Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Bradley Waits Out A Win

Scores On Holt’s Pinch Double

- By JIMMY GOLEN Associated Press

BOSTON — Any disappoint­ment Jackie Bradley Jr. had about the replay review that turned his home run into a double disappeare­d soon after Brock Holt walked up to the plate.

The Red Sox pinch hitter drove a tiebreakin­g double off the Green Monster on the first pitch after Bradley narrowly missed a homer, and Boston beat the New York Mets 5-3 on Saturday. Rick Porcello earned his 10th straight interleagu­e victory and helped the Red Sox lower their magic number to four.

“What’s the old saying: Everything happens for a reason,” Bradley said.

Porcello (17-7) pitched five innings of two-hit ball as the Red Sox improved their major league-best record to 102-47.

Combined with the Yankees 8-7 loss to Toronto, Boston expanded its lead in the division to 10 1⁄

2 and could clinch, regardless of what happens Sunday, by winning two out of three at Yankee Stadium this week.

Steve Pearce had three hits for Boston, and Craig Kimbrel pitched the ninth for his 41st save.

The Mets, who had won four straight, took a 3-1 lead on Brandon Nimmo’s three-run homer in the fourth. With two on in the fifth, Bradley lined a ball that bounced off the top edge of the wall and up, back toward the field. Although the umpires signaled for him to circle the bases, Bradley was sent back to second base when replays showed it didn’t completely clear the red line that signifies a homer.

Mets manager Mickey Callaway argued that the runner from first should go back to third, but the umpires ruled that he would have scored if they hadn’t signaled the homer.

Paul Sewald (0-6) intentiona­lly walked Rafael Devers, Drew Smith replaced Sewald, Holt hit for Sandy Leon and, on the first pitch, lined one off the Monster in left-center to score both runners and make it 5-3.

Holt has five extra-base hits in 14 appearance­s as a pinch-hitter this season, including his second game-winning pinch-hit homer of the season Tuesday.

“He’s our secret weapon,” Porcello said. Porcello allowed three runs, walking one and striking out five. The Red Sox have won each of his last 14 interleagu­e starts — the longest streak since regular season interleagu­e play began in 1997; Johan Santana started 12 straight interleagu­e wins from 2002-05.

Sewald got two outs, allowing four runs on three hits and an intentiona­l walk.

Boston’s 102 wins is third-most in franchise history, passing the 1915 World Series championsh­ip team.

Wright’s stuff: With Mets third baseman David Wright announcing this week that he would retire at the end of the season, the Red Sox gave him a No. 5 from the Fenway Park scoreboard. Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia, a teammate of Wright’s from the 2009 World Baseball Classic, presented it to him after batting practice.

“Pedroia sent me a text that he’d like to get together kind of privately. It was really cool, a really cool gesture,” Wright said. “It’s usually a lot more trash talk, but this is the first time that he actually hasn’t been mean to me. So it was kind of nice.”

Up next: The teams finish the series at 1 p.m. on Sunday with a pair of Cy Young Award candidates. LHP Chris Sale (12-4) will face Mets righty Jacob deGrom (8-9). It’s a rematch from their college days in 2010, when deGrom, a two-way player at Stetson, hit his only college home run off Sale, the ace at Florida Gulf Coast.

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