everyone called him at Smith-Wills Stadium back in the day, was a very vocal kind of guy but was always easy to work with for those who covered the Gens. “He’s lasted so long because of his commitment to open, honest communication,” writes Joe Bloss.