
Boston Red Sox vs. Cincinnati Reds odds, tips and betting trends
On Monday, a series opener is on the schedule, with the Cincinnati Reds (43-40) visiting the Boston Red Sox (41-43) at 7:10 p.m. ET.
The Red Sox are favored at home (-188) against the Reds (+158). The starting pitchers are Garrett Crochet (7-4) for the Boston Red Sox, and Chase Burns for the Cincinnati Reds.
The Red Sox knocked off the Blue Jays by a 15-1 score in their last game Saturday. Wilyer Abreu went 2 for 6 with a double, a home run and four RBIs to lead them offensively while Lucas Giolito earned the win after throwing seven innings without giving up an earned run on six hits, while striking out five.
The Reds lost to the Padres Saturday, with Lyon Richardson getting the loss while throwing 2/3 of an inning, giving up three earned runs on two hits while striking out one. TJ Friedl went 2 for 3 with an RBI to pace the Reds' offense.
Before watching this Red Sox vs. Reds matchup, here's everything you need to know about Monday's action on the diamond, including viewing options.
Boston Red Sox vs. Cincinnati Reds odds, line and spread
MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Sunday at 3:17 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.
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New York Times
38 minutes ago
- New York Times
Giants takeaways: Ugly week ends with ugly series loss to White Sox
It was just one week ago that the San Francisco Giants had momentum. They'd taken two games and an All-Star from the Boston Red Sox, and they were getting national attention for the right reasons. The ballpark energy was back. Strangers on the street were talking to you about your Giants hat. Remember that? Everyone being excited about the local ballclub? Advertisement It was seven days ago, but it might as well have been seven years ago. The Giants were embarrassed by the Miami Marlins and Chicago White Sox last week, getting outpitched and outhit by two teams that might combine for 200 losses this year. At no point did it look like the Giants were the better team. At only a couple of points did it look particularly close. They made two of the worst teams in baseball look like World Series contenders, and soon they'll come home to face actual World Series contenders. There are bad weeks, and then there are existentially bad weeks. The Giants just had one of the latter. Other than that, everything seems fine. Here are some takeaways from an ugly weekend of baseball in Chicago. Remember that these valuable takeaways are for subscribers only. Gift subscriptions are available. The Giants scored 17 runs in their six games against the Marlins and White Sox, who sure give up a lot of runs to other teams. The Giants have had 14 at-bats with the bases loaded since June 15, and they've turned those 42 runners into four runs. Two of them scored on rally-killing double plays, one scored on a walk and one scored on a play where the back runner was thrown out at home. None of those bases-loaded situations ended with the offensive team feeling very good about itself, which seems hard to do. You can keep going with the not-so-fun facts. In Sunday's 5-2 loss, the Giants drew eight walks and scored just two runs, which is a combination that hadn't happened since 2019. It's been weeks since the Giants have had more than two hits with runners in scoring position in the same game. None of the factlets will be as descriptive as the simple, bleak truth: The Giants couldn't score runs against the Marlins and White Sox, who scored plenty of runs against them. Advertisement If there's good news, it's the kind of 'good news' that gets put in scare quotes. A lot of these problems have to do with the Giants' inability to hit with runners in scoring position (they were 8-for-44 last week), which tends to even out over time. The Giants were on a 110-win pace early in the season when they were great with RISP; they're the most frustrating team in the world now that they're incapable in those situations. The truth, as always, is probably somewhere in the middle. The Giants shouldn't always be this hopeless when it comes to scoring runs. Just some of the time. One thing to keep an eye on: keeps a stat called 'meatball swing percentage,' which is exactly what it sounds like, and only four teams are taking more pitches down the middle than the Giants. If you have unlimited time and a strong stomach, you can watch videos of all of them. Some of them are in hitter's counts. Some of them are with runners in scoring position. Some of them are with hitter's counts with runners in scoring position. It's painful, and it might hint at a passivity that needs to change. It's also not quite as permanent as it feels when the team is in the middle of it, most likely. But one of my main takeaways from the weekend is that, boy, the Giants stink at scoring runs right now. Gift subscriptions still available. The names in the Giants' bullpen might change somewhat, but the roles are going to be consistent. There will be high-leverage guys for late-and-close situations. There will be situational relievers to mix and match in the middle innings. There will be at least one backend guy who can absorb innings, even if he threw a lot of pitches a couple of days ago. Right now, Walker doesn't fit into any of those roles. He clearly isn't trustworthy enough to be a late-inning guy, and he's not stretched out for multi-inning appearances multiple times in the same week. He needs regular work to get right, but the Giants are playing so many close games that it's leaving only high-leverage situations for him. The results have been unfortunate. Put up a 4️⃣-spot for the lead ‼️ — Chicago White Sox (@whitesox) June 29, 2025 Walker is the worst of all worlds — a reliever who's too talented to give up on, but too erratic to trust. There isn't a bigger gulf between risk and reward on the team. Don't roll your eyes at the idea of Walker eventually contributing quality innings — he had one of the best relief seasons in franchise history last year, and there's a lot that's similiar between the pitches he threw last season and the ones he's throwing now. Other than, you know, the results. Still, if he were having this exact season for another team, he'd be a trade target for the Giants to fix. It doesn't feel like he's that far gone. Advertisement He's a haunted reliever, though, and he's constantly ending up in unexpectedly important spots, even as the Giants try to keep him away. He's like the bullpen's version of Mr. Bean, coming into hilariously sticky situations and somehow making everything even worse. It's almost charming when you think of it like that. Almost. Walker still has options remaining. As of last week, I wouldn't have thought the Giants would seriously consider using them, but then Tyler Fitzgerald was sent down. It was a harsh move to demote the Opening Day second baseman, but it wasn't a controversial one. The Giants sent him down primarily because the Giants still hoped he could help this season, not because they'd given up on him. Walker would appear to be on a similar path. There just aren't any great spots for him to get work on a team that's still very uncertain about its postseason chances. His inability to get one more out in the seventh inning of Sunday's game helped turn a half-respectable series win into a brutal series loss, and these outings will continue until morale improves. You can't make all of the takeaways depressing. It's bad for business. If you're more focused on the long-term success of the team, you can take comfort in Carson Seymour's wide-shouldered sinker, which sure looks like a quality major-league pitch. No idea if it's the kind of pitch that can keep him in the rotation for a decade, but it's a pitch to get excited about right now. It'll be interesting how it plays in short bursts out of the bullpen. Good day on the mound for JV 6.0 IP | 5 H | 1 R | 2 BB | 3 K — SFGiants (@SFGiants) June 29, 2025 If you're focused on the idea of this season, however, you can take comfort in Verlander's outing, which was one of his best in a Giants uniform. He held his velocity deep into Sunday's game, and he was allowed to face hitters for a third time. It feels like a good time to remember that there is still a ceiling the Giants can hope for from Verlander. His stuff is still good enough to impress some of the pitch-modeling metrics, and the dream of him pitching like this in October — against much better lineups — is still alive. Assuming the Giants aren't completely cooked. Which they might be. Unless they're just marinated and resting on the counter, getting closer to room temperature as the grill preheats. Either way, Verlander looked like a capable starting pitcher again, and that qualifies as the best Giants news of the weekend. Take it and don't look back. (Photo of Willy Adames: Kamil Krzaczynski / Imagn Images)


Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Garver's 12th-inning homer propels Mariners to series win over Rangers
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Mitch Garver hit a two-run homer in the 12th and drove in four runs, and the Seattle Mariners beat the Texas Rangers 6-4 on Sunday to win a series in which all three games went to extra innings. The Mariners took a 3-1 lead in the 10th on RBI singles by Donovan Solano and Garver, but Corey Seager's two-run shot pulled the Rangers even. The Mariners won the series opener 7-6 in 12 before dropping the middle game 3-2 in 10. It was the first time three games in the same series for Texas went to extra innings since all four at Seattle in September 2002. The Mariners won the first three games of that series before the Rangers took the finale. Solano put Seattle ahead 4-3 in the 12th on a groundout that third baseman Josh Jung couldn't get out of his glove, allowing automatic runner Luke Raley to score. On the next pitch from Cole Winn (0-1), Garver's fourth homer went 437 feet into the second deck in left field. Seager's tying homer was his 10th, an opposite field shot to left center off Carlos Vargas. Trent Thornton (2-0) gave up Seager's sacrifice fly in the 10th, striking out two in his two innings. CARDINALS 7, GUARDIANS 0 CLEVELAND (AP) — Nolan Gorman belted a three-run homer, Victor Scott II had a two-run shot and Matthew Liberatore won his career-high third straight start and St. Louis rolled to a win over Cleveland. Gorman went deep in the first inning off Logan Allen (5-6), while Scott homered off Hunter Gaddis in the seventh to extend the Cardinals' lead to 5-0. Pedro Pagés and Garrett Hampson added RBIs in the eighth. St. Louis has won six straight on the road, its longest run under fourth-year manager Oliver Marmol. The Cardinals completed their initial series sweep of Cleveland by a 21-6 margin in the three-game set. Liberatore (6-6) tossed six innings, striking out five while allowing three hits and five walks. JoJo Romero, Riley O'Brien and John King wrapped up the combined three-hitter that included eight bases on balls. Allen gave up three runs in six innings for Cleveland, which went 1-5 on its homestand and fell two games below .500 for the first time since April 8. Guardians shortstop Gabriel Arias was taken off the field on a cart after sustaining a left ankle sprain in the third, but X-rays of his lower leg were negative. He caught his left spikes on the grass while going into the hole to field a grounder by Masyn Winn. PHILLIES 2, BRAVES 1 ATLANTA (AP) — Ranger Suárez pitched seven strong innings and Philadelphia edged Atlanta to take the three-game series. Suárez (7-2) gave up just one run on four hits. He struck out eight, walked one and lowered his ERA to 2.00. Orion Kerkering pitched a scoreless eighth and Matt Strahm earned his fifth save for the Phillies. Otto Kemp's double into the left field corner in the fifth inning scored Bryson Scott from first, and Kemp later came home on Trea Turner's sacrifice fly to center to give the Phillies a 2-1 lead. Spencer Strider (3-6) had another strong start against the Phillies but lost for just the second time in 10 career decisions against Philadelphia. He gave up two runs on five hits in seven innings, striking out four and walking three. Catcher Sean Murphy was the lone Brave to do damage against Suárez, crushing a 451-foot home run to center field in the second inning. No other Brave reached second base in Suárez's seven innings. Kyle Schwarber was 2 for 3 with a walk and Nick Castellanos had two hits for the Phillies, who lead the NL East. Braves first baseman Matt Olson was 2 for 4 and extended his on-base streak to 30 games, the longest active one in the majors. PIRATES 12, METS 1 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Oneil Cruz hit a pair of two-run homers, Tommy Pham and Bryan Reynolds also went deep and Pittsburgh beat New York to complete a three-game sweep. Cruz ended a 14-game homerless drought and highlighted a five-run outburst off Frankie Montas (0-1) in the first inning. After strikeouts in his next two at-bats, Cruz hit his team-leading 15th homer in the seventh inning to extend the Pirates' lead to nine runs. Pittsburgh added two more runs in the eighth inning and sent the Mets, who held a players only meeting after a 9-2 loss on Saturday, to their 13th setback in 16 games. The Pirates scored all of their runs in the first inning with two outs. Ke'Bryan Hayes started with a two-run single, the first of his three hits. Cruz and Pham (two RBIs) followed with consecutive homers to right. Montas lasted four innings, allowing six runs on seven hits. Carmen Mlodzinski (2-5) allowed two hits in the final 3 2/3 innings, earning the win. Pirates starter Mike Burrows gave up one run and struck out five in 4 1/3 innings. Pittsburgh catcher Henry Davis went 4 for 4. Reynolds hit his 10th homer of the season. Luis Torrens put New York on the board with a home run off Burrows in the fifth. ORIOLES 5, RAYS 1 BALTIMORE (AP) — Dean Kremer allowed three singles in seven scoreless innings and Baltimore beat Tampa Bay. Kremer (7-7) struck out six and walked one. He has surrendered just two runs in his last three starts covering 17 2/3 innings and finished seven for the fourth time in 16 starts. Keegan Akin replaced Kremer to begin the eighth and benefitted when Colton Cowser took a two-run homer away from Danny Jansen in left field. Brandon Lowe hit his 18th home run off Félix Bautista to start the ninth and extend his hitting streak to 16 games. Bautista struck out Jonathan Aranda who had his 13-game hitting streak snapped — and then fanned Jake Mangum and Curtis Mead to end it. Ramón Laureano hit the first pitch from Taj Bradley (5-6) in the second for a double and Cowser hit his second pitch for a single and a 1-0 lead. Bradley retired nine straight before Gary Sánchez and Cedric Mullins had hits to start the fifth. Coby Mayo made it three straight singles for a two-run lead and Ramón Urías added a sacrifice fly to make it 3-0. Bradley was replaced by Kevin Kelly with two on and one out in the sixth. Sánchez singled to score O'Hearn, and Mullins followed with a sac fly for a 5-0 advantage. Bradley allowed five runs on eight hits in 5 1/3 innings. YANKEES 12, ATHLETICS 5 (NEW YORK) — AP Aaron Judge homered twice to reach 30 for the sixth time and Jazz Chisholm Jr. also drove in four runs as Marcus Stroman won in his first start for New York since April with a win over the Athletics. Judge hit two-run homers in the fourth inning off Luis Severino and in the seventh against fellow Fresno, California-area native Tyler Ferguson for his 44th multi-homer game. Cody Bellinger added a three-run drive for the Yankees, who took two of three from the A's for only their second series win in 2 1/2 weeks. Severino (2-9) was chased with a 7-0 deficit in his Yankee Stadium return, hurt by a leaky defense. He has given up 15 runs in two starts against New York this year. Chisholm put the Yankees ahead in the second with his third homer in four games and boosted the lead with 4-0 with a bases-loaded triple in a four-run third. Chisholm is hitting .318 with six homers, 18 RBIs and four stolen bases since returning from strained right oblique on June 3. He appeared to hurt his right hand while trying to check a swing in the sixth but stayed in the game. Stroman (1-1), who had been sidelined by left knee inflammation, won for the first time since last Aug. 30. He allowed three hits, including Willie MacIver's fifth-inning homer. Severino, a two-time All-Star for the Yankees from 2015-23, allowed seven runs — six earned — five hits, three walks, two hitter batters, a wild pitch and two home runs. Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe was ejected for the first time after an inning-ending strikeout in the eighth, by first base umpire Chad Fairchild. BLUE JAYS 5, RED SOX 3 BOSTON (AP) — Addison Barger and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. homered on consecutive pitches from Walker Buehler in the first inning and Toronto capitalized on the right-hander's wildness to add two runs in the fourth in a win over Boston. Andrés Giménez and Nathan Lukes each had an RBI single as Toronto took two of three games in the weekend series and improved to 7-3 against Boston this season. Buehler (5-6), who is g uaranteed $21.05 million in a one-year free agent contract signed during the offseason , is 1-4 with a 7.80 ERA in his last six starts. Carlos Narváez hit a solo homer and Ceddanne Rafaela an RBI double for the Red Sox, who have lost seven of eight. Boston reliever Zack Kelly walked off the mound with a trainer due to right oblique tightness. Yariel Rodríguez (2-0) got five outs in scoreless relief and earned the win. Jeff Hoffman struck out three batters in the ninth for his 18th save. Barger hit a slider into the right-field seats and Guerrero Jr. sent a fastball over the Green Monster at Fenway Park. ASTROS 2, CUBS 0 HOUSTON (AP) — Jose Altuve hit a two-run homer and Framber Valdez tossed six shutout innings, and Houston beat Chicago. Altuve's 13th home run of the season broke a scoreless tie in the fifth inning. It was his first extra base hit in 34 at bats and the Astros' only extra base hit of the game. Valdez (9-4) struck out six while allowing five hits and two walks. Only one man reached third base against him. He exited with two on and nobody out in the seventh, but Bryan Abreu replaced him and retired Michael Busch, Vidal Bruján and Ian Happ to work out of trouble. Abreu pitched a 1-2-3 eighth inning. He struck out four of the six men he faced. Josh Hader retired the side in order in the ninth inning to convert on his franchise record 23rd straight save opportunity to start the season. Jameson Taillon (7-6) matched zeroes with Valdez until Altuve's home run on his 107th and final pitch of his outing. He struck out four while giving up five hits and one walk over 4 2/3 innings. The bullpen trio of Ryan Brasier, Ryan Pressly and Brad Keller held the Astros to two hits over 3 1/3 innings. REDS 3, PADRES 2 CINCINNATI (AP) — Cincinnati's Will Benson hit a bases-loaded single off San Diego closer Robert Suarez in the bottom of the ninth inning to lift the Reds to a victory. Cincinnati's Elly De La Cruz led off the ninth with an infield single that originally was scored an error by Padres third baseman Tyler Wade. De La Cruz scored the tying run on a one-out RBI single by Spencer Steer, and after Jose Trevino singled to load the bases, Benson ripped a single down the right-field line for his third hit of the game to score Gavin Lux and lift the Reds to the victory in the rubber match of the three-game series. It was the third walk-off win of the year for the Reds and the second of their six-game homestand. It was just the third blown save of the season for Suarez (2-4), who entered the game as MLB's save leader with 23. De La Cruz tied the game in the sixth inning with an RBI single, but San Diego reclaimed the lead in the seventh on Jose Iglesias' RBI fielder's choice with the bases loaded. It was a rare late-inning comeback for the Reds, who came into the game with a 1-34 record when trailing after seven innings. Cincinnati closer Emilio Pagan (1-2) earned the win after working the ninth inning. San Diego had been 37-2 when leading after eight. Xander Bogaerts had a homer and two doubles for the Padres. DODGERS 5, ROYALS 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kiké Hernández hit a two-run homer, Will Smith also went deep and Los Angeles got a dominant performance from Justin Wrobleski and the rest of its bullpen in a rain-delayed victory over Kansas City. Wrobleski (4-2) pitched six innings of three-hit ball in place of opener Lou Trivino, Kirby Yates worked a perfect eighth and Jack Dreyer handled the ninth, helping Los Angeles win for the sixth time in seven games. Max Muncy and Miguel Rojas also drove in runs for the Dodgers, who have won six consecutive series. Kris Bubic (6-6) allowed Hernández's two-run shot in the second inning among his three hits and two walks in five innings. The left-hander struck out five but still took his fourth loss in his last five starts, despite maintaining a 2.25 ERA. Bobby Witt Jr. doubled in the first to score the only run for the Royals, who have lost seven of their last eight games. Both of the teams paid homage to the Negro Leagues, whose museum is less than 10 miles from Kauffman Stadium. The Dodgers wore hats from their Brooklyn days out of respect for Jackie Robinson, who played for the Kansas City Monarchs before breaking the color barrier, and the Royals wore the interlocking 'KC' hats of the 1945 Monarchs. WHITE SOX 5, GIANTS 2 CHICAGO (AP) — Kyle Teel hit a go-ahead, two-run double with the bases loaded in the seventh and Chicago beat San Francisco to keep Justin Verlander winless in 13 starts. Jonathan Cannon and five relievers combined to strike out 11. Tyler Gilbert (2-1) struck out two in an inning for the win. Mike Vasil pitched around a walk in the ninth for his second save. Mike Tauchman and Chase Meidroth singled with one out off Erik Miller (4-1) in the seventh before Miguel Vargas drew a walk against Ryan Walker to load the bases. Teel doubled, Walker balked to bring in another run and Lenyn Sosa singled to drive in the fourth run of the inning. Verlander allowed a run, five hits and two walks, striking out three in six innings in sometimes rainy conditions. The three-time Cy Young Award winner's 13-game winless streak is the longest by a Giants starter since at least 1901. Before signing with San Francisco in January, Verlander's previous longest winless streak was seven starts. Christian Koss had two hits and Patrick Bailey doubled to drive in a run for the Giants, who have lost 11 of 16. Tauchman and Teel each had three hits for the AL-worst White Sox, who won for just the fifth time in 17 games. ROCKIES 4, BREWERS 3, 11 INNINGS MILWAUKEE (AP) — Orlando Arcia hit a tying home run with two outs in the ninth inning, Kyle Farmer drove in the go-ahead run with a single in the 11th and Colorado beat the Milwaukee. Arcia's solo shot off Brewers closer Trevor Megill that tied it at 2 was just his second of the season. Victor Vodnik (3-2) pitched the 10th for the win. Tyler Kinley struck out pinch-hitter Jake Bauers and Isaac Collins before retiring Caleb Durbin on a flyout to end it. Farmer singled off Grant Anderson (1-3) to score automatic runner Brenton Doyle as the Rockies rallied with a run in each of the last four innings after they were shut out in the previous 16. Sal Frelick and Christian Yelich homered in the sixth inning off Colorado starter Germán Márquez for a 2-0 lead. It was the 18th homer for Yelich and the fifth for Frelick. Ryan McMahon reached on a two-out, two-base throwing error by shortstop Joey Ortiz and Doyle doubled to cut it to 2-1 in the eighth. Brewers rookie Chad Patrick allowed four hits and fanned eight in five scoreless innings. Megill allowed the tying homer and then surrendered Thairo Estrada's RBI single in the 10th. MARLINS 6, DIAMONDBACKS 4 PHOENIX (AP) — Otto Lopez hit a go-ahead, two-run single and Kyle Stowers added a three-run double during an eighth-inning rally and Miami completed a three-game sweep by beating Arizona. The streaking Marlins have won seven in a row. The Diamondbacks took a 2-1 lead into the eighth inning, but lefty Jalen Beeks walked the bases loaded with two outs. Lopez then hit a line drive into left that scored Liam Hicks and Dane Myers for a 3-2 lead. Agustin Ramirez was intentionally walked to load the bases again and Stowers hit a bases-clearing double to push the advantage to 6-2. Arizona's pitchers walked 10 batters and the team dropped its fourth straight game to fall below .500 at 41-42. Beeks (2-1) gave up five earned runs and recorded just two outs, one day after giving up three earned runs and recording one out in an 8-7 loss. D-backs lefty Eduardo Rodríguez had another good outing, giving up one run on four hits and three walks over 5 1/3 innings. NATIONALS 7, ANGELS 4, 11 INNINGS ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — CJ Abrams' two-run triple capped a three-run 11th inning, and Washington's James Wood became the sixth player in MLB history to be intentionally walked four times as the Nationals beat Los Angeles. Daylen Lile led off the 11th with a single off Connor Brogdon (1-1) and automatic runner Brady House advanced to third. Drew Miles doubled and drove in the go-ahead run before Abrams tripled, giving the Nationals their first series win Anaheim since 2005 — their first season after relocating from Montreal. Wood went 1 for 2 and then was given a free pass his next four times up. Closer Kyle Finnegan (1-2) pitched three hitless innings for the win. Lile doubled off the glove of Nolan Schanuel at first to begin the ninth against Angels closer Kenley Jansen, and Miles bunted him to third. Young singled for a 4-all tie. TIGERS 3, TWINS 0 DETROIT (AP) — Tarik Skubal struck out 13 hitters in seven innings and Detroit beat Minnesota. Skubal (10-2) only allowed one hit — a clean single to right by Ty France in the fifth inning — as he improved to 10-0 with a 1.74 ERA in his last 15 starts. The last double-digit streak in one season by a Detroit lefty was Earl Whitehill's 11-start stretch in 1930. The strikeouts matched Skubal's career high, last done on May 25 in his 94-pitch shutout against the Guardians. Chris Paddack (3-7) gave up three runs in 4 2/3 innings for the Twins. The Tigers took a 1-0 lead on Kerry Carpenter's solo homer in the first inning, and he added a RBI triple in the fifth before leaving the game with an apparent leg injury. Riley Greene hit a solo homer in the fourth. Will Vest pitched the ninth to pick up his 13th save.


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
Addison Barger, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. homer on consecutive pitches as Blue Jays beat Red Sox 5-3
BOSTON — Addison Barger and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. homered on consecutive pitches from Walker Buehler in the first inning and Toronto capitalized on the right-hander's wildness to add two runs in the fourth in a 5-3 win over the Boston Red Sox on Sunday. Andrés Giménez and Nathan Lukes each had an RBI single as Toronto took two of three games in the weekend series and improved to 7-3 against Boston this season. Buehler (5-6), who is g uaranteed $21.05 million in a one-year free agent contract signed during the offseason , is 1-4 with a 7.80 ERA in his last six starts. Carlos Narváez hit a solo homer and Ceddanne Rafaela an RBI double for the Red Sox, who have lost seven of eight. Boston reliever Zack Kelly walked off the mound with a trainer due to right oblique tightness. Yariel Rodríguez (2-0) got five outs in scoreless relief and earned the win. Jeff Hoffman struck out three batters in the ninth for his 18th save. Barger hit a slider into the right-field seats and Guerrero Jr. sent a fastball over the Green Monster at Fenway Park. After Boston rallied to tie the game at 2, Buehler gave up a go-ahead run-scoring single to Giménez and then walked the next two batters — Jonatan Clase and Tyler Heineman — to force in a run. He issued three walks in the inning. Boston dropped its third straight series and has lost three of four since trading Rafael Devers to San Francisco two weeks ago. Blue Jays RHP Max Scherzer (0-0, 5.63 ERA) makes his second start since coming off the injured list from a right thumb injury on Monday in a home game against the Yankees. LHP Carlos Rodón (9-5, 2.92) is scheduled for New York. Red Sox LHP Garrett Crochet (7-4, 2.06) is slated to start Monday against Cincinnati RHP Chase Burns (0-0, 5.40). ___ AP MLB: