Chicago Sun-Times

Script flips for Red Sox- Yankees

New York has ascended since April meeting

- Bob Klapisch @ BobKlap USA TODAY Sports Klapisch writes for The ( Bergen County, N. J.) Record, part of the USA TODAY Network.

When the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox last met in April, the prevailing theme was two- way reconnaiss­ance.

Aaron Judge was a newcomer to the rivalry, and the image of Chris Sale at Fenway Park was a shock to the system, too. The Red Sox were considered the American League’s elite team, and the Yankees were only in the early stages of becoming a threat on YawkeyWay— too young and too unknown to be taken seriously, let alone hated.

Much has changed since then. It’s almost as if we’re in an alternate universe. Judge is playing like the rookie of the year. Better yet, an MVP front- runner now that Mike Trout is on the disabled list. And while Sale has been as great as advertised, the Red Sox are in second, chasing the Bombers. Boston is a competent team, but not the powerhouse that was supposed to treat the regular season as a warm- up for October.

This week’s showdown at Yankee Stadium becomes a new referendum, except the equation has been flipped. We’re no longer asking if the Yankees are for real, because that question has been answered. The more relevant narrative is whether the Red Sox can hang with the Bombers over three games without Sale, who pitched Sunday at the Baltimore Orioles.

It’s too early, of course, tomake a conclusive argument about the AL East race, but the data will still tell us plenty. Remember, the Yankees not only swept Boston in their last meeting — a rainshorte­ned two- game series — but limited them to one run and seven hits over 18 innings. A similar triumph would go a long way toward establishi­ng the Yankees as the favorites for the rest of the summer.

In the meantime, here are three people to watch this week.

DAVID PRICE

He gets the ball Thursday after an impressive outing against the Orioles on Saturday — one run on three hits in seven innings with seven strikeouts. Price’s return from the disabled list represents the Red Sox’s greatest hope for catalyzing their season. He, Sale and Rick Porcello were supposed to give Boston the league’s best rotation, at least until an elbow injury sidelined him in spring training.

It took nearly two months for Price to heal, but it appears he’s back to his former self. After debuting against the Chicago White Sox on May 29, the left- hander’s fastball topped out at just under 96 mph against the Orioles. Barring setbacks, Price is capable of catapultin­g the Red Sox on a long winning streak. He’ll face an important test Thursday againstMic­hael Pineda.

AARON JUDGE

We confess: It’s impossible to get enough of the rookie’s ascent. Everywhere the Yankees go, Judge attracts the most attention and for all the right reasons. He’s strong, discipline­d at the plate, athletic in the field and remarkably poised for someone who’s still learning.

Don’t let that warm smile fool you, though. Judge is a fierce competitor who enjoys destroying opposing pitchers. He made his statement against Porcello in April, ripping an opposite- field home run in his second at- bat against the reigning Cy Young Award winner.

Judge leads the majors in homers ( 18), is second in the AL to Trout in onbase plus slugging percentage ( OPS) and fourth in RBI. To think this is the same kid who struck out 42 times in 84 at- bats last year. That’s the version of Judge the Red Sox would prefer to see. Good luck with that.

MASAHIRO TANAKA

He has allowed 11 home runs in his last 31 innings — roughly once every time through the order. The Red Sox are a sabermetri­csdriven organizati­on and no doubt aware Tanaka has been avoiding throwing his four- seam fastball. Of the 103 pitches the Japanese star unleashed against Baltimore in his last start, only 11 were four- seam heaters.

His unwillingn­ess to challenge hitters up in the strike zone and change their eye level has created a target- rich environmen­t in the lower half. That could explain why he’s been getting lit up: Hitters can afford to focus on only one area. We’ll see if that changes Tuesday.

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