Lethbridge Herald

Red Sox first team to 70 wins

-

Chris Sale is drawing comparison­s from his manager to another dominant lefthander.

“He’s reminding me a lot of Randy — Randy Johnson,” Boston manager Alex Cora said. “The thing with Randy, it looked like he was always grinding. With (Sale) it looks effortless right now.”

Sale struck out nine in six scoreless innings, and Jackie Bradley Jr. hit a three-run homer to lift the Red Sox to a 9-1 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Sunday. Sale allowed two hits, lowered his ERA to an American League-best 2.13 and won his sixth straight decision.

The Red Sox are 19-4 in their last 23 games, and the AL East leaders cruised through the finale of this series after scoring just one run in the previous two nights at Detroit.

Blaine Hardy (3-3) allowed four runs and five hits in threeplus innings. Jeimer Candelario homered for the Tigers in the seventh.

Sale (11-4) has won each of his last five starts, allowing one run in 33 innings in that span. He had gone five straight starts with at least 11 strikeouts — and only one walk in each — but that streak came to an end when he was lifted Sunday after 99 pitches.

“I feel good. I feel like a broken record sometimes, but we scored nine runs today?” Sale said. “You get a padded lead like that, you can kind of dig in and just try to find a groove and keep going.”

Boston scored twice in the second on RBI groundouts by Rafael Devers and Eduardo Nunez, then the Red Sox broke the game open in the fourth.

With men on second and third and nobody out, Devers hit a grounder to first baseman John Hicks, who immediatel­y threw home — only to have Steve Pearce, the Boston runner at third, stay put. Devers reached on that fielder’s choice, loading the bases.

“That’s an instinct play, and you know the situation. We’ve got our backup catcher playing first base,” Tigers manager Ron Gardenhire said. “He needs to look around and figure out what’s happening before he makes that throw, but he feels like the runner is going to go on that ball.”

Drew VerHagen came on to relieve Hardy, and Nunez greeted him with an RBI single off the glove of Candelario, the third baseman. Xander Bogaerts, the runner on second, held up when he made it to third, but Devers — who had started the play on first — nearly reached third himself before stopping because Bogaerts was still there. Devers was tagged out .

The Red Sox weren’t hurt much by that baserunnin­g mishap. Bradley followed with his seventh homer of the year, giving Boston a 6-0 lead.

Andrew Benintendi hit a tworun triple in the seventh, and J.D. Martinez added a sacrifice fly.

The game was delayed 1 hour, 35 minutes at the start because of rain. TOUGH OUT Candelario was impressive even in the lopsided defeat. He battled Sale through 21 pitches in two plate appearance­s, finally grounding out to third both times.

His homer came off reliever Brandon Workman.

“He was a pain,” Sale said. “Put good at-bats together, and obviously later in the game ran into one. I don’t know what I was doing or what he was doing, but I need to figure something out.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada