The Day

Davis stops record skid at 0 for 54, Red Sox fall to the Orioles

- By KEN POWTAK

Boston — Chris Davis definitely kept the souvenir ball from this most elusive hit.

Davis ended his record slump at 0 for 54 and drew applause from rival fans at Fenway Park, lining a single and two doubles while driving in four runs as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Boston Red Sox 9-5 Saturday to stop a fourgame losing streak.

"That's a long time without getting a hit," he said. "I don't know what I'm going to do with it, but obviously something special."

Davis broke into a smile when his bases-loaded, tworun single in the first inning broke the drought.

"It meant a lot to me," he said.

He tried to make the most of his terrible stretch.

"I said it a couple of weeks ago: 'You have to embrace it at some point,'" he said.

Davis walked to the plate in the first to what mostly appeared to be mock cheers when he was announced. But many of those quickly changed when he hit a liner over the head of second baseman Dustin Pedroia, ending the longest hitless streak ever by a position player.

It was his first hit since Sept. 14 of last season.

Once he safely reached first, Davis tipped his cap to the Orioles dugout and many of his teammates raised their arms and hollered in support. He smiled and made a motion that he wanted to ball, which he got.

"Significan­t weight lifted off my shoulders," he said later.

Davis, a two-time major league home run champion, had been 0 for 33 this season.

"The team did a rally around him a few minutes ago and a couple of guys said a couple of nice things," Baltimore manager Brandon Hyde said. "We know how hard he's been grinding. We know how hard it's been on him. Our guys have been pulling for him big-time."

The 33-year-old Davis is in the fourth season of a $161 million, seven-year contract. The all-time record for a hitless streak by any player was an 0-for-85 drought by pitcher Bob Buhl in 1962-63.

"It's never easy. Baseball is a tough game when you're struggling," said Boston righty Rick Porcello, who gave up the hit. "He's still showing up and playing hard every day, so I tip my hat to him for battling through what he's battling through."

Davis lined an RBI double in the fifth that put the Orioles ahead 3-2. The Orioles broke it open four in the sixth, with Davis adding a run-scoring groundout.

Christian Vázquez hit a two-run homer and drove in a career-best four runs for the World Series champion Red Sox, who had won their last two games.

Porcello (0-3) pitched into the fifth.

Trainer's room

Red Sox: Manager Alex Cora said LHP Brian Johnson (left elbow inflammati­on) still hasn't thrown and is just getting treatment. Pedroia returned after getting Friday off as the club proceeds slowly after he missed all but three games last year due to a knee injury.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP PHOTO ?? Chris Davis of the Baltimore Orioles runs on his RBI double during the fifth inning of Saturday’s game against the Boston Red Sox at Boston.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP PHOTO Chris Davis of the Baltimore Orioles runs on his RBI double during the fifth inning of Saturday’s game against the Boston Red Sox at Boston.

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