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WILYER ABREU |
Wilyer Abreu hits first career walk-off
to beat St Louis in extra innings
April 6, 2025
...
After over two hours of rain delay and a full postponement on
Saturday, the Red Sox and Cardinals decided to maximize their time
together. They went to extra-innings in the first game of Sunday’s
doubleheader before Wilyer Abreu decided it was time for his first
career walk-off, and singled to left for a 5-4 win and series victory
in the 10th.
If not for Ryan Helsley’s uncharacteristically out-of-control ninth inning,
the Cardinals might have another game in the win column. St. Louis led 4-2
before their hard-throwing closer took the mound and issued four walks for the
second time in his career (Aug. 5, 2019), giving up two runs to tie the contest
and allow the Red Sox to force extras.
Helsley threw 11 of his first 13 pitches for balls, issuing a leadoff walk to
Trevor Story and a follow-up walk to Abreu, pinch-hitting for Rob Refsnyder,
before getting Kristian Cambell to fly out to center.
Then, to loud chants of “Romy! Romy!” Gonzalez, who replaced second baseman
David Hamilton in the seventh, ripped an RBI-double to left field, where it
befuddled Lars Nootbaar and brought Boston within one.
Helsley responded by walking Connor Wong to load the bases. After getting
Jarren Duran to strike out swinging for the second out, the game came down to
Rafael Devers, who’d already hit his first home run of the season to give Boston
a 2-1 lead in the fifth. Boston’s new designated hitter swung at the first pitch
and took a called strike for the second, then waited patiently as Helsley threw
four straight balls for the game-tying RBI-walk.
With the second game of the doubleheader barely two hours away, Alex Bregman
struck out swinging to leave the bases loaded and send the game to extra
innings.
Taking the mound for the top of the tenth, the crowd was on its feet and
roaring as Boston’s new closer, Aroldis Chapman, bookended the inning with a
pair of strikeouts, getting catcher Pedro Pagés swinging for an exclamation
point.
The bottom of the tenth was over on Ryan Fernandez’s sixth pitch. The former
Red Sox minor league pitcher issued an intentional leadoff walk to Triston Casas
and got Story to pop out. As Abreu sent the first pitch he saw soaring high to
left field, Bregman, who began the inning at second, motored home for the
winning run.
Abreu, who entered the second game of the doubleheader 12 for 23 to begin the
season, is the first Red Sox player to collect at least three homers and reach
base 20 or more times in the team’s first nine games since David Ortiz in ‘06.
Pagés was the star of the show until the bottom of the ninth. The Cardinals
catcher wasn’t in the starting lineup, but he subbed in for Iván Herrera when
the starting catcher exited with left-knee inflammation. Pagés went 2 for 3 with
a strikeout and three runs batted in. His ground-rule double off Justin Wilson
in the sixth re-tied the game 2-2, and his two-run double off Garrett Whitlock
in the eighth gave St. Louis a 4-2 lead.
As the Cardinals set a new franchise record by beginning the season with
eight consecutive double-digit hit games, tying the 1961 Pittsburgh Pirates for
the second-longest streak in MLB history, their pitching staff held the Red Sox
to eight knocks, snapping a three-game streak of double-digit hits.
Offensive highlights were few and far between through the first eight
innings. Boston left 10 men on base, including bases-loaded opportunities in the
second and ninth; they loaded the bases against Cardinals starter Andre Pallante
on back-to-back singles by Story and Refsnyder and a walk to Kristian Cambell to
begin the second, then went in order with a strikeout and back-to-back
first-pitch grounders. A rally attempt in the eighth fell apart when Gonzalez,
pinch-hitting for David Hamilton, and Wong led off with back-to-back singles,
only to both be thrown out by Pagés.
Prior to Helsley’s implosion, Boston’s lone runs came from Hamilton, who tied
the game on an RBI-single and stole second base in the fourth, and Devers’ homer
in the fifth.
The early feel-good story of the day was Sox starter Sean Newcomb. It had
been nearly five years since the left-hander from Middleborough, Mass. had even
reached 80 pitches in an outing, but he rose to the occasion in his first Red
Sox start in front of the home crowd. He threw 94 pitches, the most he’s thrown
in any game in almost exactly six years (April 7, 2019). He exited to applause
two outs into the fifth, having held the Cardinals to one earned run on six
hits, three walks, a hit batsman, and five strikeouts. Using an array of pitches
headlined by a cutter, four-seam fastball, and slurve, he induced 11
swings-and-misses and threw 62.7% of his pitches for strikes.
The Red Sox are 5-4, their first winning mark since Opening Day, and have won
four in a row. These are their first interleague wins, snapping a seven-game
losing streak against National League teams dating back to last July. |