AS MUCH HARD LUCK AS THE RED SOX recently had with great pitching but tough losses, Roy Halladay had worse:

It was Halladay’s fourth straight complete game. He’s lost the last three.

But then again, Pedroia was there to make sure everyone knew the Sox earned the win:

Lester allowed just one hit in eight innings, a clean single on Lyle Overbay’s liner in the fifth over second baseman Pedroia’s head. But Pedroia kept the game scoreless in the ninth when he dove to his right and nabbed Wells’ grounder after Scott Rolen had doubled off Jonathan Papelbon (1-0) with two outs.

Pedroia gloved the ball and threw out Wells.

“Anybody’s diving for any balls in that situation,” Pedroia said. “It definitely got the crowd involved. It’s a little bit of momentum. They could have had a run and it gets taken away.”

Wells wanted to hit the ball up the middle.

“I saw it get by the mound,” he said, “and I saw Superman at second base.”

That play also earned Pedroia Baseball Tonight’s number one Web Gem, by the way.

THE SCIENCE OF BASEBALL sometimes includes mad scientists. Sure, there’s the famous shift – often employed against Big Papi – where the field is stacked on the right, leaving the entire third base side wide open. But then there’s craziness like this:

Braves manager Bobby Cox was desperate, and he was plotting an ingenious plan. He was nearly out of right-handed pitchers, and players can’t re-enter a game after they’ve been removed. If Mr. Resop, a righty, could play the outfield, that would allow Mr. Cox to replace him on the mound temporarily — and use a lefty specialist to pitch to Adam LaRoche — without losing him entirely. So after Mr. Resop pitched to three batters in the top of the 10th inning, Mr. Cox had him go to left field. When Mr. Resop returned to the pitcher’s mound one batter later, it marked the first time a pitcher had pitched, played the field and pitched again in the same game since Jeff Nelson of the Seattle Mariners in 1993, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

But if Mr. Melvin had his way, the Brewers organization might be even more progressive. He has another counterintuitive idea: using relievers to start the game, and delaying the “starting” pitcher’s entrance until the third inning or so. The thinking is that starters are typically among a team’s best pitchers, yet nowadays they often pitch only through the fifth or sixth inning, well before many games are decided. By having them pitch later, they’d be around for the higher-leverage innings.

The idea would need to be tested first in the minor leagues, Mr. Melvin says. The only problem, it appears, is that it’s too unconventional. “I can’t get anybody to do it,” he says.

ON A NIGHT WHEN BECKETT, VARITEK, LOWELL, CORA AND CRISP are all unavailable, this is a pretty great sentence to be able to read:

Jacoby Ellsbury hit two solo homers and Kevin Youkilis added a two-run shot for Boston, while Pedroia went 4-for-5 with three doubles and a single.

It’s their sixth straight win and third late-inning comeback.

TURNS OUT THE HEX WASN’T A HOAX, but did it actually become a pox on the Sox, and not a prank on the Yanks? It may have seemed like a great idea to bury a Red Sox jersey underneath the new Yankee Stadium as a curse on the Yankees, but the symbolism never really made sense to me. Turns out the jersey buried in concrete bore the name of one Mr. David Ortiz, whose .070 average and 3 for 43 slump definitely borders on the supernatural, but in a bad way. Looks like the construction worker’s well-meaning curse may have backfired. Oops. Now that the Yanks have excavated the jersey, let’s see if Papi gets his mojo back.

BASEBALL PLAYERS MIGHT BE THE FUNNIEST OF PRO ATHLETES — but then again, the only sport I really follow is baseball so my theory might be full of crapola. Still, the personalities that make up, say, the NBA and NFL seem to me mostly humorless and/or too full of themselves to say something actually funny as opposed to just buffoonish-ly funny. Of course, Barry Bonds is pretty much the poster boy for “humorless, hyper-competitive, self-important meathead.” But then you also have wiseasses like Kevin Millar, goofballs like Manny, clowns like Big Papi and a bunch of other fun-loving guys trying to keep things light over a long season. An interview with Dustin Pedroia in the Globe, while not hilarious, at least shows these guys aren’t totally unimaginative dumbass jocks who take everything too seriously.

GLOBE: No marriage proposals?
PEDROIA: There was yesterday! [A woman held up a sign that said] “Pedroia’s future wife” and had an arrow pointing down. I was like, “Jeez. This woman must be blind. Poor thing.”

WATCHING 23-YEAR-OLD JON LESTER PITCH in his first big league start since being treated for cancer wasn’t as interesting as watching his parents watching their 23-year-old son pitch in his first big league start since being treated for cancer:

In the third, Sizemore connected for a two-run homer off Lester, who was in trouble again in the fourth.

The Indians loaded the bases with one out but Lester broke Josh Barfield’s bat on a comebacker that he bobbled before throwing home to force Garko. With Sizemore back up, Lester’s mom, Kathie, couldn’t watch as her son battled Cleveland’s leadoff hitter.

When Lester finally blew a fastball past Sizemore for strike three to end the threat, his father, John, and Kathie jumped up and pumped their fists in celebration. However, she quickly sat back down and resumed her doubled-up position, seemingly afraid to watch anymore.