
From Steve Buckley's column in the
Boston Herald:
"Let's say, in the end, they start using a five-man rotation without me
and that's working well," Matsuzaka said through interpreter Masa
Hoshino. "If those guys are pitching well and the rotation's working
well all throughout the year, maybe there won't be a space for me to
come back."Poor Dice-K. He went from World Baseball Classic MVP to injured starter whose spot in the rotation was immediately taken by John Smoltz. Meanwhile, somewhere in Pawtucket, R.I., Clay Buchholz is hoping for one more injury to hit the Red Sox rotation. Behind him, Michael Bowden thinks he's ready for prime time.
Theo Epstein's Plan B is working out just fine. After losing the Mark Teixeira sweepstakes, he immediately went out and signed Brad Penny for short money--5 million plus incentives--and that signing is paying major dividends. Apart from Penny's 6-2 record, and the fact that his velocity is improving with every start, his presence in the rotation along with Smoltz has fans unconcerned that Matsuzaka, who racked up 33 wins in his first two seasons, might not return until 2010. No Dice-K, no problem.
An MRI on his shoulder showed some weakness but no major damage and Matsuzaka landed on the disabled list for the second time this season. How many other teams can lose their Number 3 starter and get nothing but yawns and shrugs from their fans? If you were to start a new team with the three guys who haven't pitched yet--Smoltz, Buchholz (5-0, 1.90) and Bowden (3-3, 3.26)--many other teams would consider that an upgrade to their regular starting three. Sure, I know Smoltz's arm could fall off during his debut on Thursday, but I'm betting against it. The guy has come back from surgeries before and this time he's got an ax to grind with his former employers.
And while Dice-K may or may not make his way back from the DL, the Red Sox rotation just got a bit more interesting. Honestly, can Smoltz be any worse than 1-5? No matter how you look at it, Dice-K's loss is the team's gain.