Young's RBI single in 13th lifts Red Sox past Cardinals
Send a link to a friend
[May 18, 2017]
ST. LOUIS -- Well before he took
his only swing of the night that mattered, Chris Young was getting
himself prepared for that opportunity.
Sitting on the bench Wednesday, he saw the Boston Red Sox going
through relievers and reserve players as the game against the St.
Louis Cardinals stretched into extra innings. He could sense that
his turn was getting close.
Finally, in the 13th inning, he came off the bench and delivered an
RBI single that gave the Red Sox a 5-4 victory, completing a
comeback from an early 4-0 deficit.
"It was just one of those games that you stay loose and you're ready
for a pinch hit, you're ready for a double switch," Young said. "You
just never know what can happen. You try and stay ready. I think I
was swinging the whole game because it was situations where I could
have potentially come up."
Young was the next-to-last position player available to manager John
Farrell.
"He's always ready," Farrell said. "He's always into the game. He's
always thinking the game, talking the game in the dugout,
understands situations. His spot came up big, and he found some
outfield grass for the winner."
The winning rally started after reliever Sam Tuivailala retired the
first two batters in the 13th. Mitch Moreland hit a ground-rule
double, and the Cardinals intentionally walked Jackie Bradley Jr.,
bringing Young to the plate to hit for pitcher Fernando Abad (1-0).
"In that situation, you get a runner in scoring position and you're
just trying to find a way to put the bat on the ball," Young said.
"We battled and our bullpen did an amazing job to give us the
opportunity to win the ballgame, and we're grateful for that."
Young hit the second pitch from Tuivailala for a single to left,
scoring Moreland with the tiebreaking run.
"I felt like I made some good pitches, but the ball didn't fall in
the right spot for us," Tuivailala said. "I felt the pitch to
Moreland was the right pitch, it just fell. Against Young, I kind of
left the curveball a little up, and he was able to get enough of the
ball. It is what it is."
The Cardinals, who built a 4-0 lead in the first two innings against
starter Rick Porcello, never could add on after that, opening the
door for the Red Sox's comeback.
They had only seven hits over the final 11 innings, never getting a
runner past second base.
"There were not a lot of opportunities," Cardinals manager Mike
Matheny said. "We couldn't put hits on top of each other."
After being shut out for the first six innings, the Red Sox cut the
lead to 4-2 in the seventh on a two-run homer from Bradley, his
second in as many games.
Matheny thought the game turned in the eighth, when the Cardinals
believed reliever Trevor Rosenthal had Dustin Pedroia struck out,
which would have been the second out of the inning, but instead the
pitch was called a ball by plate umpire Jeff Kellogg.
[to top of second column] |
Red Sox pinch hitter Chris Young (30) hits a one run single off of
St. Louis Cardinals relief pitcher Sam Tuivailala (not pictured)
during the thirteenth inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit:
Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
Xander Bogaerts followed with his second triple of
the game to cut the lead to 4-3, and Bogaerts then scored on a
sacrifice fly by Andrew Benintendi.
"That's a shame," Matheny said of the pitch to Pedroia. "That's
strike three. That's a different game. I thought it was a shaky
strike zone, and I thought it happened a number of times in big
situations. We're never ones to make excuses, but it's a fact, a
number of pitches got missed in big situations, and it ended up
hurting pretty bad."
Abad, the seventh reliever used by the Red Sox, earned the win by
allowing only one walk in two hitless innings. Ben Taylor pitched
the bottom of the 13th, working around a two-out walk for his first
career save.
"This one tonight was a lot of grit, a lot of character, a lot of
competitive bats late in the game," Farrell said. "This was big for
us particularly tonight. This is a big win. It's a huge shift. I
think anytime you get this deep into an extra inning game when
you're depleting your bullpen to come away with a win they feel like
two at times."
Benintendi, despite getting the game-tying sacrifice fly in the
eighth, was 0-for-5, extending his streak without a hit to 26
at-bats.
The Cardinals built their lead on a leadoff homer from Dexter Fowler
in the first and a three-run second inning, getting four consecutive
hits off Porcello before leaving the bases loaded.
Cardinals starter Mike Leake gave up two runs in seven innings,
while Porcello allowed four runs in six innings.
NOTES: Red Sox 3B Pablo Sandoval will DH for Triple-A Pawtucket on
Friday night as he attempts to work his way back from a sprained
right knee that has kept him on the disabled list since April 25.
... RHP Hector Velazquez will be called up from Pawtucket to make
his major league debut for the Red Sox on Thursday night in Oakland.
A corresponding roster move has not been announced. ... The
Cardinals had a pregame ceremony honoring the 50th anniversary of
the 1967 team that defeated the Red Sox in the World Series. ...
After a day off Thursday, the Cardinals will send RHP Michael Wacha
to the mound Friday night against the San Francisco Giants. He did
not start in the last turn through the rotation to give him extra
rest and he will be making his first start since May 7. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten
or redistributed. |