Lethbridge Herald

Price struggles again in Bronx

VOIT, YANKS TOP RED SOX 10-1

- Jake Seiner

Luke Voit hit two homers off David Price, Miguel Andujar popped another one barely into the right-field seats and the New York Yankees stalled Boston’s division-clinching celebratio­n by beating the Red Sox 10-1 on Wednesday night.

Luis Severino (18-8) pitched seven innings of one-run ball, and the Yankees had no need for All-Star closer Aroldis Chapman on the day they activated him from the disabled list. Chapman had been out since Aug. 21 with left knee tendinitis. He watched the end of the game from the dugout.

Mookie Betts had two strikeouts and no hits in his return to Boston’s lineup. He pulled a possible grand slam just foul in the ninth before grounding into a game-ending double play. The AL MVP contender sat out Tuesday after injuring his left side two days earlier, but came back to bat leadoff as the designated hitter.

The Yankees will try to send Boston packing Thursday with the AL East still undecided. The Red Sox lead the division by 9 1/2 games and entered this three-game series needing one victory to lock up the division.

New York started Wednesday with a 2 1/2-game lead over Oakland for the top AL wild card. The Yankees had dropped 10 of 17 before rallying to beat the Red Sox 3-2 on Tuesday night in Aaron Judge’s return from the DL.

Voit’s two homers cleared the right-field fence by about two yards combined. The second was close enough that umpires reviewed it on video for potential fan interferen­ce.

The stout slugger bowled back into the dugout after the second shot, grinning amid a barrage of high-fives and fist bumps. It was Voit’s second multihomer game with New York, and he has nine homers in 29 games since being acquired from St. Louis. His next homer would give the Yankees a major league-record 12 players with at least 10 home runs.

Fans chanted “Luuuuuke!” after Voit singled in the eighth for his career-high fourth hit.

Price (15-7) entered the game 5-0 with a 1.56 ERA in nine starts since the All-Star break, but he has rarely been that sharp at Yankee Stadium. He allowed a career-high five homers over 3 1/3 innings in his last appearance in the Bronx on July 1, and he came into Wednesday with a 4.75 ERA at the park over 20 starts — the worst mark for him in any stadium where he’s pitched at least 10 times.

Price surrendere­d three homers this time, each aided by Yankee Stadium’s short rightfield porch. Andujar hit his 25th just over the wall for a 1-0 lead in the second, and Voit added solo shots in the fourth and sixth to nearly the same spot.

Price was also charged with two unearned runs after third baseman Eduardo Nunez whiffed on Judge’s bases-loaded grounder in the second.

Boston trailed 6-1 when manager Alex Cora pulled Price following Voit’s second homer with one out in the fifth. Yankee Stadium fans jeered as Price walked slowly to the dugout.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? New York Yankees' Luke Voit connects for one of two home runs off Boston Red Sox starting pitcher David Price during the sixth inning of a baseball game, Wednesday, in New York.
Associated Press photo New York Yankees' Luke Voit connects for one of two home runs off Boston Red Sox starting pitcher David Price during the sixth inning of a baseball game, Wednesday, in New York.

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