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Red Sox beat Yanks, finally have reason to cheer

Boston snaps worst skid to start season since WWII with 9-6 win in home opener

Image: Kevin Youkilis, Marco ScutaroAP
Boston third baseman Kevin Youkilis, left, celebrates with shortstop Marco Scutaro after the Red Sox defeated the New York Yankees  9-6 on Friday.

BOSTON - Six losses in the first six games were plenty for feisty Dustin Pedroia.

So the Red Sox sparkplug hit a solo homer in the first inning, starting his team to a 9-6 win over the New York Yankees on Friday and ending Boston's longest season-opening losing streak since World War II.

"I just came in here thinking, 'We need to find a way to win. I don't care how we do it. I don't care if it's the ugliest win of all time. We need that win,"' Pedroia said, "but we played great, man."

Pedroia had three hits and three RBIs in the 100th home opener at Fenway Park.

With a full house cheering from the start of pregame player introductions, the Red Sox rapped 12 hits after getting just 35 in their first six games. They started the season on the road by going 0-6 for the first time since beginning the 1945 season at 0-8.

"It seems like guys were calm, weren't jumping at the ball," Pedroia said. "This is our park. We were on the road six days and we didn't get comfortable."

The Red Sox had been a popular preseason choice to win the World Series after adding Carl Crawford and Adrian Gonzalez to support what seemed like a strong rotation.

"We have a lot of expectations, too," Pedroia said. "We don't want to let anybody down."

But the struggles of the starting pitchers continued when John Lackey (1-1) gave up six runs in five innings.

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He still got the win when Jarrod Saltalamacchia's run-scoring double broke a 6-all tie in the fifth.

Jonathan Papelbon, coming off his worst season, got the save with a perfect ninth inning as Boston won its seventh straight home opener.

J.D. Drew had given him a three-run cushion with a two-run single in the seventh.

"It feels great," said a smiling David Ortiz, who went 2 for 4 with an RBI. "We were just waiting to get home so we can win. Just kidding."

The game started poorly for the Red Sox as Lackey walked the first batter, Brett Gardner, who stole second. After a walk to Alex Rodriguez, Robinson Cano drove a two-run double to deep center field.

Boston also showed some pop early as Pedroia hit his first homer of the year just inside the left-field foul pole.

"He gave us a huge lift," manager Terry Francona said. "We're down two, he takes a good swing and kind of gets at least a little bit of momentum, a little bit of excitement going."

The Yankees went ahead 3-1 in the second on doubles by Curtis Granderson and Gardner before the Red Sox scored five runs in the bottom of the inning. They hadn't scored more than five in a game in any of their first six losses.

The runs came off Phil Hughes, who was hammered for his second straight outing and lasted just two innings.

"It seemed like everything I threw up there was getting hit around," he said.

Boston loaded the bases in the second on singles by Drew, Saltalamacchia and Jacoby Ellsbury and scored when Marco Scutaro grounded into a forceout at third. Then Pedroia drove in two runs with a single and Gonzalez and Ortiz singled in a run apiece for a 6-3 lead.

Lackey kept struggling, giving up an RBI double to Cano in the third, a run-scoring single to Derek Jeter in the fourth and a homer to Rodriguez, his third of the season, in the fifth.

That tied the game at 6, but Boston went ahead in the bottom of the fifth against Bartolo Colon (0-1) on a double by Saltalamacchia that scored Kevin Youkilis, who had drawn his third walk.

"They've got a great team," Yankees catcher Russell Martin said. "(Going) 0-6 is not a good indication of how they're playing. ... You're not playing the record."

The Red Sox won despite another terrible performance by Lackey.

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In his first start, he allowed nine runs and 10 hits in 3 2-3 innings of a 12-5 loss at Texas. So far this season, he has allowed runs in eight of the nine innings in which he's appeared, with 13 of the 17 hits he's allowed going for extra bases.

The rebuilt bullpen had its best game of the year with four scoreless innings.

"We didn't keep them off the board the first five innings," Francona said. "That's a hard way to win. Our bullpen came in and put up four zeros. That's tough to do."

Notes: When asked before the game about Boston's 0-6 start, Yankees manager Joe Girardi noted he was with the 1998 Yankees who opened 1-4 and went on to a 114-48 record in the regular season and a World Series title. ... Rodriguez's homer was his 616th and gave him 1,836 RBIs, passing Rafael Palmeiro and tying Ken Griffey Jr. for 13th place. ... Carl Yastrzemski, who made his major league debut 50 years ago in a Red Sox uniform and went on to the Hall of Fame, threw out the ceremonial first pitch. ... A pregame moment of silence was observed for Lou Gorman, Boston's general manager from 1984 to 1993 who died on April 1 at the age of 82. ... Another moment of silence was held in honor of victims of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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