The Day

Sports: Red Sox have nine-game winning streak snapped by Twins

Kepler's single snaps Boston's 9-game streak

- By DAVE CAMPBELL

“We ended up losing a game with a jam shot to center field. We just beat the American League Central champions three out of four. We've been playing good baseball.” RED SOX MANAGER ALEX CORA

Minneapoli­s — Max Kepler delivered the sigh-of-relief winner for Minnesota on the last day of a rough first homestand of the season.

The Boston Red Sox relentless­ly kept the Twins from being comfortabl­e all series.

Kepler's bloop RBI single in the bottom of the ninth inning gave Minnesota a 4-3 victory Thursday over Boston — stopping a five-game losing streak for the Twins and breaking a nine-game winning string for the Red Sox.

"It's impossible to go out and play baseball and not feel it when it's going really well or when it's not going really well. It's really how you harness that," manager Rocco Baldelli said.

Luis Arraez, ever the team sparkplug, let those emotions loose as he raced home on Kepler's hit off Adam Ottavino (1-1) and belly-flopped into home plate.

"It's a tough week, but we won the game," said Arraez, who went 4 for 5 with a two-run single. "I think it's a good start for us."

The Twins avoided matching their longest losing streak in three years under Baldelli, a six-game slide from July 31-Aug. 5, 2020.

The Red Sox, who tied it in the eighth on Alex Verdugo's three-run double, were on their longest winning streak since a 10-game run in 2018, the season they won the World Series.

"We ended up losing a game with a jam shot to center field. That's not bad," said manager Alex Cora, who was ejected for arguing in the eighth. "We just beat the American League Central champions, three out of four. We've been playing good baseball."

Alex Colomé (1-1) pitched a scoreless ninth for the victory, despite a one-out double by Christian Arroyo. Verdugo capped a 10-pitch at-bat against Taylor Rogers with his twoout double in the eighth that made it 3-all. The Red Sox had loaded the bases against Hansel Robles.

Five times during their winning streak, the Red Sox rallied from a deficit in the fifth inning or later.

"It's been fun. I told you guys earlier in the year that this is a sneaky good team," said Garrett Richards, who stretched Boston's streak of 10 straight games with the starting pitcher completing at least five innings. The two runs he allowed were unearned.

Michael Pineda allowed only two singles over seven scoreless innings for the Twins, who had a home run by slump-ridden slugger Miguel Sanó in the sixth.

Pineda's career-best winning streak remained at eight straight decisions, a 15-start stretch with a 2.70 ERA dating to July 26, 2019. The big right-hander served a 60-game sus

pension for taking a banned weight loss drug, bridging the last two seasons.

Using his trusty slider to help tame the top-scoring team in the American League, Pineda retired 14 straight batters at one point. He walked one and struck out six, throwing 88 pitches.

"That was just a fabulous outing," Baldelli said.

Trainer’s room

Red Sox: DH J.D. Martinez and IF Marwin Gonzalez were out of the starting lineup to rest, four games into a 14-game, 13-day stretch. "We've just got to be careful with the workload with all those guys," Cora said.

Twins: CF Byron Buxton and 3B Josh Donaldson were on the bench as a hamstring precaution. Buxton missed the Wednesday doublehead­er, too, when Donaldson returned from the injured list in the second game . ... RHP Shaun Anderson was recalled from the alternate training site in St. Paul, a fresh-arm swap for RHP Cody Stashak, then sent back after the game.

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