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DETROIT (AP) -The reeling
Detroit Tigers
looked like they were finally going to break out of their funk against Boston, scoring runs like they were expected to and
pitching just good enough to win.
Then the
Red Sox
rallied from a four-run deficit to set up Detroit for perhaps its most disheartening loss in a season already full of them.
Just when it seemed safe to count the Tigers out, they won for the first time in 20 chances when trailing after eight innings.
Placido Polanco
hit a broken-bat, tiebreaking single with two outs in the ninth off
Jonathan Papelbon
to lift Detroit to a 10-9 win over Boston on Wednesday night.
''It tells you a lot about our team,'' Polanco said. ''We had some really tough at-bats against Papelbon to make something
happen.''
Boston had everything set up for its sixth straight win, rallying from an 8-4 deficit with its star closer on the mound. But
Papelbon (2-1) blew his first save in 11 chances by allowing two unearned runs.
''We didn't get many breaks,'' Papelbon said. ''When they get little breaks like that, they're going to make you pay for it.''
Detroit had a season-high 18 hits, the most Boston has allowed this year.
Matt Joyce
hit a leadoff single off Papelbon in the ninth and shortstop
Julio Lugo
's fielding error on
Edgar Renteria
's grounder created a jam.
''I thought I had a chance to go to second,'' Lugo said. ''I bobbled the ball.''
After
Curtis Granderson
's RBI groundout, Polanco blooped one over a leaping Lugo for his season-high fifth hit and Renteria trotted home with the
winning run.
''I was just trying to put it in play and I was glad it just went over Lugo's head,'' Polanco said.
Todd Jones
(1-0) pitched the ninth for Detroit, which snapped a five-game losing streak.
''I don't believe in momentum, but if we go on and do good, we might look back and say that was a big win,'' Tigers manager
Jim Leyland said.
Kevin Youkilis
homered twice,
Mike Lowell
hit a three-run homer in the seventh and pinch-hitter
Dustin Pedroia
had a tiebreaking single in the eighth for the
Red Sox
in a rally that went all for naught.
The
Red Sox
trailed 8-4 after five innings.
''We had a great comeback and we couldn't finish it,'' Boston manager
Terry Francona
said.
Youkilis has seven homers at Comerica Park, five more than he has at any venue as a visitor. The only other time he hit two
homers in a game was - naturally - in Detroit on Aug. 8, 2004.
Gary Sheffield
had a season-high three hits, helping the Tigers score eight runs through five innings against starter
Clay Buchholz
and
Julian Tavarez
.
Detroit went ahead 4-0 in the third - scoring more than it did in the previous two losses to Boston - and added four more
runs over the next two innings.
It wasn't enough to hold off the
Red Sox
.
Detroit starter
Armando Galarraga
gave up five runs, seven hits in 5 1-3 innings. The rookie, who went into the rotation when
Dontrelle Willis
went on the disabled list, matched a career high with six strikeouts and walked only one in his fifth start.
Just when Galarraga seemed to be finding a groove, striking out
David Ortiz
looking and
Manny Ramirez
swinging, Youkilis hit a 387-foot shot to left in the fourth inning.
Buchholz allowed a season-high 10 hits, five runs and struck out six over four innings, getting one more out than his season
low.
Notes:
Red Sox
RHP
Curt Schilling
is expected to play catch on flat ground Thursday, testing his ailing shoulder as he did Tuesday. ... Willis, who had a rehab
start last week, is expected to pitch in the bullpen this weekend. ... Boston IF
Alex Cora
(right elbow sprain) began a rehab assignment Wednesday and was 2-for-4 with a run in seven innings at Triple A-Pawtucket.
...
Red Sox
RHP
Daisuke Matsuzaka
, who pitched with a cold Monday night, was feeling better Wednesday and is expected to have a higher pitch count Saturday
at Minnesota. ... The game started only a minute late, a feat with the heavy rain that soaked the field and created ponds
on the tarp. But the game took 3 hours and 55 minutes to finish. .... Sheffield's RBI single in the third was the 1,582nd
of his career, pulling him within one of former Tiger and Hall of Famer
Al Kaline
for 35th on the all-time list. ... Boston CF
Jacoby Ellsbury
had two stolen bases and is 22-for-22 in his career, the best start by a
Red Sox
rookie since 1920. The
Red Sox
have been successful in their last 20 steal attempts.
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