4-game sweep by Red Sox continues World Series bore

Mike Fitzpatrick

DENVER (AP) &#8212 Three World Series sweeps in the past four years, with a five-game bore mixed in.

What happened to drama in October?

Josh Beckett, Manny Ramirez and the relentless Red Sox didn’t do baseball any good by crushing Colorado in four games. It was a blowout from the beginning, when Boston took the opener 13-1 at Fenway Park.

And with the games regularly ending after midnight EDT, there wasn’t much reason for casual fans to stay up late and watch. That was the trend all postseason – five of the seven series ended in ho-hum sweeps.

Yawn. A trip to the dentist is more exhilarating.

But don’t expect an apology from anyone in Boston.

“To go through this from Day 1 until now with people that you really, really care about makes it really special,” Red Sox manager Terry Francona said Sunday night after his team closed out the Rockies with a 4-3 victory at Coors Field.

Still, for many fans, the only real excitement this month came in the AL championship series as the Red Sox rallied from a 3-1 deficit to defeat Cleveland in seven games. Once the World Series got under way, the big boys from the American League easily dispatched their NL counterparts – again.

Starting with Boston’s sweep of St. Louis to end an 86-year title drought in 2004, AL teams have dominated three drive-thru Series in the last four seasons. The Chicago White Sox swept Houston in 2005, and the Red Sox outscored Colorado 29-10 this year.

The only exception was last season, when the Cardinals beat Detroit in five dreary games.

Not exactly scintillating stuff.

Colorado created some buzz by going on an incredible surge down the stretch. The young Rockies, picked by most to be an also-ran in the NL West, won 21 of 22 games to take the pennant for the first time in their 15-year history.

But then they had to wait around for eight days before the World Series started. When it did, they were rusty. The Rockies got blown away by Beckett’s 97 mph fastballs as homegrown ace Jeff Francis struggled to find his command in Game 1.

“The layoff hurt us. There’s no doubt about it,” Todd Helton said.

Colorado did put up a mild fight, losing a pair of one-run games. But the Rockies hit only .218 in the Series, squandering one scoring chance after another.

On the mound, they finished with an unsightly 7.68 ERA. The Red Sox batted .333, the second-highest average in Series history behind the 1960 New York Yankees – who lost to Pittsburgh.

Yet the Rockies earned Boston’s respect.

“We beat a very good team. I hope nobody forgets that, because they gave us a battle to the end,” Francona said. “I know when you look at 4-0 it may get lost. It won’t on us. They’re classy people and a classy organization.”