Detroit Free Press

Red Sox topple Tigers as Sale outduels Skubal

- Evan Petzold Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him on Twitter @EvanPetzol­d.

On Friday, the Boston Red Sox reinstated left-handed starter Chris Sale, a consistent Cy Young candidate before injuries derailed the past four years of his career, from the 60-day injured list.

It went pretty well, at least for 14 batters. The 34-year-old — a seven-time All-Star — had a perfect game intact against the Detroit Tigers with two outs in the fifth inning when Kerry Carpenter, a left-handed hitter, spoiled Sale’s perfection by hitting a misplaced slider for a solo home run to right-center field.

The solo home run led to a two-run fifth inning, but the Tigers lost, 5-2, in Friday’s series opener at Fenway Park. The Tigers (52-64) had their winning streak snapped at three games.

After Carpenter’s home run, Sale hit Javier Báez with a two-strike slider to put a runner on first base. The hit-by-pitch ended Sale’s 12th start of the season with two outs in the fifth inning.

His replacemen­t, right-handed reliever Kyle Barracloug­h, walked Zack Short on five pitches. The Tigers countered Barracloug­h’s handedness by bringing Riley Greene, a left-handed hitter, off the bench to pinch-hit for Eric Haase.

Greene delivered an RBI single to right field to cut the Tigers’ deficit to 4-2. The top of the fifth ended when Matt Vierling struck out swinging to strand a pair of runners on the bases.

Sale allowed two runs on one hit and zero walks with seven strikeouts across 42⁄3 innings, throwing 42 of 58 pitches for strikes. He generated 12 whiffs with seven four-seam fastballs, four sliders and one sinker.

The Tigers were held to three base runners — Spencer Torkelson’s hit-by-pitch with one out in the sixth, Short’s walk with two outs in the seventh and Carpenter’s walk with two outs in the ninth — over the final four innings.

Báez struck out swinging to end the game.

Skubal’s start

A throwing error by Báez gifted Rob Refsnyder, the leadoff hitter in the first inning, a free base to start the game. The misplay put lefthander Tarik Skubal in a bind from the beginning.

A single from Rafael Devers, the second batter of the game, put runners on the corners, and with one out, Masataka Yoshida grounded into a force out. On the ground ball, Refsnyder scored to put the Red Sox ahead, 1-0.

Báez made up for his first-inning throwing error with an incredible diving stop and glove flip to start a double play in the second inning. Second baseman Andy Ibáñez and first baseman Torkelson completed the play.

Skubal put runners on the corners in the third inning but worked out of the jam. In the fourth inning, singles from Trevor Story and Pablo Reyes put runners on the corners for the third time in four innings.

This time, the Red Sox burned Skubal. Triston Casas, a rookie who played

27 games in 2022, blasted a hanging slider in the heart of the strike zone. His 401-foot home run, a three-run shot, extended Boston’s lead to 4-0.

Skubal finished the fourth inning with backto-back outs against Connor Wong (flyout) and Refsnyder (groundout). He escaped a one-out walk in the fifth inning with an inning-ending double play, featuring Báez once again.

Intentiona­l walk backfires

The Tigers replaced Skubal, calling recently

activated right-handed reliever Will Vest out of the bullpen, after Alex Verdugo’s strikeout in the sixth inning. Before the first out, Story ripped a leadoff single and stole second base.

Vest recorded the second out in four pitches, thanks to a running catch by Greene in leftcenter field, but the Tigers intentiona­lly walked Casas in favor of a matchup between Vest and Wong. The decision backfired, as Wong hit a down-and-away slider for a ground-ball single into right field.

The Red Sox took a 5-2 lead.

Skubal allowed five runs (four earned runs) on seven hits and two walks with three strikeouts over 51⁄3 innings, throwing 59 of 94 pitches for strikes. He used 30 four-seam fastballs (32%), 26 sliders (28%), 17 sinkers (18%), 15 changeups (16%) and six knuckle curves (6%).

He generated an underwhelm­ing eight whiffs on three fastballs, three sliders and two changeups.

 ?? BRIAN FLUHARTY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal throws to first baseman Spencer Torkelson for the second out in the third inning against the Red Sox on Friday in Boston.
BRIAN FLUHARTY/GETTY IMAGES Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal throws to first baseman Spencer Torkelson for the second out in the third inning against the Red Sox on Friday in Boston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States