BOSTON — Kevin Youkilis scored the go-ahead
run on a passed ball after his third extra-base hit and the Boston Red
Sox rallied to beat the New York Yankees 9-7 in the major league opener
Sunday night.
Boston erased a 5-1 deficit against CC Sabathia
and defeated the defending World Series champions in the first night
opener in the history of 98-year-old Fenway Park.
Jorge Posada and Curtis Granderson hit
back-to-back homers off Josh Beckett to give the Yankees a 2-0 lead in
the second inning. It was 7-5 in the bottom of the seventh when Marco
Scutaro singled and Dustin Pedroia tied it with an opening-day homer for
the second straight season.
Youkilis then doubled with two outs, took third
on Damaso Marte's wild pitch and scored when the left-hander's high
pitch bounced off Posada's glove. Pedroia added an RBI single in the
eighth.
Hideki Okajima pitched a scoreless inning to
get the win and Jonathan Papelbon worked the ninth for the save.
Chan Ho Park recorded just two outs while
picking up the loss in his Yankees debut. The right-hander was charged
with three runs and three hits.
Former Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez got a warm
greeting when he threw out the ceremonial first pitch.
The real starters didn't do as well.
Sabathia gave up five runs and six hits over 5
1/3 innings in his second poor opening-day start since he joined New
York for a $161 million, seven-year contract.
Beckett allowed five runs and eight hits in 4
2/3 innings. It was the worst of five opening-day starts for the
right-hander, who had allowed just four runs in 22 2/3 innings in his
previous four.
Even two aging singers beloved by Red Sox fans
had better nights.
Steven Tyler, lead singer of Aerosmith and a
Boston-area resident, sang "God Bless America" during the seventh-inning
stretch.
Neil Diamond, whose "Sweet Caroline" is played
at Fenway Park after the top of the eighth, then stepped onto the field
along the right-field line to sing it in person. The Brooklyn native
wore a blue Red Sox hat with a red "B" and a dark jacket with the words
"KEEP THE DODGERS IN BROOKLYN" on the back.
The Red Sox were more concerned with the team
from the Bronx.
The Yankees began the season as champions for
the first time since they beat Kansas City 7-3 behind Roger Clemens in
the 2001 opener. They finished that year in the World Series, but lost
to the Arizona Diamondbacks in seven games.
The last time the Red Sox and Yankees met in
an opener was in 2005 following Boston's first championship since 1918.
New York won 9-2 with Randy Johnson beating David Wells — like Sabathia,
a big lefty.
Youkilis got the first hit off Sabathia, a
leadoff double in the second, and scored on Adrian Beltre's sacrifice
fly. Youkilis then tripled in two runs in the sixth before Beltre's RBI
single tied it at 5.
On the first pitch of the major league season,
Derek Jeter grounded out to shortstop Marco Scutaro. Nick Johnson then
flied to center and Mark Teixeira grounded out to first. Seven pitches,
three outs.
The first eight batters of the game were
retired before the Yankees, who led the AL last season with 244 homers,
got two long balls in a row. Posada hit a short liner off the right-field
foul pole. Then Granderson sent a long drive into the center-field
seats in his first at-bat as a Yankee.
The Yankees went ahead 7-5 in the seventh on
Robinson Cano's RBI groundout and Posada's run-scoring single but Boston
responded with three runs in the bottom half, culminating in Youkilis'
tiebreaking scamper.
Notes
The
back-to-back homers by Posada and Granderson were the first by the
Yankees on opening day since Dave Winfield and Steve Kemp did it on
April 5, 1983, at Seattle. … Hip-hop producer Dr. Dre took batting
practice. He was at Fenway to promote the Beats by Dr. Dre headphones
with a Red Sox logo.