Stamford Advocate

Indians homer in 19th straight; beat Red Sox

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BOSTON — Franmil Reyes homered over the Green Monster to spark a three-run third inning — Cleveland’s franchiser­ecord tying 19th straight game with a home run — and the Indians salvaged the finale of the series with an 11-5 victory over the COVID-impacted Boston Red Sox on Sunday.

Reyes added a two-run double and went 4 for 4, and Bradley Zimmer had a tworun single for the Indians, who matched their singleseas­on record streak of homering in consecutiv­e games, set in May of 2000.

“Sometimes you just need that breather,” Indians interim manager DeMarlo Hale said of Reyes, who was just 1 for 20 before a pinch-hit, game-tying homer on Saturday.

J.D. Martinez hit a tworun homer and had three RBIs, and Hunter Renfroe added three hits for the Red Sox, who had their fourgame winning streak halted.

The Red Sox scratched scheduled starter Nick Pivetta before the game, placing him on the COVID-19-related injured list. About 30 minutes before the first pitch, they added infielder/ outfielder Danny Santana to the list, giving them 11 players — six position and five pitchers — in the last 10 days.

Cleveland led 6-0 after three innings before the Red Sox rallied, slicing it to 6-5 on Martinez’s shot.

Reyes’ double came in the ninth when Cleveland pulled away with five runs.

“It’s more confidence at the plate,” Reyes said. “I think the way my coaches talked to me, it was more

about the mechanics and me trusting myself. I think it was that.”

Boston had a walk-off win on Saturday after rallying late in the series opener.

Zach Plesac (10-4) gave up three runs in five innings, improving to 6-1 since coming off the IL after breaking his thumb May 23. Emmanuel Clase got the final four outs for his 21st save.

“There were a couple of breaks that inning that could have been outs,” Plesac said of the fifth. “Different things that weren’t going my way. It just came down to making a pitch.”

Hale felt like Plesac still looked good despite Boston scoring three in the fifth.

“He ran into trouble in the fifth, but I thought that he was competing and trying to make pitches,” Hale said. “I just felt good about him, just ‘Get through it.’ … I thought it was a good opportunit­y for him to get through it and he did.”

Making his major league debut, Red Sox starter Kutter Crawford (0-1) was pulled with no outs in the third after allowing five runs on five hits.

“He filled up the strikezone with good stuff,” Red

Sox manager Alex Cora said. “It’s not easy to come into a situation like this and maneuver a big-league lineup.”

Crawford found after Saturday’s minor league game that he’d be starting in the majors.

“It’s kind of been a crazy 24 hours. I was kind of uncertain what the plan was with all the COVID stuff,” he said. “I was told to kind of be on standby. After the game I was told I was starting today. I tried to get as much sleep as possible. Obviously, I was super excited. … Unfortunat­ely, it didn’t go as I wanted it to, but we live and we learn and we’re going to make adjustment­s and move forward.”

Leading 3-0 in the third, Reyes’ leadoff shot, estimated at 419 feet, completely left Fenway Park.

Crawford walked the next batter before John Schreiber relieved in his Red Sox debut, allowing Zimmer’s broken-bat, loop single to left that made it 6-0.

Martinez and Travis Shaw each had an RBI double in Boston’s three-run fifth, with Shaw’s missing a three-run homer by about a foot when it hit near the top of the right-field wall.

 ?? Winslow Townson / Getty Images ?? The Red Sox’s Bobby Dalbec sits on the ground after not being able to tag out a runner at third base during the ninth inning against the Indians on Sunday in Boston.
Winslow Townson / Getty Images The Red Sox’s Bobby Dalbec sits on the ground after not being able to tag out a runner at third base during the ninth inning against the Indians on Sunday in Boston.

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