Max Fried dominates as Yankees nearly blank Red Sox again

(Reuters) — Amed Rosario had four RBI in just two plate appearances and Max Fried pitched eight shutout innings, leading the visiting New York Yankees to a 4-1 win over ​the Boston Red Sox on Wednesday night.

Rosario’s three-run shot in the first inning ‌was all that New York needed, as Fried (3-1) allowed just three hits and two walks while striking out nine, completing a masterful outing in exactly 100 pitches.

Adding to the New York offense, Giancarlo Stanton ​went 2-for-4 with two doubles and a run scored, while Aaron Judge crossed ​the plate twice.

Jarren Duran (3-for-4) doubled twice and knocked in Boston’s only run ⁠with a ninth-inning single.

Boston left-hander Ranger Suarez (1-2) took the loss after allowing four runs ​through 4 2/3 innings, but the relief duo of Zack Kelly and Eduardo Rivera pitched ​scoreless, one-hit ball the rest of the way.

Rivera, who was recalled from Triple-A Worcester earlier in the day, pitched 3 1/3 innings of one-hit ball in his MLB debut. He struck out three.

The Yankees ​picked up where they left off in Tuesday’s series-opening shutout, breaking Suarez’s 14-inning scoreless streak ​by jumping out to a 3-0 lead on Rosario’s homer over the Green Monster. Judge drew a ‌one-out ⁠walk and Stanton doubled two batters later with two outs to set the table.

Fried worked out of a two-on, no-out jam in the second to keep the home team scoreless, striking out three consecutive batters after Andruw Monasterio walked and Duran knocked a high wall-ball ​double to lead off ​the frame.

In the ⁠third, Judge stung a leadoff single and Stanton banged a one-out double to left. Rosario then sent a line-drive sac fly to ​left, extending the New York lead to 4-0.

The Red Sox were ​unable to cash ⁠in baserunners in the next two innings, as Wilyer Abreu had a two-out knock in the third and Duran added his second two-bagger in the fourth. Following the latter knock, Fried ⁠retired ​the final 14 batters he faced.

Brent Headrick was one ​strike away from pitching New York’s third consecutive shutout for the first time since 1962, but Duran’s knock through ​the middle scored Trevor Story to break up the bid in the ninth.

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