BALTIMORE — Xander Bogaerts and J.D. Martinez homered to provide Boston an early lead, and the Red Sox beat the Baltimore Orioles 8-5 Friday night for their season-high third straight victory.
Bogaerts hit a solo shot off John Means (0-2) in the second inning and Martinez connected for a two-run homer in the third. Rafael Devers added a three-run drive to make 6-0 in the fifth, and the Red Sox coasted to the finish.
During the game, Boston announced it had traded relievers Brandon Workman and Heath Hembree and cash considerations to Philadelphia for right-handers Nick Pivetta and Connor Seabold. In a lost season shortened by COVID-19, the rebuilding Red Sox were willing to deal two big league relievers for potential future cogs in the rotation.
“Interesting day,” Boston Manager Ron Roenicke said. “We were hoping to get this (deal) done before the game. We’re happy, certainly, with the guys we got in this move.”
Ironically, Boston won on this night with a bullpen game, using reliever Colten Brewer as the opener. Darwinzon Hernandez (1-0) and two others followed before Matt Barnes came in to get the final three outs – a role previously filled by Workman – and earn his first save.
“We barely made it through the game,” Roenicke said. “The way the game was going, I hoped we wouldn’t use Barnsey. But we figured we’d better go with him.”
Boston’s modest three-game run comes on the heels of a nine-game losing streak. Despite their recent success, the Red Sox (9-18) remain in last place in the AL East, although they’re making up ground quickly on the skidding Orioles.
Baltimore (12-14) has been outscored 41-22 during a six-game skid while playing at home against three sub-.500 teams – Washington, Toronto and Boston.
After the Red Sox went up 8-0, Pat Valaika and Cedric Mullins hit seventh-inning homers for the Orioles and Chance Sisco went deep with two on in the eighth.
Anthony Santander extended his hitting streak to a career-high 16 games for Baltimore. Prized prospect Ryan Mountcastle played left field and went 0 for 2 with two walks in his major league debut.
Means allowed three runs in three innings as he continues to struggle following a rookie year in which he was the Orioles’ lone representative in the All-Star Game. After getting a late start because of arm fatigue and then dealing with the death of his father, the left-hander owns an unsightly 10.13 ERA over four starts.
“I felt really good tonight,” Means insisted. “I felt every pitch was working except for the changeup. That’s been the story of this year.”
Manager Brandon Hyde said, “The life to his stuff was good again. Didn’t really have the good changeup, and that’s where mistakes came, that’s where the damage came from.”
RUST ON, RUST OFF
Boston outfielder Alex Vedugo was batting .231 on Aug. 2. Since then, he has hit in 16 of 17 games, including a personal-best 12-game run that included a 2-for-4 performance Friday.
“The beginning of the season was really like the end of my spring training,” he said. “I was trying to shake off a lot of rust. My timing was off.”
Verdugo is hitting .319 during his 12-game streak and his batting average now stands at .292.
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