Ortiz uses bat and chat to boost Red Sox

A timely team talk and impressive batting display from David Ortiz drives the Boston Red Sox to level the series 2-all.

Red Sox David Ortiz (R) has been leading by example in World Series with eight of Boston's 24 hits [EPA]

David Ortiz could sense this World Series was starting to slip away, that his rowdy bunch of Boston Red Sox were just too quiet, too tense.

Someone needed to make some noise, and soon.

So Ortiz called his teammates together for a huddle before the sixth inning in Game 4, delivering a serious pep talk right there in the dugout.

I kept telling my boys... this is the World Series, this is the World Series. You don't get to this level every day

by David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox

“It was like 24 kindergartners looking up at their teacher. He got everyone’s attention and we looked him right in the eyes,” said Jonny Gomes, who responded with a three-run homer on Sunday night to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 4-2.

“That message was pretty powerful.”

Ortiz revved up the Red Sox with his bat and bark, helping Boston level the Series at 2-all.

“I’m the veteran on this team, that’s why I have to say something,” he said.

“I sensed everyone was feeling down, frustrated, like a sinking boat.

“I told them, ‘Don’t do anything more than you’re capable, don’t force things out.’ I mean, if you’re a David Ross, don’t try to do things as ifyou’re David Ortiz.”

Ortiz got three more hits, boosting his stock as an October star. He hollered at his teammates from second base after a double in the fifth, then gathered them the next inning.

“Sometimes you get to this stage and you try to overdo things,” he said.

“And it doesn’t work that way.

“I kept telling my boys… this is the World Series, this is the World Series. You don’t get to this level every day.”

Last of a generation

Ortiz hustled home to score a run and even provided a bit of comic relief. All said, a complete game for the designated hitter-turned-first baseman. And also a pretty impressive Series so far – Ortiz has eight of Boston’s 24 hits, and has reached base in 12 of 16 plate appearances against the St. Louis staff.

“I think they’re all watching and realising that he’s tough to get out right now,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said.

At 37, Ortiz is the last Red Sox player left from a historic sweep that ended across the street at the old Busch Stadium exactly nine years ago. He was part of Boston’s sweep in 2007 over Colorado.

He also was the only Boston hitter doing any damage for a while.

“I know we were a better team than what we showed,” Ortiz said.

His broken-bat single off Lance Lynn’s leg was the lone Red Sox hit through four innings. So after he opened the fifth with a drive to right-center, Ortiz shouted to teammates on the bench, waving his arms and urging them on.

“Just loosen up and play baseball the way we normally do,” he kept telling his guys.

Moments later, Ortiz lumbered home and scored, tying it at 1 when he was hit by left fielder Matt Holliday’s throw to the plate.

Before the sixth, Ortiz had another stroke of brilliance. He called a team meeting on the bench.

“It was meaningful,” Red Sox manager John Farrell praised.

“Kind of a timely conversation he had with everybody.”

Said pitcher John Lackey: “He’s a guy who’s been here through a lot of stuff. He’s got a couple of rings, he knows what to do this time of year. 

“His voice definitely carries weight, for sure.”

Ortiz did his part at the plate that inning, drawing a two-out walk from Lynn. Gomes followed by greeting reliever Seth Maness with his game-breaking homer for a 4-1 lead.

Ortiz added another single in the eighth and was pulled for a pinch-runner. He is 8 for 11 in this matchup and 17 for 39 overall in the World Series – at .436, he is second among all players with at least 40 plate appearances to Bobby Brown at .439.

“His career shows what he’s done,” Farrell said.

Along with telling his teammates to lighten up, Ortiz showed them how. In the seventh, Daniel Descalso hit an infield popup to the right side. Ortiz and second baseman Dustin Pedroia both put up their gloves, and the ball drifted into the sky.

The sure-handed Pedroia tracked it the whole way. Ortiz, meanwhile, playfully stood in his spot with his arms in the air and let Pedroia make the catch.

It was the only time Ortiz backed away all night.

Source: AP