The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Red Sox beat Yankees, move 5 up in AL East

- By Jimmy Golen

BOSTON » Jackie Bradley Jr. knows all about the Fenway Park triangle, and how long it can take to get the ball back to the infield from the 420-foot marker.

So when the Red Sox center fielder saw, as he pulled into second, that his Yankees counterpar­t had just picked up the ball, Bradley sped off for third. The two-run triple was all Boston needed, but Bradley added an RBI single in the sixth to help the Red Sox beat the Yankees 5-1 on Sunday and extend their margin in the AL East to five games.

“Jackie’s been phenomenal, swinging the bat today, and doing what he did with 3 RBIs,” said Boston starter Rick Porcello, who pitched six innings of a combined three-hitter. “He’s the best I’ve seen in center field. Very fortunate to have him behind me when I’m pitching.”

The Red Sox won for the 14th time in 17 games, taking two out of three from New York for the second weekend in a row. The archrivals meet again in the first week of September for a fourgame series at Yankee Stadium.

“It’s not what you want,” New York manager Joe Girardi. Obviously, we need to continue to play well so when they come to our place it means something. We probably had a chance to win four of the six and we end up winning two of the six — and that’s frustratin­g.”

Porcello (8-14) allowed all three New York hits, striking out four and walking three to win his fourth straight start. Three relievers provided a perfect inning apiece.

Porcello has allowed two runs or fewer in all six career starts against the Yankees in Fenway Park. That’s the longest such stretch for a Red Sox pitcher since at least 1913, the ballclub said.

Sonny Gray (7-8) allowed two runs on seven hits and two walks in five innings. He lost for the fourth time in five starts to fall to 1-6 in nine road starts this season.

Brett Gardner homered near the Pesky Pole for the Yankees, who had won five of their last six.

Xander Bogaerts reached with one out in the second on a flare to right, then Mitch Moreland was retired on a diving catch by center fielder Aaron Hicks. After Sandy Leon singled to left, Bradley lined one to the triangle in center, scoring two and standing up into third.

Bradley, the No. 9 hitter, drove in another run in the sixth. The bottom of the Red Sox order added two insurance runs in the eighth when Bogaerts walked, Moreland doubled and Leon drove them both in with a double down the rightfield line.

Caleb Smith walked Bradley and gave up a single to Brock Holt to load the bases before striking out Mookie Betts, getting Andrew Benintendi on a popup too shallow to score a runner and Hanley Ramirez on a comebacker. Chapman got the last out in the sixth and completed the seventh, allowing one walk while striking out two.

“I just prepared myself a little earlier than I usually do,” he said through a translator.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boston Red Sox’s Andrew Benintendi, right, takes his at bat as New York Yankees’ Gary Sanchez, left, looks on in the eighth inning of a baseball game, Sunday in Boston.
STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boston Red Sox’s Andrew Benintendi, right, takes his at bat as New York Yankees’ Gary Sanchez, left, looks on in the eighth inning of a baseball game, Sunday in Boston.

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