washingtonpost.com  > Sports > Leagues and Sports > MLB > Red Sox

One Nation, One World

Red Sox Complete Sweep of Cards For First Series Title Since 1918: Red Sox 3, Cardinals 0

By Dave Sheinin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 28, 2004; Page D01

ST. LOUIS, Oct. 27 -- If there really was a Curse, it is forevermore broken. If Bill Buckner, Bucky Dent, Aaron Boone and the rest were truly part of some vast conspiracy to perpetuate a region's unending anguish, it has been snuffed out. If there ever was a tangible reason the Boston Red Sox went 86 years without a World Series title -- each decade marked by its own signature calamity, an awful shared history handed down through generations -- it is true no longer.

More than likely, there was no curse, no conspiracy and no reason, other than the fact there has never been another Red Sox team like this one -- the one that smothered the St. Louis Cardinals, 3-0, in Game 4 of the World Series, the one that swept away the winningest team in baseball in four games, the one that will be hailed in New England for as long as baseball is played there.

Boston wins its first World Series title since 1918 by sweeping the Cardinals with a 3-0 victory Wednesday. Red Sox starter Derek Lowe shuts down the Cardinals for seven scoreless innnings to earn the victory. (Al Behrman - AP)

_____ From The Post _____
 Baseball
Derek Lowe pitches the Red Sox to their first World Series title since 1918.
Boston is cursed no more after ending 86 years of frustration.
Thomas Boswell: Finally, Boston is king of the hill.
Boston won by shutting down the middle of the Cardinals lineup.
News Graphic: Stars align for the Red Sox in 2004.
Notebook: Manny Ramirez wins the MVP award.

_____ On Our Site _____
Photos
Game 4 box score
Game 4 play-by-play
Survey: Will the Red Sox repeat?

_____ Multimedia _____
Video: Boston goes wild.
Audio: Red Sox fans express joy.
Audio: Curt Schilling: Team effort.
Audio: Lowe credits scouting.
Audio: Trot Nixon excited for fans.
Audio: Ramirez learned from N.Y..
Audio: Terry Francona: No curse.
Audio: Albert Pujols still proud.
Audio: Jason Marquis reflects.
Audio: Tony La Russa is gracious.


_____ Results _____
Game 1: Boston 11, St. Louis 9
Game 2: Boston 6, St. Louis 2
Game 3: Boston 4, St. Louis 1
Game 4: Boston 3, St. Louis 0
Red Sox win World Series, 4-0


_____MLB Basics_____
Scoreboard
Standings
Statistics
Team index
Music Downloads
MLB Section
_____Red Sox Basics_____
Red Sox page
Roster
Schedule
Statistics
_____Cardinals Basics_____
Cardinals page
Roster
Schedule
Statistics
_____Message Boards_____
Post Your Comments

"We broke the curse," said left fielder Manny Ramirez, who was named the series' most valuable player after hitting .412 with four RBI. "Next year, we'll do it again."

Veteran right-hander Derek Lowe, the longest-tenured Red Sox player, tossed seven scoreless innings Wednesday night as Boston won its eighth straight game this postseason, becoming the latest Red Sox starter to dominate the Cardinals' fearsome, steel-cored offense.

"We're finally winners," Lowe said. "We're not the happy guys who come in second."

When the final out was secured, and the weight of all that history rose off their backs, every last self-described idiot in the Red Sox dugout and bullpen streamed onto the Busch Stadium infield, commencing a fittingly raucous celebration as a stunned crowd of 52,037 looked on. Catcher Jason Varitek collapsed to his knees in the infield grass. Ramirez climbed the mound and stood proud and tall.

Heaven only knows what was taking place in the streets of Boston, where there will be a championship parade on Friday.

"As passionate as [those fans] are," Varitek said, "they deserve it."

One of the longest and most storied championship droughts in sports history is now over. The Red Sox last won the World Series in 1918, when two of their four wins were credited to a young lefty named Babe Ruth.

Had these Red Sox followed the scripts of their ill-fated predecessors, the ending would have been fraught with peril, disaster and gore -- a ground ball between their first baseman's legs, a monumental homer by some weak-hitting opponent, or some other calamity too gruesome to imagine. Red Sox fans could have been forgiven for suspecting their three-games-to-none lead was just the setup for the latest cruel joke that fate was preparing to play on them.

But not only did the Red Sox win, they never even made their fans sweat. Center fielder Johnny Damon led off the game with a homer off Jason Marquis, Trot Nixon added a two-run double in the third inning, and that was that. The Cardinals never again brought the tying run to the plate.

For the Cardinals, the end launched a painful winter of soul-searching. They led the majors with 105 wins this season -- no NL team with that many wins had ever been swept in the World Series -- with a combination of offensive might and seamless fundamental play.

Yet, the lasting images of the Cardinals from this series will be of futility and ineptitude -- sluggers who could not drive in runs, a parade of mediocre pitchers unable to miss bats, atrocious base running, indefensible decisions. Surely, it will go down as one of the worst World Series performances in history.

"They outplayed us in every category," said Manager Tony La Russa, who became the first manager to be swept in a World Series in both leagues.


CONTINUED    1 2    Next >

© 2004 The Washington Post Company