Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Odor sparks rally in 8th inning

- By Ken Powtak

BOSTON — Rougned Odor’s two-run double highlighte­d a four-run rally in the eighth inning after his two errors helped Boston build an early lead, and the New York Yankees beat the Red Sox 4-3 on Saturday.

Gleyber Torres added a go-ahead, bloop single for the Yankees, who posted just their third victory in 12 games this season against their longtime rivals.

The Red Sox, who had won four in a row, put runners on second and third with two outs in the ninth before Aroldis Chapman struck out

Kiké Hernández for his 18th save.

New York can earn a split of the four-game series Sunday at Fenway Park. The Yankees, who could have fallen double-digit games out of first place in the AL East, moved within eight games of the Red Sox.

Boston starter Nathan Eovaldi was breezing along, throwing a shutout with two outs in the eighth before he was lifted after Brett Gardner’s RBI single.

“Yeah, that was a good one. No question about it,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “Eovaldi held us down a good portion of the day and all of a

sudden we get the lead.”

It’s the first time the Red Sox have lost with a lead of more than two runs this season.

“It’s a tough one,’ ” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “One of those that’s disappoint­ing but we’ll move forward.”

Adam Ottavino (2-3) relieved and allowed Giancarlo Stanton’s bloop, ground-rule double. Odor drove his tying hit off the Green Monster and Torres followed a single that dropped in down the right-field line.

“I think if you see my body language during the game, it was pretty clear I was stung by the whole ordeal,” Ottavino said of the two bloop hits.

New York starter Jameson Taillon (6-4) gave up three runs — one earned — in seven innings, striking out four and walking three.

“I thought I did a good job of minimizing it early,” said Taillon, who gave up a run in each of the first three innings. “I’m not shocked we were able to string something together when Eovaldi was out.”

Eovaldi struck out eight and was charged with two runs, without issuing a walk. He threw 82 of his 100 pitches for strikes.

“I feel like I made a few mechanical adjustment­s to help with my timing,” said Eovaldi of his ball/ strike ratio. “I feel like that showed today.”

Hernández drove Taillon’s third pitch off the Green Monster, slid headfirst into third and trotted home when second baseman Odor’s relay sailed into the protective netting above New York’s dugout.

Taillon had given up just three earned runs in three career starts against the Red Sox. They took advantage of Odor’s two errors, scoring three against him in the initial three innings.

“This is a good one,” Boone said. “We’ve had more than our share of gut punches the last month or so.”

DJ LeMahieu went 1 for 5 with a double, extending his consecutiv­e on-base streak to 34 games, matching the longest single-season string by a Yankees player since Hall of Famer Derek Jeter’s in 2012.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP ?? The Yankees’ Rougned Odor (12) celebrates after scoring on an RBI-single by Gleyber Torres during the eighth inning.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP The Yankees’ Rougned Odor (12) celebrates after scoring on an RBI-single by Gleyber Torres during the eighth inning.

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