Garrett Crochet Fans 11 and Trevor Story Homers as Red Sox Beat Yankees for 8th Straight Time, 12
- On Saturday in The Bronx, the Boston Red Sox secured a dominant 12-1 victory over the New York Yankees, extending their winning streak against their rivals to eight games.
- This victory followed the Red Sox's earlier loss to the Yankees on June 6 and extended New York's current three-game losing streak after a prior five-game win streak.
- Pitcher Garrett Crochet started his 26th game, threw seven innings with five hits allowed, walked one, and struck out 11, while Trevor Story contributed a two-run double and his 20th home run.
- Garrett Crochet reached a milestone by recording over 200 strikeouts in a single season for the first time among Boston pitchers since Eduardo Rodríguez in 2019 and also passed 500 career strikeouts. Meanwhile, Trevor Story became the oldest player in Red Sox history to achieve at least 20 home runs and 20 stolen bases within the same season.
- The Red Sox increased their lead over the Yankees by 1.5 games within the division and continue to hold a spot in the wild-card playoff race, while their recent strong performance has raised questions about the Yankees' struggles and mistakes.
58 Articles
58 Articles
Yankees embarrassed in 8th straight loss to rival Red Sox
NEW YORK — Garrett Crochet struck out 11 in seven innings, Trevor Story homered and drove in three runs, and the Boston Red Sox beat the New York Yankees 12-1 on Saturday. Star rookie Roman Anthony and Alex Bregman each drove in a run for Boston, which defeated New York for the eighth straight time after losing the rivals’ first meeting on June 6. The Red Sox, second in the NL East to Toronto, moved 1 1/2 games ahead of the Yankees in the divisi…

2 career milestones for Crochet, Red Sox blow out Yankees 12-1
NEW YORK – On Friday afternoon, less than 24 hours away from Garrett Crochet’s scheduled start at Yankee Stadium, the Red Sox southpaw was surprised to find himself besieged with autograph and photo requests. From the Yankees fans young and old, who stood behind the rope line that rings the dirt behind home plate during batting practice. “It was the first time. A lot of kids. Typically adults are a little more set in their ways, so that was more…
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