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No surprise, a team of destiny

In so many ways it’s hard to fathom. And then, on the other hand, it seems so obvious.

On the first of August I tweeted this out to followers of my @RSNStats:

I don’t even remember exactly what made me say it. But on reflection, there actually could have been a lot of reasons.

The fact is, it could have been any of those reasons. Or any of these:

This was a team that didn’t once lose more than 3-in-a-row (and did that only once after the All-Star break) for just the 2nd time in its 113 year history. The only other Red Sox club to do that was the 1903 crew, which then went on to win Boston’s very first World Series championship. No team in baseball has avoided losing more than 3-in-a-row during the regular season since the 2005 Cardinals.

Where this win ranks

A lot has been written and said about how gratifying this World Series win is when compared to the others of recent memory. 2004 was so important because it “broke the curse” of having seen generations come and go without seeing their beloved team go all the way to the Finish Line. I saw it in my grandfather. I saw it in my mother. And on October 27, 2004, when the hooting and hollering and backslapping had ended, I remember stepping outside into the cool night air and looking to the stars and being grateful. There were poignant moments throughout New England and across the baseball world.

After thrillingly getting past the Yankees in 2004 the Series vs the Cardinals was a breeze. In a 4-in-a-row sweep of the Rockies in 2007 the club seemed hardly to break a sweat.

But 2013 was different and the team had to work to overcome tough and worthy competition in the division, for the league championship, and for the ultimate prize. In all but the last game of the World Series, every postseason game was a grinder, a high pressure, high stakes game that could have gone either way.

Looking back on it from the future it will hard not to think of David Ortiz‘s contributions, his .688 (11-for-16) batting average and .750 (18-for-24) on-base percentage in the World Series. But Boston’s postseason should be remembered for the contributions that came from up and down the Red Sox lineup and for late inning heroics at the plate and on the mound. This was the group that never quit, that learned and adjusted in every plate appearance, and that, save for a few miscues, did so many of the little things right.

On the field and off

Garland “Jake” Stahl. Like Farrell, led his Red Sox to an MLB-best record in his 1st season as manager..

No discussion of 2013 should ignore what happened away from the ballpark. The Red Sox of 2013 were a team of great achievements on the field, but off of it as well. A team of character and heart. There were no leaked “team meetings” and the word “disgruntled” never seemed to come up, even as new manager John Farrell made some tough calls from time to time. Farrell, of course, returned to the Red Sox after being the club’s pitching coach from 2007-10. His steady hand, familiarity to the veterans, and clubhouse demeanor earned the players’ respect, to hear them talk about him. In return, of 46 managers in the franchise history, he is only the 2nd to lead Boston to at least a share of MLB’s best record in his 1st year, joining 1912 manager Jake Stahl.

The Marathon bombings of April 15th and the Red Sox response, both in public and behind the scenes, linked the club to the community and vice versa.

From #BostonStrong and the 617 jersey hanging in the dugout, to Daniel Nava‘s game-winning 2-out, 3-run home run in their first game back at Fenway after the marathon, to the final remembrance as the parade stopped so that the World Series trophy could be placed momentarily at the marathon’s finish line, the Red Sox took shouldered the responsibility for helping a region cope and heal. Readers will remember that this was April, not August. 12 games into the season there was no expectation of Red Sox greatness, and in fact, just the opposite. These weren’t stars who felt compelled to make an appearance. They seemed, even the newcomers, like genuinely decent people who wanted, like all decent people, to lend a hand.

The Red Sox response to the bombings transcended sports or, even better, magnified the connection between a club and its fans and the impact of all that on a community’s health and spirit.

So obvious after all

And so we head to the winter and leave a very memorable season behind. 2014 won’t be the same, even if the roster doesn’t change, and we know it will. The 2014 club will be successful in its own ways.

But for me 2013 will always be the year of a team of destiny. A team and community that galvanized to overcome and to win together. It all seems so obvious, if only in retrospect.

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