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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

World Series of contrasts set to begin       Send a link to a friend

[October 24, 2007]  BOSTON (AP) -- Even now, after the Colorado Rockies' amazing run of 21 wins in 22 games, many fans don't know this black-and-purple clad club of Tulowitzkis and Torrealbas.

Maybe that changes this week. Come Wednesday night, the Rockies will be on baseball's biggest stage, playing the Boston Red Sox in the World Series opener.

"We feel anonymous everywhere," third baseman Garrett Atkins said Tuesday. "They're household names over there, and we're just not."

A team that didn't even exist until 1993 navigated through the cracked corridors and cramped clubhouse of Fenway, then played catch in front of 37-foot-high Green Monster in left and Pesky's Pole in right. Infielder Clint Barmes plopped into a red seat in row CC to take it all in.

Josh Beckett was set to start the opener for Boston, and Jeff Francis was slated to pitch for the Rockies. Back on June 14, Beckett was 9-0 when he lost to Colorado and Francis, who pitched five scoreless innings.

Now that Francis and the Rockies are back, a whole lot more attention is being focused on Fenway Park.

"I'm sure the Red Sox are used to this every day," he said, "but we've never seen anything like this, the bus pulling up into the parking lot, and the trailers and the satellite dishes."

Much has been made of the humidor to moisten balls at Coors Field and possible snow when the Series moves to Denver this weekend, but there were precipitation concerns in Boston, too. The National Weather Service said there was a 60 percent chance of rain for Game 1, although forecasters did not expect any precipitation to be heavy.

With Colorado coming off a record eight-day layoff since sweeping Arizona in the NL championship series, there's been a lot of debate about rust vs. rest -- and what better place to discuss rust than quirky old Fenway Park, which opened in 1912 and is filled with nearly a century of baseball sounds and smells.

"We will not apologize for winning quickly," Rockies manager Clint Hurdle said to a roomful of laughter.

Last year, of course, the Tigers fumbled and flopped after a six-day layoff and lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in five games -- with a Detroit pitcher making an error every night. Teams took notice -- a day ahead of Wednesday's opener, Red Sox manager Terry Francona was at the cage running pitchers' fielding practice.

In some ways, the Red Sox have become the Yankees, an October fixture attracting national attention. Manny and his do-rag, Big Papi and Dice-K are TV staples.

The Rockies? They haven't been on a FOX Saturday broadcast since July 2004 and haven't appeared on an ESPN Sunday night telecast since June 2002.

"We've been called favorites since Day 1, and look at us," David Ortiz said, "here we are dancing and just taking it easy. We just have the edge, the attitude to become champions."

Boston overcame a 3-1 deficit in the AL championship series to beat Cleveland. That was nothing compared to what the Red Sox did in 2004, when they became the first baseball team to bounce back from a 3-0 deficit in a best-of-seven postseason series, upending the Yankees. Then they swept the Cardinals for their first World Series title in 86 years, setting off a year of celebrations throughout New England.

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Now that the curse has lifted, there might be less pressure. That's not the Red Sox notion.

"1918, I wasn't even thinking about coming to life. I never paid attention to any of that," Ortiz said with a smile.

Boston took over the AL East lead for good on April 18 and ended New York's run of nine straight division titles. The Rockies were fourth in the NL West at just 76-72 when their spurt began Sept.18. If not for two blown saves by San Diego's Trevor Hoffman, they wouldn't even have even won the wild card and made their first postseason appearance since 1995.

When Colorado came to Boston in June, the Rockies won two of three and outscored the Red Sox 20-5. Boston was 51-30 at home during the regular season and 5-1 during the playoffs, benefiting from its accumulated knowledge of Fenway's idiosyncrasies and ricochet patterns.

"A lot of special things happen here," Francis said. "It's a special baseball place: the fans, the players, the team and the city."

Since its last win on Oct. 15, Colorado had workouts and simulated games. That only went so far.

"The postseason, the World Series, you can't simulate that," right fielder Brad Hawpe said. "There's nothing like that."

Both teams had some roster news on the workout day: Colorado's Aaron Cook is in and Boston's Tim Wakefield is out.

Cook, who hasn't pitched in a major league game since Aug. 10 because of a strained muscle in his side, has recovered and is down to pitch Game 4. Wakefield, a 41-year-old knuckleballer, was dropped from the roster because of a bad shoulder and likely will be replaced by Jon Lester for the fourth game.

Also, there was this: Rookie Jacoby Ellsbury will start in center for Boston in place of Coco Crisp, injured when he ran into the fence below the triangle as he caught the final out in Game 7 of the ALCS Sunday night.

So enough of the talking. Time to play.

Colorado already has been thinking ahead, perhaps obsessing.

"There's no getting away from it," Hawpe said. "This is what you think about when you wake up in the morning; it's the last thing you think about before you go to bed."

[Associated Press; by Ronald Blum]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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