Lackey Good, But A's Shut Out Red Sox, 5-0
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- John Lackey returned to his usual form.
Boston still can't find a way to win on the road.
The Red Sox wasted a strong showing from Lackey in a 5-0 loss to the Oakland Athletics on Tuesday night, sending them to their worst start away from home in franchise history.
"I thought he did tremendous," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said of Lackey. "We didn't give him anything else."
Brett Anderson (1-1) outdueled Lackey (1-2) to snap Boston's three-game winning streak. The Red Sox, who started 0-6 this season, are now 0-7 on the road. That's the worst road start in franchise history.
Just when things finally started to return to normal, too.
The Red Sox were coming off a 9-1 win over the Blue Jays, highlighted by 13 hits and three home runs. They were blanked for the second time this season after losing 1-0 at Cleveland on April 7.
"It's early in the year. Pretty sure we won't go winless on the road," Lackey said.
David DeJesus got Oakland started with a first-inning RBI groundout, then Hideki Matsui added a two-run double and Daric Barton and Kurt Suzuki each hit RBI singles in a four-run eighth.
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Anderson allowed four hits and walked one in eight innings, helping the A's (9-8) move over .500 for first time this year.
Francona was ejected for the first time this year for arguing a play on the basepaths in the fourth, and he was forced to watch another miserable loss from a TV in the clubhouse.
Anderson improved to 4-1 with a 2.08 ERA in six career starts against the Red Sox. A's starters have allowed just one earned run over their last five games -- spanning 33 2-3 innings -- for a 0.27 ERA.
Boston had a chance against Anderson in the eighth after David Ortiz led off with a single and was lifted for pinch-runner Jacoby Ellsbury. But Mike Cameron struck out and Ellsbury was caught stealing for a double play. Initially, interference was called on Cameron until crew chief Tim Welke cleared things up afterward.
Even Ellsbury thought the call was batter interference.
Anderson then allowed back-to-back singles to Carl Crawford and Jarrod Saltalamacchia before striking out Darnell McDonald.
Craig Breslow and Brian Fuentes combined to finish the five-hitter.
In the seventh, Anderson tripped on the front of the mound and committed Oakland's majors-leading 19th error while making a throw to first after fielding Adrian Gonzalez's comebacker. But Anderson got Kevin Youkilis to ground into an inning-ending double play.
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After Gonzalez's two-out single in the first, Anderson didn't allow another hit until Ortiz's single. The burly left-hander
retired 16 of 17 batters during one stretch with only a leadoff walk to Dustin Pedroia in the fourth.
Pedroia was caught stealing moments later and Francona was ejected by plate umpire Jim Reynolds for arguing.
Francona claimed it was an obvious balk.
Lackey allowed four hits in six innings, struck out three and walked one in his best start so far. The right-hander threw two side sessions under the guidance of first-year Red Sox pitching coach Curt Young during a long layoff between starts. He was supposed to pitch last Wednesday but the game against Tampa Bay was rained out.
Lackey -- 17-6 with a 2.86 ERA against the A's in 32 career starts, most of those coming during his days with the AL West rival Angels -- lowered his ERA from 15.58 ERA to 9.82 after struggling through his first two outings of 2011.
"Watching him pitch tonight, you can't really see how he struggled early in the year," A's manager Bob Geren said. "That
was vintage John Lackey."
But Boston couldn't generate much offense in the opener of a quick, two-game visit to the Coliseum -- one of only two West Coast trips for the Red Sox this season. They came to Oakland twice in 2010 and also played in San Francisco for interleague. The A's go to Fenway Park for a pair of three-game series.
After this stop, the Red Sox head to Southern California to play four games with the Los Angeles Angels before three games at Baltimore. They don't come back West until August at Seattle.
Francona stuck with the hot hand of shortstop Jed Lowrie, who entered batting .516 with two home runs and nine RBIs. Lowrie went 0 for 4 with two strikeouts and had his seven-game hitting streak snapped. Francona said he is communicating with Marco Scutaro and is writing the lineup based on performance.
NOTES: Francona was ejected for the 30th time as a manager... Young returned to Oakland for the first time since spending the past seven seasons coaching the A's pitchers.
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)