Max Fried disappoints in Yankees' lifeless series-deciding loss to Astros

Max Fried lacked run support but failed to deliver an ace-like outing that the lifeless Yankees needed in Sunday's 7-1, series-deciding loss to the Houston Astros.

Takeaways

  1. Aaron Boone's third-inning ejection for arguing balls and strikes with home-plate umpire Derek Thomas did absolutely nothing to light a fire under the Yankees (62-56), who got no-hit by Astros starter Jason Alexander until Ben Rice's one-out single in the sixth inning. Jose Altuve's solo home run with two outs in the first inning put Houston (66-52) ahead and New York never answered.
  2. Fried is trending down. With a 6.00 ERA since July, the Yankees' top starter has allowed four runs on eight hits over five innings in consecutive games. Of course, Fried (12-5, 2.94 ERA) did not get any help from his offense throughout his 94-pitch (64-strike) outing. But he also did not give his team's struggling bats much of a chance as the Astros pushed ahead, totaling three runs in the third and fifth innings.
  3. Ryan McMahon's seventh-inning sacrifice fly with the bases loaded and one out scored Jazz Chisholm Jr. and scratched a run across to get the Yankees on the board, but that was it. New York trailed 4-1 after McMahon got the job done, but Austin Wells' inning-ending fly ball to right field stranded runners on first and second base. Carlos Correa's leadoff home run in the ninth inning against Tim Hill was the dagger before RBI singles by Ramón Urías and Mauricio Dubón buried the Yankees in a six-run hole.
  4. New York has lost seven of its past nine games and three straight series but never looked this lifeless. The Yankees are clinging to the American League's third wild card but have company while the division -- trailing the first-place Toronto Blue Jays and second-place Boston Red Sox -- seems further out of reach.

Who's the MVP?

Alexander, who held the Yankees to one hit through six scoreless innings while striking out three and walking three on 87 pitches (47 strikes). Even without his best stuff, he kept New York clueless.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees begin a three-game series against the 56-61 Minnesota Twins. Right-handers Will Warren (6-5, 4.44 ERA) and Zebby Matthews (3-3, 5.17 ERA) are set to start Monday's 7:05 p.m. opener.

Ichiro Suzuki says he never dreamt of having his number retired by the Mariners

SEATTLE (AP) Ichiro Suzuki paused at times to collect his thoughts and placed his hand on his heart as he spoke thoughtfully about what it meant to have his No. 51 retired by the Seattle Mariners.

Suzuki met with reporters before Seattle's game Sunday against the Tampa Bay Rays, the morning after his jersey was retired by the team.

Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame last month, Suzuki was touched by praise from Mariners manager Dan Wilson, a former teammate, and team chairman John Stanton, who announced that Suzuki will have his own statue at T-Mobile Park, joining broadcaster Dave Niehaus, Ken Griffey Jr. and Edgar Martinez.

He said he never imagined his number would be enshrined at the ballpark.

“It's something that you couldn't even dream or think about, and it actually happened,” Suzuki said through a translator.

Suzuki is the third Seattle player to have his number retired by the team, joining Griffey and Martinez.

“The view I had yesterday from the field, looking up at a full, full stand of Mariners fans, was amazing. At Cooperstown, there were a lot of fans, but it was kind of from a higher position looking down. This yesterday where we were looking up, and it was just a full stand of people, that was great,” Suzuki said.

Suzuki first joined the Mariners in 2001. That year he joined Fred Lynn (1975) as the only players to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season.

Over his 19-year career, Suzuki was a two-time AL batting champion and 10-time All-Star and Gold Glove winner, hitting .311 with 117 homers, 780 RBIs and 509 stolen bases with Seattle, the New York Yankees and Miami.

Suzuki wound up with 3,089 hits over his career that included 14 total seasons with Seattle. After stints with the Yankees and Miami, he spent his final two seasons with the Mariners and retired in 2019.

The Mariners will erect the statue of Suzuki at T-Mobile Park in 2026. It will feature his iconic batting stance pose.

Suzuki still works for the Mariners, serving as a special assistant to Stanton. He often works out with players during pregame warmups, which he did Sunday.

“I think what's special about this team is you see a lot of teams where negativity kind of gets passed down, and it just kind of grows with a team. That's something that happens a lot and its easy for negativity to grow within a team,” Suzuki said. “But this team, the positive is getting passed down from player to player, and it is growing and growing. ... It's the positive that is being passed around and you can just see it and feel it.”

Phillies follow familiar script in sweeping Rangers, padding NL East lead

Phillies follow familiar script in sweeping Rangers, padding NL East lead originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ARLINGTON, Texas — There seemed to be a script the Phillies were following during their three-game series at Globe Life Field against the Texas Rangers. It went something like this: Starting pitchers struggle in the first inning and give up runs before settling in while the offense eventually takes the lead and the defense performs stellar plays before the bullpen draws the final curtain.

The story remained the same Sunday as the Phillies swept the Rangers with a 4-2 win, upped their season record to 68-49 and gave themselves a 5.5 lead in the National League East on the New York Mets, who dropped another game to the Milwaukee Brewers.

Command was the one thing manager Rob Thomson was looking for from starting pitcher Zack Wheeler, who had his start pushed back a few days due to a shoulder that had developed some soreness over the last few weeks. Since a complete-game one-hitter back on July 6, Wheeler hadn’t pitched more than six innings in four outings entering Sunday, and had compiled a 4.94 ERA.

Command wasn’t exactly good for Wheeler Sunday, nor was his velocity as it was down a few miles an hour. But he powered through five innings of work after giving up his two runs in the first inning on a home run by Joc Pederson. Wheeler gave up just three hits, walked three and threw 51 of his 83 pitches for strikes. He also struck out seven.

“I felt a lot better. I felt good. I felt healthy,” Wheeler, who improved to 10-5 on the season, said. “Still just a little off so just got to keep working at that. It wasn’t the prettiest today but got through it. Trying to figure it out. The past four starts have been off, but it’s that part of the season where the innings are starting to rack up a little bit so it’s just catching up to me a little bit. Just got to push through it. It’s all just a cycle so it will come back around and I’ll be fine.”

Wheeler admitted to the club at some point over the past few weeks that there was some soreness in the shoulder but an MRI showed no damage and now it’s just a matter of throwing through it and getting himself back to 100 percent.

“Honestly, it’s been a while,” he said of the soreness. “I finally just got to that point where we wanted to go get an image of it so we can treat what specifically needed to be treated and not try to just guess. We did that and today I felt perfectly normal. Just those couple of days and getting the right treatment in helped me out.”

The bullpen, bolstered before the game with the addition of David Robertson after his gear-up stint in Lehigh Valley, was just about perfect for its four innings as Tanner Banks, Matt Strahm, Orion Kerkering and Jhoan Duran allowed a combined three hits, no walks and struck out three. The relievers were much needed again Sunday with Wheeler fighting through his five innings.

“When he’s on his fastball command, he’s really good,” catcher J.T. Realmuto said of Wheeler. “Starts like today, where he’s a little erratic with his fastball, you kind of have to find what’s working that day and what he’s able to command in the zone. It’s kind of different from start to start which off-speed he’s feeling the best with. Today it took us a little bit to find and we wound up using his split a little bit more than we had game-planned for just because it was one of his better pitches today.

“I just think those guys (the bullpen) being a little more reassured of when their going to pitch and having a little more specific roles and knowing who’s pitching the ninth inning. I think it just give them a better idea of when to get ready and what to prepare for.”

The defense made terrific plays once again to help preserve the win. After the Phillies took a 3-2 lead in the fifth, Harrison Bader made a running, over-the-fence catch of what would have been a game-tying home run by Corey Seager. Trea Turner made an over-the-shoulder catch in the seventh with a man on and had another gem in the ninth when he went to the hole toward third to backhand a grounder before he made a strong throw to first to get Jake Burger to lead off the ninth.

“Unbelievable,” Thomson said of Bader’s play. “We played really good defense. This whole series. Well, for a while now we’ve been playing really solid defense.”

After falling behind 2-0 in the first, the Phillies cut the lead in half on an RBI double by Bryce Harper in the fourth before taking the lead for good in the fifth when Edmundo Sosa hit a solo home run to left, followed by a Bryson Stott single. Stott then stole second and scored on a single by Weston Wilson for a 3-2 lead.

The Phillies tacked on an insurance run in the ninth, by again playing the small-ball game as Bader was hit by a pitch, was sacrificed to second by Sosa, moved to third on a single by Stott and scored on a sacrifice fly by Brandon Marsh for the final margin to give the Phillies the sweep of the Rangers, who had won 12 of their previous 14 at home. It was also the seventh win in nine games for the Phillies.

“It was a good series,” Thomson said. “This is a good club and they’ve been playing well, especially at home. I thought we played very well. The first inning there was a potential double-play ball, a ball that dropped between our middle infielders and Bader. But other than that, I thought we played extremely well.”

As for Wheeler, worry doesn’t seem to be overcoming the manager a little bit.

“I’m not concerned,” he said. “They’re working on some stuff and he just looks a little bit out of sync. The velocity’s not there but his secondary stuff was good, you got a lot of whiff, seven strikeouts. He just looks like he’s out of sync, that’s all.”

All in all, the Phillies couldn’t have written up this weekend any better than it played out.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone ejected for 5th time this season in game vs. Astros

NEW YORK (AP) — New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone was ejected from a game for the fifth time this season in the third inning on Sunday against the Houston Astros.

Boone thought Jason Alexander’s sinker to Ryan McMahon was a low called strike. He argued with plate umpire Derek Thomas, who replied: “I’ve heard you enough Aaron,” and tossed him out.

Boone continued the argument for about another minute while third base umpire Jordan Baker interceded and the at-bat continued with McMahon flying out to center field.

Boone was ejected six times last season. His last ejection was by Manny Gonzalez on July 23 in Toronto during the seventh inning for arguing a called third strike on Anthony Volpe.

Since becoming manager in 2018, Boone has been ejected 44 times. Last season, he was tossed by Thomas in the seventh inning of a game against the Atlanta Braves following a walk to Marcell Ozuna.

The Astros held a 2-0 lead when Boone was ejected.

Mets prospect Nolan McLean delivers four more strong innings with Syracuse

Mets prospect Nolan McLean put together another strong outing on Sunday.

Pitching on four days rest for the first time this season, the young right-hander held the Charolette Knights to just one run on two hits and three walks while striking out seven over four innings of work.

McLean danced around two out baserunners in each of the first two innings, picking up his first three strikeouts of the afternoon in the process. 

He picked up two more punchouts and was helped out by his defense in the third, as Luke Ritter laid out at second and made a tremendous diving catch to take away a hit. 

Charolette was able to get to him in the fourth, as Dominic Fletcher lifted a solo homer with one out, but he bounced back and ended his afternoon with his seventh punchout. 

McLean finished a strong day at the park with 74 pitches (47 strikes). 

The 24-year-old’s ERA now stands at an impressive 2.47 across 16 Triple-A appearances. 

David Stearns said earlier this week that both him and Brandon Sproat have caught the club’s attention but their timeline for a call-up remains unclear. 

“They're doing a great job,” David Stearns said. I think they're putting themselves in the position, when and if we have a need, we feel confident going down there and getting an arm. And we're going to continue to factor them in as we go through the rest of the season.”

Perhaps we could see one or the other soon after Frankie Montas’ struggles continued in Saturday’s outing.

Yankees’ Aaron Boone ejected for league-high fifth time in third inning vs. Astros

Yankees manager Aaron Boone is now the league leader in ejections. 

With Ryan McMahon leading off the bottom of the third Sunday afternoon in the Bronx, Boone chirped from the dugout after home late umpire Derek Thomas called a questionable low strike two.  

Thomas barked back in Boone’s direction that he’d warned him enough already before very quickly ringing up the very hot-headed skipper.

Boone came out and got in Thomas' face, telling him that he didn't like the low strike calls they've been getting over the first three innings of the game. 

It was his fifth ejection of the season, and his second in the last two weeks. 

Yankees’ Aaron Judge ‘optimistic’ he’ll return to outfield sooner rather than later

Aaron Judge continues progressing well in his throwing program. 

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said that he threw Wednesday in Texas, Friday, Saturday, and was planning on doing so again prior to Sunday’s series finale in the Bronx. 

Each day he’s been getting “noticeably better” and the skipper says that he’s optimistic he’ll be able to return to the outfield sooner rather than later. 

Judge hasn’t played the field since July 25 due to a flexor strain in his right elbow.

The 33-year-old was activated from the IL this week but has been limited to just DH duties as he continues gradually working his way through his recovery from the injury. 

He’s gone 3-for-12 with three walks and an RBI in four starts since returning. 

Boone flirted with the idea of running Giancarlo Stanton back in the outfield for the second straight day with Judge occupying the DH spot Sunday, but the team decided they wanted to play things safe. 

“We want to be realistic with that,” he said. “I could definitely see him maybe getting back out there for the Minnesota series, and then continue paying attention to how Judge is doing with his return.”

Saturday marked Stanton’s first outfield appearance since the 2023 season.

Phillies bring back 40-year-old reliever David Robertson

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The Philadelphia Phillies recalled 40-year-old reliever David Robertson from Triple-A Lehigh Valley on Sunday, three weeks after he signed a free-agent deal with the National League East leaders.

Robertson made six relief appearances with Lehigh Valley, and had a 10.13 ERA, though he had four scoreless outings. He struck out six, walked one and allowed 11 hits and six runs in 5 1/3 innings.

The Phillies made the move before their series finale at Texas, where Robertson was 3-4 with a 3.00 ERA in 68 games last season.

Right-hander Alan Rangel was optioned to Triple-A to make room on the 26-man roster.

Over his 16-year major league career, Robertson, has a 2.91 ERA in 861 games, all but one of those in relief. This is his third stint with the Phillies, first as a free agent before the 2019 season and then after being acquired in a trade from the Chicago Cubs in 2022. He played nine seasons with the Yankees over two different times in New York, which drafted him in the 17th round of the 2006 amateur draft.

Giants get ‘punched in the face' by Nationals on Justin Verlander's historic day

Giants get ‘punched in the face' by Nationals on Justin Verlander's historic day originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants entered Sunday’s rubber match against the Washington Nationals with a chance to win their third consecutive series, and after the first inning, it seemed like the game had all the makings of a magical day at Oracle Park.

Justin Verlander entered his 20th start of the 2025 MLB season needing just three strikeouts to reach the 3,500th of his career, and he became the 10th big-league pitcher ever to do so after striking out the side in the first inning. But the celebration, which included a standing ovation from 40,089 fans as he walked off the mound, was short lived as San Francisco went on to lose 8-0.

The Giants mustered just three hits against Nationals left-hander MacKenzie Gore and never even reached second base, though Verlander put them in an early hole after his historic first inning, allowing four runs in the second on a pair of doubles followed by a two-run homer from CJ Abrams.

The 42-year-old ended up striking out six and allowing five earned runs while walking one across five innings of work when all was said and done.

“I was happy to get there,” Verlander told reporters after the game of his strikeout milestone. “Happy to have a moment with the fans. It’s a cool milestone … I really appreciate what it’s taken to get there.

“Three bad sliders. Really, two. Kind of worked out of a jam in the second and threw a mediocre slider that gets hit right down the line. And then, obviously Abrams, that one kind of just backed up on me. So that was the difference in the ballgame right there.”

Spencer Bivens entered in the sixth and surrendered three more runs — one earned — over the next three innings, and the Giants’ second bright spot of the game came when infielder Christian Koss made his second mound appearance of the season to wrap things up in the ninth (and preserved his 0.00 ERA).

A clearly frustrated Bob Melvin took the podium after the loss and didn’t hold back on San Francisco’s performance, with the Giants manager stating he thought his team was more prepared after their hitter’s meeting entering the series finale.

“The rest was awful,” Melvin said of everything that happened after Verlander’s milestone. “I mean, we have 40,000 people here and we don’t give them anything to root for the entire game other than that. Unfortunately, that probably is as disappointing [of] a game we’ve had all year.

“Back to [Verlander], he strikes out the side in the first and has that moment, that was great. But he’s got a lot of accomplishments, a lot of stripes.”

After taking series from both the New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates on the road, the Giants returned home and beat the Nationals on Friday — and for one night, it appeared as if they had solved their recent struggles at Oracle Park. But after losing their last two games to Washington and their winless homestand to end July, the Giants now have gone 2-11 in their last 13 home games and averaged just 2.3 runs per game during that span.

“Everybody was prepared,” Giants third baseman Matt Chapman told reporters in the clubhouse after Sunday’s loss. He agreed with Melvin’s sentiment that the shutout defeat was a bit surprising to the team.

“We were ready to go, we were excited. Our goal was to win today, and we went out there and kind of got punched in the face a little bit. So I don’t think anyone ever plans to have the game go the way today did, but it’s just how it went.”

The Giants now enter a three-game series Monday against the San Diego Padres, who currently own the second National League wild-card spot, having missed out on some real momentum. Still, San Francisco, now 59-59, sits just four games back of the third and final wild-card position with 44 games left to play.

“Every game from here on out is huge for us,” Chapman said. “We got to turn the page. This one sucks, it stings, but we’ve got to turn the page and get ready to go to war tomorrow.”

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Yankees place Amed Rosario on 10-day injured list with shoulder sprain

NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Yankees put Amed Rosario on the 10-day injured list with a left SC joint sprain in his shoulder Sunday, two days after he crashed into a right field fence and the veteran is optimistic it will not be a lengthy absence.

“Right now, I think we should be able to come back exactly when the time is due,” Rosario said through a translator before the Yankees concluded a three-game series against the Houston Astros on Sunday.

“I feel day to day physically but at the same time, we can’t be sure, so that’s why the 10 days, but the idea is to come back when the 10 days is due.”

The Yankees recalled catcher J.C. Escarra from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes Barre to replace Rosario.

Rosario sustained the injury in the 10th inning of Friday’s 5-3 loss to the Astros. He was attempting to make a leaping catch in front of the chain link portion of the fence on a ball hit by Yainer Diaz.

Rosario raced back for the ball, collided with the fence and fell backward as center fielder Trent Grisham backed up the play and threw the ball to shortstop Anthony Volpe for the force out at second base. Rosario was checked out by manager Aaron Boone and a trainer but stayed in the game.

Acquired from Washington on July 26, Rosario is 3-for-7 in four games for the Yankees. He started in right field and played six innings in Monday’s loss at Texas and entered as a defensive replacement in right field in three other games, including Friday.

Rosario was the second recent Yankee trade acquisition to land on the injured list. Last week Austin Slater was placed on the injured list with a left hamstring strain after he played three games following a trade from the Chicago White Sox on July 30.

A former top shortstop prospect with the New York Mets, Rosario has played 30 career games in right field and 55 games in the outfield. He played once in right field with Washington before the Yankees acquired him.

Escarra made the opening day roster and batted .205 with two homers and 10 RBIs in 39 games. He was optioned to the minors on July 30 after Slater was acquired.

Reds plan to activate Hunter Greene from the injured list to pitch against Phillies

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Hunter Greene will return to the Cincinnati Reds’ rotation Wednesday night.

The right-hander will start against visiting Philadelphia after being out since June 4 with a strained right groin. The same injury sidelined Greene for two weeks in June.

Greene is 4-3 with a 2.72 ERA in 11 starts this season. The 26-year-old was selected to the All-Star Game last year for the first time.

In three rehab starts for Triple-A Louisville, Greene allowed 11 runs in 11 innings.

Gurriel doubles in 9th to drive in winning run, Diamondbacks hand Rockies 6th straight loss

PHOENIX (AP) Lourdes Gurriel Jr. doubled off the wall in left with one out in the ninth inning to give the Arizona Diamondbacks a 6-5 victory over Colorado on Saturday night, the Rockies' sixth straight loss.

Geraldo Perdomo had his third hit off the game, a double to right-center off Jimmy Herget (0-2) with one out in the ninth. Gurriel followed with the drive off the wall to easily score Perdomo. Gurriel drove in three runs, the first two with a sacrifice fly and a single.

Andrew Hoffmann (1-0), just acquired from Kansas City, threw eight pitches in a 1-2-3 ninth inning for his first victory in the majors.

Corbin Carroll homered for the third straight game. He connected off Bradley Blalock for his 25th homer, tying his career high set two years ago when he was National League Rookie of the Year.

Carroll homered on his bobblehead night, a Star Wars-themed occasion that drew 38,337 to watch two sub-.500 teams. He also scored from first on Ketel Marte's double to right in the third.

Brenton Doyle hit a two-run homer off Eduardo Rodríguez as part of a three-run Colorado second inning. Doyle's ninth homer of the season cleared the high center-field wall.

Kyle Farmer, Warming Bernabel and Ezequiel Tovar drove in the other Rockies runs.

Rodríguez lasted 5 1/3 innings, giving up six hits and five runs and walking five.

Blalock went 4 2/3, allowing seven hits and five runs. He walked three and struck out four.

Gurriel's drive over the head of left fielder Jordan Beck won the game.

The Rockies have allowed five or more runs in 14 straight games.

Colorado RHP Tanner Gordon (2-4, 6.59) opposes RHP Brandon Pfaadt (11-7, 5.02) on Sunday in the series finale.

Mets still haven’t made decision on Frankie Montas’ future in starting rotation

What’s next for Frankie Montas

Carlos Mendoza said the Mets still haven’t made a decision. 

“As of now he’s still in line,” the skipper said. “We have to get through today’s game and we’re going to have a rotation for the series against the Braves, but as of right now we haven’t had any discussions just yet.”

Montas struggled again working behind an opener on Saturday night.

He was hurt by his defense at times but was also inefficient, allowing three runs (one earned) on three hits and a pair of walks while striking out just three in as many innings of work. 

His big-league ERA is now up to an ugly 6.38 across eight outings this season. 

“We haven’t had any discussions,” Mendoza said. “We put an opener in front of him and we didn’t try that a full-time before, we still have a few days until he’s his time to pitch but we haven’t had those discussions.”

If they do decide to make a change, the Mets could turn to their young pitching prospects -- Brandon Sproat and Nolan McLean -- who continue mowing their way through lineups down in Syracuse.

"They're doing a great job," David Stearns said this week. I think they're putting themselves in the position, when and if we have a need, we feel confident going down there and getting an arm. And we're going to continue to factor them in as we go through the rest of the season."

McLean is set to pitch on four days rest for the first time all year on Sunday afternoon. 

Sproat was pushed back a day earlier this week to pitch on Thursday, potentially lining him up to start in the majors on four days rest next week. 

Red Sox score go-ahead run on Machado's failed hidden ball trick

SAN DIEGO (AP) Padres third baseman Manny Machado tried a hidden-ball trick against the Boston Red Sox and it ended up costing San Diego at least one run Saturday.

With Jarren Duran on third base and one out in the third inning, Machado still had the ball after Alex Bregman was caught in a rundown on the previous play. With reliever Wandy Peralta on the rubber, Machado tagged Duran near the bag.

Duran pointed to the mound and third base umpire Scott Barry called a balk, scoring Duran to give Boston a 2-1 lead. Trevor Story moved from second to third.

By rule, the pitcher cannot be on the rubber for a hidden-ball trick to be legal. If another player tags a runner while the pitcher is standing on or straddling the rubber, it's a balk.

“I thought it was a great baseball play. I’ll take some responsibility,” San Diego manager Mike Shildt said. “We want to work on everything that can possibly happen in spring training. It’s my miss that we didn’t. You just can’t be on the rubber when that happens. But Manny’s IQ shows up again. Just something we didn’t work on. He was on the rubber. But he had him.”

Masataka Yoshida then hit a grounder to bring in Story and make it 3-1. The Padres pulled to 3-2 in the bottom of the inning and went ahead 4-3 in the fifth.

San Diego won 5-4 in 10 innings when Ramón Laureano singled in former Red Sox star Xander Bogaerts from second with no outs.

Laureano singles in Bogaerts in the 10th as the Padres walk-off the Red Sox, 5-4

SAN DIEGO (AP) Ramón Laureano singled in Xander Bogaerts from second base with no outs in the 10th inning and the San Diego Padres beat the Boston Red Sox 5-4 on Saturday night.

With runners on first and second and the infield drawn in, Laureano, obtained from Baltimore at the trade deadeline, hit a chopper off off Garrett Whitlock (5-2) over third baseman Alex Bregman into left field. Bogaerts, who had a big game against his former team, scored.

Boston's Roman Anthony tied it in the ninth when a ground-rule double off All-Star closer Robert Suarez that brought in Ceddanne Rafaela.

Bogaerts homered, had an RBI single and walked.

Manny Machado cost San Diego at least one run with a failed hidden-ball trick before Red Sox starter Lucas Giolito walked in two straight runs during a fifth-inning meltdown that gave the Padres the lead.

With the Red Sox leading 3-2, Giolito allowed Fernando Tatis Jr.'s leadoff single in the fifth and then retired Machado and Luis Arreaz. But he then walked four straight batters, including Ryan O'Hearn and Ramón Laureano with the bases loaded, and was lifted.

Giolito walked Jackson Merrill on four straight pitches, threw only one strike to Bogaerts and O'Hearn and went to a full count against Laureano. He allowed four runs and five hits, walked six and struck out one.

Bogaerts, who signed a $280 million, 11-year free agent deal with the Padres in December 2022, homered leading off the second, his 10th, to tie it 1. He singled in Arraez with two outs in the third to pull the Padres to 3-2.

With one out in the top of the third, Jarren Duran took his lead off third base and Machado still had the ball after Alex Bregman was caught in a rundown on the previous play. With reliever Wandy Peralta on the rubber, Machado tagged Duran, who pointed to the mound. Third base umpire Scott Barry called a balk, and Duran scored to give Boston a 2-1 lead. Trevor Story moved from second to third.

By rule, the pitcher cannot be on the rubber for a hidden-ball trick to be legal. If another player tags a runner while the pitcher is on or straddling the rubber, it’s a balk.

Masataka Yoshida then hit a grounder to bring in Story and make it 3-1.

Laureano's winning single.

Padres relievers Jeremiah Estrada, Adrian Morejon, Mason Miller, Suarez and Jason Adam (7-3) combined for 13 strikeouts from the fifth through 10th innings.

Red Sox RHP Brayan Bello (8-5, 3.03 ERA) and Padres RHP Dylan Cease (4-10, 4.60) are scheduled to start Sunday in the series finale.