Crochet and Yoshida lead Red Sox to
3-1 win over rival Yankees in Wild Card Series opener
[October 01, 2025]
NEW YORK (AP) — Garrett Crochet retired 17 consecutive
batters in a sparkling pitching performance, and pinch-hitter
Masataka Yoshida lined a two-run single off reliever Luke Weaver
that sent the Boston Red Sox past the New York Yankees 3-1 on
Tuesday night in their AL Wild Card Series opener.
New York loaded the bases with nobody out in the ninth inning, but
All-Star closer Aroldis Chapman worked out of the jam against his
former team. Boston is 10-4 versus its longtime rival this year and
halfway to winning the best-of-three playoff.
“You could see it in his eyes before the game that he wanted it
bad,” Boston's Alex Bregman said of Crochet. “Just a performance
that big-time pitchers make.”
Game 2 is Wednesday night in the Bronx again, with Aaron Judge and
the Yankees needing a victory to extend their season and two in a
row to advance.
“We’ve been doing it all year," Judge said.
The Game 1 winner advanced in all 12 previous Wild Card Series, 10
in sweeps.
“Hopefully we can continue that,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said.
Crochet gave up only Anthony Volpe's second-inning homer and
improved to 4-0 against the Yankees this year, throwing a
career-high 117 pitches in a marquee duel of ace left-handers with
Max Fried. Crochet struck out 11 and walked none over 7 2/3 innings
while allowing four hits.

“We had some big 3-2 counts and some hitter’s counts and just
weren’t able to come through,” New York's Paul Goldschmidt said.
Pitching with a 2-1 lead after Yoshida's go-ahead hit in the
seventh, Crochet extended his streak of retired batters until Volpe
singled with one out in the eighth. Crochet's final pitch was his
fastest at 100.2 mph, which Austin Wells took for a called third
strike.
Chapman retired José Caballero on a flyout to finish the eighth
before Bregman, playing his 100th postseason game, hit an RBI double
in the ninth off David Bednar.
Goldschmidt, Judge and Cody Bellinger loaded the bases with
consecutive singles starting the bottom half, but Chapman recovered
to get the save when he struck out Giancarlo Stanton, retired Jazz
Chisholm Jr. on a shallow flyout and fanned Trent Grisham with a 101
mph fastball.
Boston improved to 13-12 against the Yankees in the playoffs,
winning nine of the last 10 meetings.
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Boston Red Sox outfielder Masataka Yoshida, left, celebrates with
first base coach José David Flores after driving in two runs against
the New York Yankees during the seventh inning of Game 1 of an
American League wild-card baseball playoff series, Tuesday, Sept.
30, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Crochet threw the most pitches in a postseason game
since Washington's Stephen Strasburg tossed 117 against St. Louis in
2019.
Fried pitched shutout ball for 6 1/3 innings but a Yankees bullpen
that had a 4.37 ERA during the regular season, 23rd among the 30
teams, faltered again.
Weaver relieved with no one on, got ahead of Ceddanne Rafaela 0-2 in
the count, then walked him on 11 pitches.
Nick Sogard grounded a double into right-center, hustling to second
when Judge didn't sprint to pick up the ball. Yoshida lined the next
pitch, a fastball at the letters, to center for a 2-1 lead.
Weaver had a 1.05 ERA in his first 24 appearances, was sidelined for
2 1/2 weeks by a strained left hamstring, then had a 5.31 ERA over
his final 40 games.
Fried got 19 swings and misses, striking out six and walking three
while allowing four hits. He escaped a second-and-third, two-out jam
in the fourth, then first-and-second, one-out trouble in the fifth.
Volpe, who slumped to a .212 batting average this year, put the
Yankees ahead when he drove a sinker to the opposite field, where
the ball landed a half-dozen rows into the right-field seats.
Volpe’s drive would have been a home run in all but one big league
stadium: Fenway Park.
Up next
Yankees LHP Carlos Rodón (18-9, 3.09 ERA) and Red Sox RHP Brayan
Bello (11-9, 3.35) start Wednesday.
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