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Ramirez makes history, powers Red Sox over Orioles
BOSTON 6, BALTIMORE 3
 

BALTIMORE (Ticker) -- The 500 club made room for another member
on Saturday.

Manny Ramirez hit career home run No. 500 in the seventh inning
and David Ortiz and Dustin Pedroia hit back-to-back blasts in
the third to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 6-3 victory over the
Baltimore Orioles.

Stuck on 498 for over two weeks, Ramirez hit his second homer in
the past four games, vaulting himself into baseball history as
the 24th player to reach 500.

"It was great," Ramirez said. "I've been trying so hard the
past three weeks just to get it done. It finally came and I'm
happy. I'm proud of myself and all the things that I
accomplished. I worked hard for this.

"It did (weigh on me). I was just trying to go out there and
have as much fun as I can and take it by day-by-day. I'm just
happy that it's over with."

Ramirez drove the first pitch he saw from righthander Chad
Bradford an estimated 410 feet over the right-center field wall,
becoming the third player after Jimmie Foxx and Ted Williams to
reach 500 as a member of the Red Sox.

"Bradford hasn't given up many home runs," Orioles manager Dave
Trembley said. "Matchups were such that I thought we had the
right situation.

"His approach was very aggressive. It seemed like he wanted to
get it over with. The worst thing we did was throw him a
strike. We probably just should have kept it out of the strike
zone."

The blast pushed the Red Sox's lead to 5-3 and set off a wild
ovation from the fans at Camden Yards, many of whom were
cheering for Boston.

"He has a lot of fans," Trembley said.

"I thought the player's reaction to Manny was awesome," Boston
manager Terry Francona said. "You could tell the affection that
everybody had for him and it was nice to see. I got a bigger
kick out of just the way his teammates reacted toward him."

The Orioles grabbed an early lead in the second when Jay Payton
and Adam Jones connected for back-to-back singles, but the Red
Sox quickly pulled even on the back-to-back blasts by Dustin
Pedroia and David Ortiz off Baltimore starter Garrett Olson in
the third.

Ortiz's home run was his 13th of the season - moving him into
third in the American League.

Baltimore took the lead back in the fifth inning when Brian
Roberts hit a solo homer into the left field seats off Boston
lefthander Jon Lester.

Lester was removed after just five frames, allowing three runs
and seven hits while walking three and striking out four. The
24-year-old struck out Ramon Hernandez swinging with the bases
loaded in the fifth to end a threat.

Jason Varitek got Lester off the hook when he tied the game at
3-3 with an RBI single in the sixth and Ortiz made a winner out
of David Aardsma (2-1) with a sacrifice fly in the seventh
before Ramirez's historic home run.

Righthander Lance Cormier (0-2) was charged with the loss after
surrendering two runs in 1 2/3 innings.

Jonathan Papelbon worked out of a jam in the ninth inning with
the help of a sparkling double play turned by Alex Cora to earn
his 16th save.

Rookie Jacoby Ellsbury stole three bases for the second night in
a row, giving him an AL-leading 26 this season.

"He's been a difference-maker," Francona said of Ellsbury. "I
like to sit here and tell you that were managing him, telling
him what to do. He's just a good player and his instincts on
the bases are tremendous. He's making good decisions and he's
changing the game when he gets on base."

The one down note for the Red Sox came in the ninth inning when
Ortiz left in the ninth inning after fouling a pitch off his
wrist. X-rays taken after the game were negative and he is
listed as day-to-day.

"He went and got an X-ray," Francona said. "He took the swing
and felt something in his wrist. It was very tender. That's
what we know right now. Obviously it's a concern."

 
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