Grand Debut: Nava hits grand slam on first pitch in majors as Red Sox rout Phillies, 10-2
By APSaturday, June 12, 2010
Nava makes a grand slam debut, Red Sox win
BOSTON — Daniel Nava gave his parents a great home video.
Nava hit the first pitch he saw as a big leaguer for a grand slam — only the second player to do it — leading the Boston Red Sox to their second straight rout of the Philadelphia Phillies, 10-2 Saturday.
Nava connected on a fastball from Joe Blanton in the second inning, shortly after being called up from Triple-A Pawtucket. Kevin Kouzmanoff hit a slam on the first pitch he saw Sept. 2, 2006, for Cleveland against Texas, according to STATS LLC.
With his parents watching from the stands — and father operating a video camera — Nava came to bat with the Red Sox trailing 2-1.
“It’s funny. They really hadn’t seen me play in the last two years,” he said. “They were in Indianapolis to watch me play on Friday and I told them I might be playing up here.”
His parents overcame a bit of travel trauma to get to Fenway Park in time for their son’s debut. His mom said that when the luggage was slow to arrive at the airport, they left it there and headed straight to the ballpark.
Nava often was regarded as too little to play during his career at all levels. Undrafted out of college, he was the MVP of the independent Golden League in 2007, and signed with Boston.
With his mother and father watching from the back of the postgame interview room, Nava was asked about his climb to this moment.
“It’s ridiculous,” he said.
Only four players in big league history have hit grand slams in their first at-bat. Nava became the 10th player to homer in his first at-bat for the Red Sox, and just the second to hit a grand slam — veteran Rip Repulski did it on May 10, 1960.
The 27-year-old Nava tried to approach his first plate appearance like another other one.
“I wanted to treat it like I normally do,” he said. “I just said, ‘How are you guys doing (to umpire Bill Hohn and catcher Brian Schneider)?’ They didn’t say anything.”
As he rounded second base, it began to hit him, what he’d accomplished. Nava “started to scream. I was pumped.”
Nava’s slam brightened a rainy day that started out poorly for the Red Sox, even before the first pitch.
Daisuke Matsuzaka was a late scratch and placed on the 15-day disabled list with a strained forearm following his pregame throwing in the bullpen.
“When he was warming he said his forearm was sore,” manager Terry Francona said. “He said he could pitch, but would have to change his delivery. We weren’t comfortable with that.”
Emergency starter Scott Atchison, recalled from Triple-A Pawtucket on Friday, worked three innings, allowing two runs and two hits in his first major league start.
Batting last in the order, Nava pulled the first pitch he saw into the Boston bullpen in right-center field, where reliever Manny Delcarmen made a leaping catch.
Nava got an enthusiastic greeting in the dugout, with Kevin Youkilis among those pounding him on the batting helmet. Encouraged by his teammates, Nava took a curtain call.
“I knew it was his first at-bat, but I tried to throw him a sinker away,” Blanton said. “I threw it right down the middle and it didn’t sink.”
As luck would have it, Nava came up the next inning and again the bases loaded were loaded. With the crowd on its feet, Nava struck out on a check swing against Blanton.
Nava later hit a line-drive double into the left-center gap, and finished 2 for 4. Not a bad debut, considering it began on a shaky note — he had a little trouble corraling Schneider’s double down the left-field line in the top of the second.
The Red Sox pounded Blanton (1-5) for nine runs and 13 hits in four innings. But, he didn’t fare as badly as Friday’s starter, Jamie Moyer, who had the worst start in his 24 seasons, allowing nine runs and nine hits in one-plus inning.
J.D. Drew homered and had three hits for the Red Sox, who beat the Phillies 12-2 on the opener of a three-game series on Friday night. Nava also doubled as Boston amassed 16 hits.
Delcarmen (2-2), the second of five pitchers, worked two scoreless innings for the win.
Schneider had three hits and drove in both of Philadelphia’s runs. The Phillies are 7-16 in their last 23 games.
Matsuzaka had warmed up and walked to the dugout about 15 minutes before the scheduled start.
Just ahead of the national anthem, Atchison started warming up quickly in the bullpen. When it was over, he completed his warmups before walking to the dugout with pitching coach John Farrell.
“This was happening quickly, with the anthem going on we were making pitching changes,” Francona said.
The club announced the scratch and roster move just before the Red Sox took the field.
“It’s a not a joint issue. It’s muscle soreness, so I don’t think it should take that long,” Matsuzaka said through a translator.
NOTES: Red Sox OF Josh Reddick was optioned to Pawtucket. … Every Red Sox starter had a hit by the fourth inning. … Blanton has allowed five or more runs in each of his last four starts. … Youkilis was hit on the right arm by a pitch in the sixth inning and leff the game the next inning.”He’s OK,” Francona said. “He got it right on the funny bone.”
Tags: Athlete Health, Athlete Injuries, Boston, Daniel nava, Massachusetts, North America, Professional Baseball, United States