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Boston Globe
11 hours ago
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Red Sox waste stellar outing by Garrett Crochet in extra-inning loss to Angels
Aroldis Chapman recorded a scoreless bottom of the ninth. But because these Red Sox have virtually no margin for error, they lost anyway. Christian Moore, a Suffield Academy grad in his first month in the majors, tagged righthander Greg Weissert for a tying home run in the eighth and lefthander Justin Wilson for a walkoff two-run shot in the 10th. Advertisement Despite great success in one aspect of the game for most of the night, a little went wrong and the Red Sox couldn't recover. It was their fourth consecutive loss. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up That dropped the Red Sox to 40-41, entrenched in the mediocre range. They have had a .500 record 15 times. And they are six games behind the first-place Yankees in the AL East, 2½ games back of an AL wild-card spot. 'We've been an average team,' manager Alex Cora said before the game. 'I still believe we can be better in certain areas, more consistent.' Because of the major personnel changes the Red Sox have endured, Cora said, the team's identity has been slower to form than it would be most other years. Advertisement What can or should that identity be? Trevor Story and Rob Refsnyder, respected veterans, touched on similar themes: a club that should take advantage of its youth, athleticism, and talent. Those tend to be accompanied, though, by mistakes, inconsistency, and feelings of pressure to perform. Such is the nature of inexperience. 'Sometimes it's tough to have an identity with the versatility, but maybe that's what it is,' Story said. 'Be versatile, find different ways to win, doing it by slugging, by bunting. I feel like when we played our best, it's clean baseball, playing good defense, running the bases well, not really making mistakes, not giving them more opportunities or more things like that. We can be a little more consistent in that area.' Refsnyder said: 'The identity is a very young team, but we have to play aggressive, we have to play fast, hopefully smart. That's doing your homework before the game, at night preparing for the next game. So I think the identity is a young and fast, athletic team. We're going to mix and match a lot, we're going to pinch hit a lot, we're going to do a bunch of defensive substitutions.' A key, in Refsnyder's view, is not to 'shy away from those mistakes.' They happen. They are how the newbies learn. They might even be better than the alternative. 'Sometimes when you try not to make mistakes or you're nervous and you're not applying as aggressively or fast as you maybe would in Triple A when the lights aren't as bright, that's just not a recipe for winning baseball,' he said. 'I'm not saying we're doing that, but I used to do that when I was younger. I would prepare but then be playing a little timid. You ultimately just don't play your best baseball. Advertisement 'Over the course of a season, if you play aggressive and smart and let your talent take over at times, ultimately you're going to play better than if you play safe and scared.' Because the Red Sox are missing the hitters who represented the meat of their lineup at the start of the season — Alex Bregman (injured for at least a couple more weeks), Rafael Devers (traded), Triston Casas (injured and out for the year) — their starting nine of late has featured near-daily changes and few sure things. Even Jarren Duran, an All-Star in 2024, bounces between leadoff and dropping to fifth depending on which way the opposing starting pitcher throws the ball. On Tuesday, for example, the Sox' batting order included three rookies, a second-year full-timer, a couple of journeymen, and Story, Refsnyder, and Duran. That Duran — with about three years of service time in the majors — is a pseudo-veteran speaks to how young the group is. Some of that will change in the coming weeks. Bregman is due to return in the first half of July. Masataka Yoshida is on pace to beat him back. They figure to be reliable bats and bring the lineup more day-to-day regularity. 'It's a different lineup when those two guys are in it, honestly,' Refsnyder said. Cora said: 'When they're ready, they're going to help us. Right now, this is who we are.' Tim Healey can be reached at

Associated Press
17-06-2025
- Sport
- Associated Press
Angels rookie Christian Moore, a NYC native, gets 1st MLB hit in 1st visit to Yankee Stadium
NEW YORK (AP) — Christian Moore's first visit to Yankee Stadium came as the Los Angeles Angels' second baseman, even though he grew up a fan of the pinstripes just 20 miles from the ballpark. 'My dad's a huge Met fan,' he explained. 'We argued about it all the time when I was a kid. My brother and I were both Yankees fans growing up so we definitely had a lot of smack talk going on in the house, but it was all friendly. It was all good.' Three days after his major league debut, Moore tripled past right fielder Aaron Judge for his first big league hit, then threw out Paul Goldschmidt at the plate in the 11th inning to help the Angels beat the Yankees 1-0 on Monday night. Moore grew up in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn, near the Queens border. The 22-year-old had a group of about 40 family members and friends at the game Monday, including dad Charles, mom Lazette, sisters Tysheena and Cynnamon, and brother CJ. Christian was a two-way player at Suffield Academy in Suffield, Connecticut, and played three seasons at the University of Tennessee, helping the Vols win their first College World Series title with a leadoff homer in the decisive third game of the championship series against Texas A&M. He was selected eighth overall in last July's amateur draft and signed for a $4,997,500 bonus. He started at Class-A Inland Empire and after two games was moved up to Double-A Rocket City last Aug. 2. Moore hit .234 in 34 games with the Trash Pandas this year, was promoted to to Triple-A Salt Lake on May 20, then batted .350 with four homers, 18 RBIs and a .999 OPS in 20 games. Last Thursday, he woke up after hitting a two-run homer and an RBI single during an 8-7 loss at Las Vegas and saw a couple of missed calls from Bees manager Keith Johnson. 'I said, `Hey, man. Sorry. I was sleeping,'' Moore recalled. 'He said: `Don't sleep through calls in Baltimore.' And I was like, `Oh, what? What do you mean Baltimore?' And he was like: `You're going to the show.'' Moore flew from Las Vegas to Baltimore. His parents drove there from New York and he debuted Friday night, going 0 for 3 in a 2-0 loss. He said he attended 15-20 Mets games growing up, but Yankee Stadium was a new experience. Batting ninth, he flied out in the third and sixth. Then with two outs in the eighth, he sliced an opposite-field liner to right. Judge tried for a sprawling backhand catch, but the ball landed in front of the two-time AL MVP and rolled to the wall. Moore slid headfirst into third. 'His at-bat was much, much better tonight,' Angels manager Ron Washington said. 'And I think from this day forward they'll get better because of the fact he got his first base hit out the way.' Moore hit an inning-ending flyout in the 10th, then scored in the 11th as the automatic runner when Nolan Schanuel doubled off Jonathan Loáisiga. New York had runners at the corners in the bottom half and the infield was in when Jasson Domínguez hit a broken-bat, one-hopper to Moore, who charged in a bit and made a perfect sidearm throw to Travis d'Arnaud. The catcher nabbed the ball just to the third-base side of the plate in time to tag a sliding Goldschmidt on the left foot. Moore had the ball from the triple in his locker and planned to give it to his parents. He hadn't worried about how long it would take to reach the big leagues. 'I just try to put in the work and trust the process,' he said. ___ AP MLB: