Wade Boggs had the first five-hit game of his career, sparking a 20-hit attack last night, and the Boston Red Sox rode a six-run first inning in routing the Minnesota Twins, 17-7.
The win, Boston's fourth in a row, coupled with the New York Yankees 2-1 loss at the hands of the Oakland A's left the Red Sox with a two-game lead in the AL East. Boston, at 25-13, now sports the second-best record in baseball.
Unbeaten Roger Clemens breezed to his seventh victory of the season without a loss, going seven innings while backed by Boston's biggest explosion of the season. Clemens gave up five runs on nine hits.
Boggs, who led the major leagues with a .368 average last year, went 5-for-6 with four singles and a double, raising his average to .383, tops in the majors.
Gary Gaetti hit two homers and a double for the Twins.
Minnesota committed five errors in losing for the ninth time in the last 10 games.
Tony Armas had a double and three singles and Marc Sullivan collected three singles as the Red Sox mauled five Minnesota pitchers.
Minnesota starter and loser Frank Viola (now 4-4) failed to retire a batter in the Red Sox first inning. After Marty Barrett led off the game with a single, Boggs singled and Dave Stapleton walked to load the bases for Jim Rice.
The Red Sox slugger hit a little broken-bat flare into right that dropped in for a run-scoring single. Don Baylor and Tony Armas (who raised his average 40 points with his four-hit performance) follwed with back-to-back doubles to put the Sox up 5-0 and send Viola to the showers.
Coincidentally, Viola's father, Frank Sr., was at Fenway last night celebrating a birthday.
But it was the Red Sox who did all the partying in front of the 20,000-plus Fenway faithful. After winning two straight games in their last at-bats, Boston decided to secure this one early.
Boston added a run in the second inning, two in the third, and four in both the sixth and seventh to augment its first-inning outburst.
Boston's most inventive run came in the third when Boggs, on second after an RBI double, scored when strike-three on Dave Stapleton got past Twins' catcher Mark Salas. The catcher proceded to throw wildly to first base where Stapleton and Kent Hrbek collided, allowing Boggs to scoot home.
Read more in Sports
SCOREBOARDRecommended Articles
-
ScoreboardTODAY'S GAMES Water Polo v. MIT. Blodgett Pool Sports Comp Meeting, 7:30 PM, Crimson Building, The Cube Free Beer Here
-
Boys of Summer Win Chilly Fenway OpenerBOSTON--The placards distributed outside Gate A of Fenway Park yesterday by the local sports radio station said it all: The
-
Opening DaydreamYou can't do many things on just three hours of sleep. Giving up on trying to comprehend the wondrous age
-
On RootingA T THIS time last year, I was shuttling between agony and ecstasy. I remain a loyal New Yorker and
-
Opening Day: Escaping RealityYou always get a special kick on Opening Day, no matter how many you go through. You look forward to
-
Red Sox Prospects: Finding Room for Remy and StapletonThis is the second in a series of articles about the 1981 Boston Red Sox. The first thing to remember