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Red Sox keep rolling at home
BOSTON 5, TAMPA BAY 1
 


By Mike Petraglia
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BOSTON (Ticker) -- The Boston Red Sox used their home-field
advantage to leapfrog back into first place in the American
League East.

J.D. Drew continued to swing a hot bat, collecting another two
hits, while Josh Beckett allowed just one run in six innings as
the Red Sox defeated the Tampa Bay Rays, 5-1, on Wednesday for
their 12th straight win at Fenway Park.

Drew, batting third in place of the injured David Ortiz, also
scored twice while Kevin Youkilis and Coco Crisp chipped in with
two hits apiece for Boston, which improved to a major
league-best 23-5 at home and moved into first in the AL East by
a half-game over Tampa Bay.

"I don't know if we can," Red Sox manager Terry Francona
answered when asked to explain the success at home. "Obviously,
we like playing here, we're used to our ball park."

The Red Sox are just 14-20 away from their friendly confines
this season.

"The good news is our home record outweighs some of our troubles
on the road and when it comes time to get back on the road,
we'll have to do better," Francona said. "We like playing here,
we'd be crazy not to. We have the craziest fans in the world."

On the flip side, the Rays lost their hold on first place for
the first time since May 24.

"It's way too early to get overly concerned about that," Rays
manager Joe Maddon said. "We've talked about it. We're playing
a very good team. We have not done well here this year. And we
have to do well here to end up in first place. You just can't
do it any other way. We have to do better here."

Without a hit in the first two innings against Tampa Bay starter
Edwin Jackson (3-5), Crisp opened the third with a sharp single
to right. He moved to second on a groundout and score the
game's first run on Jacoby Ellsbury's single to center.

"One through nine, we have really good hitters," Crisp said.
"Some are considered great. Other people have to step up in
different facets of the game. Fortunately, lots of people are
playing well. J.D. is playing some great defense. You can go
down the list and we're playing good ball right now."

After Ellsbury moved to second on a pickoff throw that eluded
Rays first baseman Eric Hinske, the Red Sox made it 2-0 on an
RBI ground-rule double from Drew.

Manny Ramirez capped the three-run rally in the third with an
RBI single to center that extended his hitting streak to 10
games.

The Rays got a run back off Beckett in the fourth when Hinske
singled home rookie Evan Longoria. But the Red Sox restored
their three-run lead in the bottom of the inning when Crisp
plated Youkilis with a sacrifice fly.

The three-run lead proved enough for Beckett (6-4), who was hit
hard at times but managed to keep the Rays in check by
scattering seven hits and with five strikeouts and no walks.

"We won and that's the big part," Beckett said. "I threw some
good pitches, threw some not-too-good pitches, but all in all,
it was a pretty good outing."

"He was pretty good," Francona added. "Not always as crisp as
we've seen but we did see the side of Beckett competing and not
giving in. I think he got frustrated a few times not making
pitches, or not following it up with another pitch, but he was
good enough."

The game was played in a steady drizzle and fog. Beckett's
mud-filled spikes slipped on the wet mound while making a pitch
in the sixth and he came out after completing the inning.

"It was just one of those deals," Beckett said. "It scares you
more than anything. A lot of bad things can happen when you do
that."

Once Beckett came out, the Red Sox bullpen allowed just one hit
and one walk over the final three innings, including Manny
Delcarmen striking out the side in the seventh.

"Our bullpen has been great," Beckett said. "You can't really
leave anybody else out either. It was a team effort today."

Jackson allowed six hits and four runs over five frames, walking
three, striking out four and tossing a wild pitch.

"I thought our guys pitched pretty well tonight, even Jackson,"
Maddon said. "I thought he had good stuff. That one three-run
inning obviously hurt him but, overall, I thought he threw the
ball well."

The Rays struck out 10 times while working just one walk in
falling to 0-5 this year at Fenway.

"We're striking out way too often," Maddon said. "It's not the
umpire's fault. It's our fault. We have to do a better job.
It was one of our goals this spring, to really cut down on the
strikeouts because we struck out way too often last year."

 
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