MLB

Red Sox rock Ryu as Blue Jays drop mini-series opener for 3rd straight loss

Xander Bogaerts hit a three-run home run to back Eduardo Rodriguez in his first start at Fenway Park since 2019, and the Boston Red Sox beat the Toronto Blue Jays 4-2 on Tuesday night.

Toronto ace touched up for 8 hits, 4 earned runs in difficult 5-inning performance

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu reacts after conceding a home run during the team's 4-2 loss to the Boston Red Sox on Tuesday. (Adam Glanzman/Getty Images)

Xander Bogaerts hit a three-run home run to back Eduardo Rodriguez in his first start at Fenway Park since 2019, and the Boston Red Sox beat the Toronto Blue Jays 4-2 on Tuesday night.

Rodriguez (3-0), who missed last season due to COVID-19 complications, allowed two runs on three hits over six innings and struck out six for AL East-leading Boston.

Matt Andriese, Adam Ottavino and Matt Barnes each worked a scoreless inning in relief. Barnes earned his third save.

"I was really excited as soon as I went out there," Rodriguez said. "It feels amazing to be back here to step on the mound and be able to compete. ... That was something special for me."

Rodriguez was pulled after allowing his second homer of the day, a towering leadoff shot by Randal Grichuk leading off the seventh. Bo Bichette also homered for the Blue Jays, who have lost three straight.

Manager Alex Cora said he likes the way has Rodriguez attacked the strike zone and set up the bullpen this season.

"His stuff is that good. He's evolving into one of the best lefties in the league," Cora said. "He has a good feel of what he wants to do."

Toronto ace Hyun Jin Ryu (1-2) lasted five innings, giving up eight hits, four runs and striking out two.

Trailing 4-2 in the eighth, the Blue Jays had a runner on third with two outs, but Bichette struck out.

Toronto had four hits, the first time it has had four or fewer hits in back-to-back games since July 2019.

"We all know they can do better. They're just not doing it right now," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said. "Hitting's contagious and when you don't hit, everybody feels the pressure."

Rodriguez received a warm greeting from the pandemic-limited Fenway crowd of 4,728. It was a small consolation prize for the left-hander, who missed out on scheduled opening day starts each of the past two seasons.

He still appeared to feed off the home fans' energy, hurling a 95 mph fastball to strike out Bichette looking in the first inning.

Rodriguez cruised through his first three innings, allowing only a walk.

In the fourth, Bichette jumped on a first-pitch cutter and drove it over the Green Monster to put the Blue Jays in front 1-0.

Christian Arroyo and J.D. Martinez singled ahead of Bogaerts' blast to left-centre in the bottom of the inning. Marwin Gonzalez doubled later in the fourth and Bobby Dalbec drove him in with a triple.

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