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NEW YORK (AP) — Curtis Granderson misplayed Pedro Ciriaco’s ninth-inning flyball into a go-ahead triple, and the Boston Red Sox beat the New York Yankees 8-6 Saturday night after Mark Teixeira had tied the score with a two-run homer off nemesis Vicente Padilla.
Down 6-1, the Yankees closed in the fifth on Jayson Nix’s two-run homer off Jon Lester and Derek Jeter’s RBI grounder.
After Teixeira’s homer in the eighth, Rafael Soriano (2-1) walked Jacoby Ellsbury with one out in the ninth and Ciriaco hit a fly that could have been caught. Granderson broke in, then went back and turned the wrong way before the ball dropped to his right-field side as he fell. Dustin Pedroia followed with a sacrifice fly.
Andrew Miller (3-1) got one out for the win, just the second for Boston in eight games against the Yankees this year. Alfredo Aceves finished for his 22nd save in 26 chances.
Padilla and Teixeira have been going at each other in recent weeks. Padilla allowed a leadoff single to pinch-hitter Raul Ibanez in the eighth, then threw a called third strike past Derek Jeter. Granderson hit two foul drives deep down the right-field line, the second missing a home run by about a foot, before striking out.
Padilla fell behind 2-0 in the count to Teixeira, then lobbed in a 51 mph curveball. Teixeira turned on the next pitch, sending it deep into the right-field bleachers. He stared at the ball as he took four short steps up the line, then went into his home run trot.
Teixeira hit a go-ahead, two-run triple off Padilla in the seventh inning at Fenway Park on July 6, sparking a weekend war of words. Padilla accused Teixeira of wronging Latino teammates when they played together on the Texas Rangers, and Teixeira said Padilla “didn’t have a lot of friends in the game.” Padilla responded Teixeira would “be better off playing a women’s sport.”
Boston manager Bobby Valentine caused a stir began the game when he said the Red Sox medical staff instructed him not to play Carl Crawford four days in a row, a mandate Valentine said he ignored earlier in the month after the left fielder came off the disabled list.
Following a rain delay of 2 hours, 4 minutes, the Red Sox had built their lead when Adrian Gonzalez hit an RBI double and scored on Will Middlebrook’s two-run double in the first, then hit a three-run homer off CC Sabathia in the fifth.
Chris Stewart’s first home run since September cut the gap to 3-1 in the third, but Gonzalez boosted the lead with two outs in the fifth when he lined a home run into the right-field bleachers. Gonzalez leads the majors in batting average with runners in scoring position at .418 (41 for 98).
New Yankees right fielder Ichiro Suzuki raced into the right-center gap to rob Gonzalez of an extra-base hit with a catch just in front of the warning track in the seventh.
Lester, who had been 0-3 with a 10.42 in his previous four starts, allowed four runs and four hits in six innings with six strikeouts. He fanned Robinson Cano in the sixth for his 1,000th strikeout.
Sabathia allowed a season-high six runs and eight hits in six innings. He retired 12 of 13 batters following Middlebrooks’ double, then gave up Ciriaco’s single and a walk on a close full-count pitch to Pedroia before Gonzalez’s home run.
NOTES: Former Red Sox manager Terry Francona visited with Boston players before the game in the Red Sox clubhouse, preparing for his job as a broadcaster for Sunday night’s game on ESPN. … The Yankees have outscored the Red Sox 18-12 in the first inning this year. … Stewart, who has turned into Sabathia’s regular catcher, had gone homerless in 105 at-bats since connecting for San Francisco off the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw

Crawford limited to four days in row

NEW YORK (AP) — Carl Crawford was out of Boston’s starting lineup for Saturday’s game against the New York Yankees and said his balky elbow may need ligament-replacement surgery.
After missing the first half of the season because of left wrist and elbow injuries, Crawford returned July 16.
Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine said the team’s medical staff had told him not to start Crawford more than four days in a row.
Crawford appeared in six straight games when he returned,
“I did a manager no-no thing and went against what I was told to do. Never to be done again,” Valentine said. “I kind of did the old veto power.”
In the second season of a $142 million, seven-year contract, Crawford is batting .222 (8 for 37) with one homer and two RBIs — connecting for a solo homer as last-place Boston lost Friday’s series opener 10-3. Valentine said he hopes Crawford will be able to build up endurance so that the restriction can end.
Crawford anticipates he will need elbow surgery at some point.
“I figure one day it’ll blow out, and when that happens, time to go,” he told Boston reporters. “The later I wait to get it done, the more time I’m going to miss. I guess you guys can do the calculation on that and see how that works. I definitely know that at some point of my career I can’t keep playing with this ligament in my elbow like that.”
Daniel Nava replaced him in left field. Crawford is a career .319 hitter against CC Sabathia, the Yankees’ starting pitcher on Saturday.

NOTES: RHP Daisuke Matsuzaka, on the disabled list because of a stiff neck, is to make a rehabilitation start Monday at Triple-A Pawtucket. … RHP Scott Atchison (on DL because right forearm strain) allowed three runs and three hits in an inning during a rehab appearance for Pawtucket at Indianapolis on Friday night and felt sore Saturday. Valentine said he likely will have an MRI. … RHP Andrew Bailey, on the 60-day DL following right thumb surgery, will make a rehab outing Monday in the Gulf Coast League. Valentine said he anticipates Bailey will need about eight rehab appearances.

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