The future never looked so bright for Boston as it did last weekend. Buchholz and Jon Lester, 23, won back-to-back starts. Jacoby Ellsbury, 23, who will take the job of Coco Crisp or J.D. Drew sooner rather than later, hit his first big-league home run while looking like Jim Edmonds in his prime -- only faster. Jonathan Papelbon, 27, chalked up his 31st save. Dustin Pedroia, 24, smacked hits all over Fenway, looking like the best-hitting rookie second baseman in history. Justin Masterson, 22, a groundball pitching machine, is a phone call away in Triple-A.
Indeed, you look at the Yankees and Red Sox these days and you see the players who will keep the rivalry hot for the next decade (sorry, Toronto, Baltimore and Tampa Bay). New York has Chien-Ming Wang, Robinson Cano, Chamberlain, Hughes, Kennedy and Alan Horne to wage war with Boston's kids. New York and Boston have moved their rivalry from the free-agent market (though that venue always will simmer) to the draft and player development.
Forget the fact the the Yanks and Sox have the highest payrolls in baseball. They also each have a stable of young studs.
Just more proof that JP has been nothing but a colossal failure in his 6 years here