A day after the Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay
Rays tangled, Major League Baseball struck
back: Eight suspensions totaling 38 games.
Boston outfielder Coco Crisp and Tampa Bay
pitcher James Shields were the hardest hit
Friday, the result of their fight turning
into a wild, bench-clearing brawl at Fenway
Park.
Three Red Sox were suspended: Crisp for
seven games, pitcher Jon Lester for five
games and first baseman Sean Casey for three
games.
Five Rays were penalized by MLB
disciplinarian Bob Watson: Shields for six
games, DH-outfielder Jonny Gomes and pitcher
Edwin Jackson for five games each,
outfielder Carl Crawford for four games and
second baseman Akinori Iwamura for three
games.
All eight players also were fined
undisclosed amounts. The Red Sox and Rays
have often clashed in the past, and their
latest outburst came during Boston's 7-1 win
Thursday night.
"I want to be very clear: I defend
everything our guys did," Rays manager Joe
Maddon said before Friday night's game at
Texas. "I feel actually proud of the way we
handled the situation that was presented."
The starting dates of the suspensions
were staggered, so as to not leave either
team short-handed.
Crisp, Shields and Gomes all appealed
their penalties, which were set to start
Friday night. They can play until the appeal
process is complete.
Lester, suspended for throwing a pitch at
a Tampa Bay hitter after a warning had been
issued, did not appeal.
Crawford was set to start serving his
suspension Wednesday, Jackson on June 13,
Casey on June 14 and Iwamura on June 17.
"Obviously, we want to balance the days
out. They've done that, but we want to see
if we can set it up a little different,"
Maddon said.
"We'd like to see a few more of their
guys suspended. They started it, but we had
more guys thrown out," he said. "The
perpetrator's crime is way too close to us."
The Red Sox were home against Seattle on
Friday night. The Boston clubhouse had
already closed when the suspensions were
announced.
Major baseball brawls in recent years
have resulted in multiple suspensions.
• In August 2006, eight suspensions were
handed out after Texas and the Angels
tangled. Managers Buck Showalter and Mike
Scioscia, five players and a coach were
penalized.
• In May 2000, 19 members of the Dodgers
-- 17 players and two coaches -- were
suspended after they climbed into the stands
at Wrigley Field after a fan allegedly stole
catcher Chad Kreuter's hat.
• In April 2000, 13 players were
suspended after Detroit and the Chicago
White Sox got into a pair of bench-clearing
brawls. In addition, managers Jerry Manuel
and Phil Garner and a coach were penalized.
With first place in the AL East on the
line, tempers started to flare again between
the Rays and Red Sox on Wednesday night
after Crisp made a hard slide into Iwamura.
Then on Thursday night, Crisp was hit in
the right hip by Shields in the second
inning. Crisp rushed the mound, ducked a
wild right by Shields and mayhem ensued.
"I don't regret anything," Shields said.
Gomes charged from the dugout, throwing
punches at Crisp.
"My suspension, five games, I guess is
deserved," Gomes said. "You leave the dugout
and try to inflict punishment by punching
someone, you're going to get fined."
Gomes served a one-game suspension this
year for running in from right field to
tackle the Yankees' Shelley Duncan during a
brawl in spring training.
"It's definitely not the way I want to
leave my mark as a player. It's my second
offense. I'm sure that had something to do
with it," Gomes said.
Crisp, left with a scratch on his
forehead and right cheek, said Crawford
tried to pull his hair during the pileup.
After the game, Crawford didn't deny he
might've done it. Crisp, Shields and Gomes
were ejected.
"More of our guys participated. Or our
guys got caught on tape," Crawford said.
Said Jackson: "It's nothing to be proud
of. It's not some big accomplishment."
"The only way to explain it is instincts
and reaction," he said. "It wasn't as if I
was out there doing something dirty."
Often eliminated early, Tampa Bay is
fighting with Boston and New York this year
-- on and off the field.
"With the Red Sox it was more caused by
dirty play during the game. With the
Yankees, I don't know," Crawford said.