The Red Sox Are Becoming History
It took a no-hitter — a 108-pitch, 10-strikeout gem by the A’s Sean Manaea — to stop the Red Sox in their tracks, snapping their eight-game winning streak and dealing them just their third loss of the year in their 20th game. Though they lost to the A’s again on Sunday, they’ve spent time in some rarefied air in recent days.
When the Sox beat the A’s on Friday night to climb to 17-2, they became the first team in 31 years to reach that early-season pinnacle, and just the sixth since 1901, when the American League began play:
Team | Year | Final W-L | Finish | Postseason |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tigers | 1911 | 89-65 | 2 | |
Giants (18-1) | 1918 | 71-53 | 2 | |
Dodgers | 1955 | 98-55 | 1 | Won World Series |
A’s | 1981 | 64-45 | 1 | Won AL West (1st Half) |
Tigers | 1984 | 104-58 | 1 | Won World Series |
Brewers | 1987 | 91-71 | 3 |
Two of those five teams went on to win the World Series. The 1955 Dodgers, managed by Hall of Famer Walter Alston and led by Hall of Famers Jackie Robinson, Roy Campanella, Pee Wee Reese, and Duke Snider (and also featuring a 19-year-old bonus baby named Sandy Koufax), started the year 10-0 and ran their record to 22-2 before taking their third loss. By that point, they were nine games ahead of the National League pack; they would win by 13.5 games, then claim their long-awaited first championship by beating the Yankees in a seven-game World Series.