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Kotchman, Matthews power Angels over Red Sox
 

By Mike Petraglia
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BOSTON (Ticker) -- Injuries and illness finally caught up
to the Boston Red Sox.

Gary Matthews Jr. homered twice, including career No. 100, and
Casey Kotchman delivered the go-ahead run with a solo homer as
the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim beat the Red Sox, 6-4, on
Wednesday night at Fenway Park.

The loss snapped Boston's six-game winning streak.

"I think it's a good game for us," Angels manager Mike Scioscia
said. "The way we got it, too. The bullpen got some big outs
for us."

One night after Josh Beckett had to miss his start with a stiff
neck, Daisuke Matsuzaka was the second Red Sox starter to be
scratched in as many nights.

"Daisuke alerted us that he was feeling it and it rapidly got
worse, which has been happening," Red Sox manager Terry Francona
explained. "That start wasn't happening. He saw the doctor
and (he) sent him home with medication."

Thursday's scheduled starter, Jon Lester, was moved up one game
as an emergency starter. Jason Varitek (flu), Kevin Youkilis
(back) and Manny Delcarmen (sick) also were unavailable for the
game.

Lester was tagged for one run and two hits in each of the first
three innings as the Angels jumped out to a 3-1 lead. Matthews
opened up his big night with a solo shot off Lester in the
first, cracking a 1-1 pitch well over the "Green Monster" and
out of the park.

The Red Sox scored single runs in the second and the third on an
RBI single by Julio Lugo and Dustin Pedroia's sacrifice fly,
cutting the lead to 3-2.

But Lester yielded another run in the fifth when Matthews
connected for his second solo homer of the night and fourth of
the season, putting Los Angeles up, 4-2.

Lester allowed nine hits and four runs over five innings,
walking two and striking out one.

"He stepped up and we made sure he knew that," Francona said.
"I don't think he was happy with the results because we didn't
win but he gave us five innings. When he left it's 4-4 and we
had a chance."

David Ortiz quickly pulled Boston even, lining the first pitch
he saw from Jon Garland in the fifth into the first row of
grandstand seats with Pedroia aboard to knot the game at 4-4.

Garland (3-2) recovered to pitch a scoreless sixth before giving
way to the Angels bullpen. The righthander allowed eight hits
and four runs over six innings, walking two and striking out
one.

Craig Hansen (0-1), called up from Class AAA Pawtucket earlier
in the day to deepen a pitching staff ravaged by a flu-like bug
running through the clubhouse, started impressively by quickly
retiring the first two batters of the sixth.

But Kotchman connected for a long home run into the Red Sox
bullpen in right-center.

"If you look at Kotchman and our two catchers and (Erick) Aybar
really are perfect examples," Matthews said. " It's kind of
contagious and it's created a pretty competitive atmosphere for
the younger players."

The first baseman's second homer in as many nights put the
Angels up, 5-4.

"Once I let it go I knew I was guiding it," added Hansen. "And
when you guide stuff, that's when you get hurt."

Hansen was optioned back to Pawtucket following the game to make
room for Justin Masterson, who will make his major league debut
Thursday afternoon, filling the slot originally held by Lester.

"It felt like I had a debut all over again," Hansen said. "It
was great to go back out there and great to be back in Boston,
at least for the day anyway. I enjoyed every minute of it."

Justin Speier pitched a scoreless seventh and Scot Shields
worked out of a first-and-second jam in the eighth when Jed
Lowrie hit into an inning-ending, 4-6-3 double play.

"I got a pitch out over the plate," Lowrie said. "I got around
it a little bit and hit it right at him. It's one of those
pitches if I had back I'd probably try to stay a little bit more
up the middle, maybe go the other way with. I hit it hard and
sometimes those are the breaks of the game, right at the guy and
they turn two."

Francisco Rodriguez pitched a scoreless ninth for his eighth
save.

"Our bullpen's always picking us up," Matthews said. "It's rare
if those guys let us down. It seems like if we can get to that
seventh inning we can usually get the job done. Sometimes we
make it interesting but it still gets done and tonight was
business as usual."

 
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