| March 26, 2008 A's take game two against Sox in Tokyo
|
TOKYO (AP) - Emil Brown found a safe way home: hit the ball over
the fence.
One day after Brown made a costly baserunning mistake, his
three-run homer in the third inning led Oakland over the Boston Red
Sox 5-1 Wednesday night and gave the Athletics a split of their
opening two-game series.
Following Major League Baseball's third season-opening series in
Japan, the teams were to head back to the United States on 10-hour
flights across the Pacific with a split. The Chicago Cubs and New
York Mets split their Japanese series in 2000, as did the New York
Yankees and Tampa Bay Devil Rays in 2004.
Boston began its World Series title defense with a 6-5,
10-inning victory Tuesday night, boosted by Manny Ramirez
tiebreaking, two-run double. The game might have lasted longer had
Brown not been tagged between second and third on his RBI double in
the bottom of the 10th.
Ramirez kept hitting Wednesday night with a solo homer in the
sixth, although he struck out three times. He could afford to stand
and watch this one, a sure home-run deep into the left-field seats
that moved him within nine of joining the 500-home run club.
On Tuesday, he admired his 10th-inning double from the batter's
box, thinking it would clear the fence, then hustled to second.
His homer was one of just three hits off Rich Harden (1-0) who
is coming back from three injury-filled seasons and made just four
starts last year - none after July
7. The right-hander struck out
nine and walked two in six innings.
He did better against the other half of Boston's power duo,
retiring David Ortiz twice, once on a strikeout, and walking him
once. Big Papi went 0-for-7 in the series.
Coming in, Ortiz was 4-for-5 against Harden and Ramirez was
2-for-3 with two homers apiece.
Jon Lester (0-1) fell behind in the second on a double by Bobby
Crosby and an RBI single by Chris Denorfia.
Mark Ellis led off with a walk and Mark Sweeney singled. Brown
jumped on a 1-0 pitch from Lester and drove it over the left-field
wall.
Oakland added a run in the eighth off Bryan Corey on Jeff
Fiorentino's RBI single after a double by Kurt Suzuki, a native of
Hawaii with Japanese grandparents.
Santiago Casilla, Keith Foulke and Alan Embree followed Harden
with a scoreless inning apiece, completing a five-hitter for
Oakland, which rebounded from its fourth straight opening-day loss.
Foulke threw a called third strike past Ramirez to end the eighth
with a runner on second.
Lester gave up four runs, five hits and three walks in four
innings.
The crowd was much more subdued than it was during the opener,
when Daisuke Matsuzaka pitched in his homeland for the first time
since signing a $52 million, six-year contract with Boston before
last season.
With the unusual schedule, Boston and Oakland will now resume
spring training. The A's have three exhibition games against San
Francisco, and Boston plays three against the Los Angeles Dodgers,
including one at the Los Angeles Coliseum on Saturday.
They resume the regular season with two games against each other
in Oakland starting Tuesday.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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