Red Sox Defeat Orioles 15-10
BALTIMORE (AP) -- Playing against a weary club, the Baltimore Orioles homered twice and reached double figures in runs for only the third time this season.
And it still wasn't enough to reverse an annoying trend against the Boston Red Sox.
Dustin Pedroia doubled in two runs to spark an eight-run eighth inning, and the Red Sox got home runs from Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Josh Reddick in a 15-10 rout Monday night.
Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis and Darnell McDonald had three RBIs apiece for the Red Sox, who have won 13 of 15. The run includes a 16-inning victory at Tampa Bay on Sunday night in which Boston mustered only five hits.
Showing very little signs of fatigue, the Red Sox banged out 16 hits in rolling to their seventh straight victory over Baltimore.
Boston has outscored the Orioles 61-32 during that span.
"Frustrating," Baltimore shortstop J.J. Hardy said.
The Red Sox checked into their Baltimore hotel around 6 in the morning, grabbed some sleep and put a whipping on the last-place Orioles.
"Just a tough game. We put up a lot of runs and they just happened to put up more," said Nolan Reimold, who had two RBIs. "They looked pretty sharp. Credit to them. They had a long game yesterday and then the flight and came out obviously ready to play."
It was the first meeting between the teams since the Red Sox recorded a heated four-game sweep at Fenway Park immediately before the All-Star break.
Boston designated hitter David Ortiz and Orioles closer Kevin Gregg began serving three-game suspensions for their part in a bench-clearing incident during that series. Both players were initially suspended for four games before appealing the punishment.
The Red Sox didn't miss a beat. Boston fell one run short of matching its season high and had six players with at least two hits, including Pedroia, whose 16-game hitting streak is one short of his career high.
After the Red Sox loaded the bases against Mike Gonzalez (1-2) in the eighth, Pedroia hit a tiebreaking two-run double off Jason Berken to make it 9-7. Youkilis added a two-run single, Carl Crawford singled in a run and McDonald capped the uprising with a three-run double.
"We battled back a little bit and had the momentum and it happened kind of quick," Hardy said. "Eight runs and then bam."
Baltimore scored three runs in the eighth, but that just meant the Orioles lost when reaching double figures for the first time since Aug. 2, 2009. That was an 18-10 defeat against Boston.
Hardy and Adam Jones homered for the Orioles, who have lost 10 of 12.
"A couple guys on, we might have taken a roll at them in the ninth," Baltimore manager Buck Showalter said. "But they pitched a little bit better than we did tonight."
Dan Wheeler (2-1) got the win with 2 1-3 innings of no-hit relief for starter Tim Wakefield. His performance was particularly noteworthy because Matt Albers, Alfredo Aceves, Daniel Bard and Jonathan Papelbon pitched Sunday night.
"We didn't have Albers, didn't have Aceves, didn't have Bard," Boston manager Terry Francona said. "(Wheeler) comes in and shuts them down for a while. That's what gave us a chance. He threw the ball really well."
Wakefield gave up seven runs, three earned, and nine hits in 4 2/3 innings. He was undone by a particularly wicked knuckleball that produced a strikeout but resulted in a passed ball that fueled a five-run fifth inning that gave Baltimore a 7-6 lead.
Felix Pie opened the fifth by striking out, but he reached when the pitch eluded Saltalamacchia and went to the screen. Hardy, who signed a new three-year contract earlier in the day, hit a two-run homer and Jones drove a knuckleball an estimated 434 feet into the left-field stands.
Later in the inning, Reimold chased Wakefield with a two-run double.
Youkilis' RBI single tied it at 7 in the seventh.
After Derrek Lee hit a two-run triple for Baltimore in the first inning, Boston took the lead against Brad Bergesen with a three-run third that began with Saltalamacchia's seventh homer.
Boston made it 5-2 in the fourth, scoring two unearned runs after Lee let a grounder to first base go through his legs. The miscue ended a run of six straight errorless games by Baltimore.
Reddick homered off the foul pole in the fifth for a 6-2 lead.
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)