The New York Yankees lost to the Boston Red Sox and have lost eight in a row
Lloyd Mitchell
The New York Yankees extended a losing streak to eight for the first time since 1995, allowing Justin Turner’s ninth-inning, go-ahead double after a key overturned call in a 6-5 defeat to the Boston Red Sox on Sunday.
New York appeared to go ahead in the eighth when Isiah Kiner-Falefa scored from first on rookie Anthony Volpe’s single. Plate umpire Junior Valentine signaled safe, ruling Kiner-Falefa’s left foot got in ahead of Connor Wong’s tag, but the call was reversed in a video review, which also upheld that the catcher did not block the plate in violation of rules.
Swept in consecutive series by Atlanta and Boston, the Yankees have lost eight straight for the first time since Aug. 19-26, 1995. New York (60-64), in danger of ending its streak of 30 consecutive winning seasons, is 24-39 since June 4. The Yanke began Sunday trailing Seattle by eight games for the AL’s last wild card.
Turner had four RBIs for Boston, which is 8-1 against the Yankees this year, and has won seven in a row against New York.
With the score 5-5, Pablo Reyes singled off Clay Holmes (4-4) led off the ninth, and stole second, and Alex Verdugo walked. Turner doubled to the right-field warning track on a sinker.
Chris Martin (4-1) allowed two hits in a scoreless eighth, got the win and Kenley Jansen got his 29th save in 32 chances. Greg Allen doubled leading off the ninth and DJ LeMahieu was hit by a pitch, but Jansen struck out Aaron Judge and Torres, then retired Ben Rortvedt on a flyout.
Rafael Devers homered in the first off Clarke Schmidt and Masataka Yoshida hit into a run-scoring forceout in the sixth, but Kyle Higashioka and Gleyber Torres hit tying homers in the third and sixth off Nick Pivetta.
Turner hit a three-run homer in the seventh off Michael King one pitch after Devers was walked intentionally. Volpe tied the score in the bottom half with his 17th homer, a…
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