Albany Times Union

Cannon fire hits Red Sox

Laureano guns down third runner in four games for Athletics

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When the reigning AL MVP openly regrets challengin­g you, that’s pretty high praise.

Center fielder Ramon Laureano threw out another Red Sox runner in a key spot, and the Oakland Athletics kept Boston stumbling with a 7-3 win on Thursday.

Laureano tossed out three runners as the A’s took three of four in the series.

“Rarely do you see three impactful plays like that in a series, because sometimes they stop running on you, but they continued to be aggressive on him, and every time he made a different play from the one before — but all big plays in the course of a game,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said.

“It’s tough to keep finding adjectives for Ramon’s throwing, but it’s one of a kind,” he said.

Mookie Betts led off the Red Sox ninth inning with a walk and tried to take third when Andrew Benintendi followed with a bloop single. But Laureano charged the ball hard and threw on the run to catch Betts, with the out call being upheld on replay.

“I should have known,” Betts said. “He’s pretty much thrown everybody out. That’s what my instincts told me to do and I should have let myself know before anything even happened that my run meant nothing.”

On Tuesday night, Laureano threw out Xander Bogaerts at third as he tried to stretch a double in the ninth inning of a game Oakland won 1-0. On Monday night, Laureano threw out Bogaerts at the plate early in a 7-0 win for the A’s.

The 24-year-old Laureano made his major league debut last year. He now has 12 assists in only 57 games in the outfield with the A’s.

“It’s a bad decision and he knows it,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said of Betts’ baserunnin­g blunder.

“The three plays were bang-bang plays, but that one right there can’t happen and he knows it. He came up to me, and for how great a player he is, he makes mistakes and he owned it. He came up to me and said ‘That’s my fault.’ ”

Why would anyone challenge Laureano?

“They might, I don’t why they would, but they might,” Stephen Piscotty said. “I was shocked to see it . ... The guy’s got a cannon and he’s laser accurate.”

Piscotty led the A’s offense as he went 4-for-4 with a home run, double and five RBIS to help Oakland win for the fifth time in six games.

The Red Sox fell to 2-6, the worst start for a defending World Series champion since the stripped-down Marlins struggled in 1998. J.D. Martinez homered for Boston.

Brett Anderson (2-0) gave up three runs and eight hits and four walks in 51/3 innings.

Anderson walked home two runs in the first inning. Martinez’s third home run of the season made it 3-0 in the third.

The A’s tied it in the third on Piscotty’s three-run homer off Eduardo Rodriguez (0-2). Rodriguez gave up six runs and eight hits and three walks in 32/3 innings.

 ?? Ezra Shaw / Getty Images ?? Mookie Betts of the Red Sox is tagged out at third base by Matt Chapman of the A’s in the ninth inning, thanks to a strong throw from Oakland center fielder Ramon Laureano.
Ezra Shaw / Getty Images Mookie Betts of the Red Sox is tagged out at third base by Matt Chapman of the A’s in the ninth inning, thanks to a strong throw from Oakland center fielder Ramon Laureano.

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