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TJ Friedl's game-saving catch ends Reds' win over Brewers

TJ Friedl's game-saving catch ends Reds' win over Brewers

Reuters3 days ago

June 4 - Pinch hitter Connor Joe drove in the go-ahead run with a seventh-inning sacrifice fly as the Cincinnati Reds edged the visiting Milwaukee Brewers 4-2 on Tuesday.
Reds center fielder TJ Friedl robbed pinch hitter Jake Bauers of a game-tying home run for the final out when he leaped over the wall and brought the ball back.
Tyler Stephenson and Will Benson homered for Cincinnati, which snapped a three-game skid and put an end to Milwaukee's eight-game winning streak.
Matt McLain had a key double in the Reds' seventh-inning rally and made a lunging grab of a Christian Yelich line drive to second base in the eighth to help preserve the lead.
Cincinnati reliever Graham Ashcraft (4-4) retired all four batters he faced in the seventh and eighth. Emilio Pagan pitched a scoreless ninth for his 15th save in 17 chances.
The Reds leveled the three-game series entering the rubber game on Wednesday.
The Brewers wasted no time in getting to Cincinnati starter Hunter Greene, as Brice Turang lined the third pitch of the game down the right field line for a double. Jackson Chourio hit a rope to left-center that left fielder Benson caught while sliding awkwardly on the grass and fighting off the sun in his eyes.
The red-hot Christian Yelich continued the solid contact off Greene with a sinking line-drive single to left-center, scoring Turang for a 1-0 Milwaukee lead. Yelich extended his hitting streak to 10 games.
Milwaukee's Sal Frelick belted his fourth homer of the season in the fourth inning. He drove a two-out, two-strike offering that Greene left over the middle of the plate over the fence in right field for a 2-0 lead.
Greene allowed two runs on five hits over five innings, striking out seven, walking three and throwing 85 pitches.
Brewers starter Freddy Peralta (5-4) was overpowering to start the game, striking out five of the first six Cincinnati batters and six of eight. He wound up permitting three runs on seven hits in his six-plus innings, striking out nine and walking three.
The Reds finally got to Peralta in the fourth when Elly De La Cruz doubled with two outs and Stephenson followed with an opposite field two-run homer to right to tie the game 2-2.
Peralta was left in the game by Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy to start the seventh inning at 92 pitches. The right-hander walked Jake Fraley and gave up a double to McLain, moving Fraley to third.
Joe pinch-hit for Gavin Lux and drove in the go-ahead run with a one-out sacrifice fly to right off reliever Rob Zastryzny.
--Field Level Media

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Sonny Gray, Cardinals blank Dodgers in series opener

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Super regionals roundup: Oregon State rallies late, stuns Florida State in 10
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Brothers bring boxing back to Fenway after 70 years and hope to revitalize the sport in Boston
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The Independent

time44 minutes ago

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Brothers bring boxing back to Fenway after 70 years and hope to revitalize the sport in Boston

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Sullivan, born in 1858 to Irish immigrant parents and widely considered America's first sports superstar. The first heavyweight champion of the world, he was as famous as Muhammad Ali was in his time. Sam Langford, a Black Canadian-born boxer, moved to Boston as a teenager but was blocked from competing in the world championships by racist policies and is considered one of the greatest non-champions in boxing. Other boxing stars with Boston connections include Marvin Hagler and Rocky Marciano of nearby Brockton. 'The Boston Bomber' Tony DeMarco, whose statue raises his fists at passersby in Boston's North End, was the last fighter to win in the ring at Fenway in 1956. For a time after it was built, Fenway Park was the only outdoor venue with a significant seating capacity in Boston, making it a destination for all kinds of events, including boxing starting in 1920. After new owners took over in 2002, the park became a venue for a variety of activities, including concerts and sporting events such as hockey, snowboarding, Irish football and curling. 'Back in the day, it was sort of the Swiss Army knife of sports facilities in Boston. And it's returned to that — a little bit of everything. So, returning boxing to the park is just a nod to the past," Johnson said. Other venues can feel 'more corporate and sterile," but Fenway is living history, said Johnson, who calls it the 'largest open-air museum in New England.' A different pitch Mark Nolan said it's not for lack of trying that no one has hosted a boxing fight at Fenway in almost 70 years. But many promoters couldn't make a pitch that landed with ballpark management. The Nolans, who teach full time and own a boxing gym in Waltham where people can train regardless of their ability to pay, were different. 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'They're making sure that every fight is well-matched," said Thomas "The Kid" O'Toole, a fighter from rural Galway, Ireland, who has lived in Boston for the past two years, 'Nobody wants to see someone go in and just knock their opponent out right away and beat them up for four, six, eight rounds. They want to see a competitive fight.' O'Toole went professional in 2021 and is undefeated with 13 fights. He said his fight against St. Louis-born Vaughn 'Da Animal' Alexander at Fenway will be "the biggest test of his career." Massachusetts-born Lexi 'Lil Savage" Bolduc will compete in her fourth professional fight. She faces Sarah Couillard in a rematch after coming out on the losing end of a majority draw at the Royale. 'Fighting at Fenway, I think adds a little bit of pressure because I'm local, I grew up in Mass and idolized a lot of players as I was growing up. ... But at the same time, I'm trying to use it just as a huge opportunity and really soak in the moment," she said. "Pressure makes diamonds. 'To be able to kind of stand on that same ground of some of the most accomplished athletes, it's really remarkable," she said.

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