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 Sunday, October 10
Boston relishes chance to see Wright slip
 
Associated Press

 BOSTON -- Once an October star, Jaret Wright is now a falling one.

Taunted by the Fenway Park crowd from the moment he walked in from Cleveland's bullpen, Wright's miserable 1999 just got worse.

Jaret Wright
Wright

Wright, called upon to relieve after starter Dave Burba's forearm tightened in the fourth inning, took the loss Saturday as the Boston Red Sox extended the AL playoffs to a fourth game with a 9-3 win over the Indians in Game 3.

With "Jar-et, Jar-et" ringing in his ears, Wright, who two years ago was a postseason hero as a fresh-faced rookie for the Indians, pitched two-plus innings that were as shaky as his previous six months.

He allowed five runs, four hits, one walk, one hit batter and one game-tying homer.

"To put it bluntly," Wright said, "I didn't get it done. It was my shot to do something good, and it didn't work out."

Wright had been expected to start Game 4, but Indians manager Mike Hargrove said before the game he would use Wright in long relief if necessary in Game 3 and bring back Game 1 winner Bartolo Colon on three days' rest Sunday if Cleveland lost.

Wright helped make it a reality.

He was told before the game to be ready in case Burba's forearm tightened -- a condition Burba has had for a few weeks but the Indians kept secret. Wright said he felt fine before coming in, but looked like he was overthrowing from his first pitch.

As a 21-year-old rookie in '97, Wright went 3-0 in the postseason, twice beating the New York Yankees in the division series. He won Game 4 of the World Series against Florida, and became the second youngest pitcher to start a deciding game and the seventh rookie to start a Game 7.

But last year he went 0-2 in the playoffs, losing to Boston in the opener and getting pounded by the Yankees in the ALCS.

He went 8-10 during a regular season that included two stints on the disabled list this season, and a well-publicized trip to AL president Gene Budig's office to discuss his reputation for throwing at batters' heads.

In an April game against Boston, Wright hit Darren Lewis -- who he drilled in the playoffs last year -- to set off a bench-clearing brawl and escalate tensions between teams with a history of bad blood.

The Red Sox had been waiting for a chance to get even, and they did.

Wright said he wasn't bothered by the deafening chants as the crowd did a little headhunting of its own.

"I heard it and what-not," Wright said. "But it doesn't affect your pitching. It's the stuff I've dealt with before. But it's just getting it done out there. Just hitting your spots and getting it done. There's no way the crowd should affect you. So that weight's on my shoulders, not anything the crowd did."

Troy O'Leary, the first batter to face Wright, hit a shot through the mound that clipped the pitcher on the left leg. Wright then gave up a single to Lou Merloni and a double to Jason Varitek that tied it at 1.

Lewis then gained revenge on Wright, slapping an RBI single to right and pumping his fist as he rounded first base.

Then, after the Indians tied it in the sixth, Wright gave up a leadoff homer to John Valentin. He retired the next three in order, but set the stage for Boston's six-run seventh by walking Merloni to open the inning, and hitting Varitek.

After being pulled from the game, Wright was given a standing ovation from the crowd as he walked somberly to the dugout. And when the Red Sox blew it open, all Wright could do was hang his head.

"We were ready today," Wright said. "It didn't work out."

 


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