BOSTON — Brian Matusz spent his day off in Boston at the ballpark, sitting on top of the Green Monster to watch the Red Sox play the Texas Rangers.

“It seems pretty far away, to be honest with you,” the Orioles’ left-hander said.

And then he took the mound on Saturday night and realized how close it actually is to home plate.

With the American flag blowing out over Fenway Park’s famous left-field wall and five home runs headed in the same direction, Boston rallied in the seventh inning on three-run homers by Marco Scutaro and Kevin Youkilis and held on for a 7-6 victory over Baltimore.

“I hope it has something to do with our swings,” Red Sox Manager Terry Francona said. “But I think it has something to do with the weather.”

Nine of the first 11 runs in the game scored on homers over the Monster, including Adam Jones’ solo shot off Ramon Ramirez with the Orioles trailing 7-3 in the ninth. Nick Markakis doubled, then Jonathan Papelbon came in and gave up three straight singles before striking out Ty Wigginton and newly promoted Rhyne Hughes.

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“We had a couple of home runs,” Baltimore Manager Dave Trembley said. “But they had theirs with men on.”

Wigginton had four hits, including a homer, and Luke Scott had three of Baltimore’s season-high 17 hits. The Orioles lost their fifth straight game and 10th in a row against Boston; they are 2-16 and already 101/2 games back in the AL East.

Jason Varitek hit a solo shot for Boston, which has won 4 of 5 since starting the season 4-9. John Lackey (2-1) gave up three runs on 10 hits and two walks, striking out three in seven innings for his first victory in Fenway for the Red Sox.

“It’s a tremendous job if you get down early and get through seven,” Varitek said.

The same could be said of Papelbon, who allowed an inherited runner and one of his own to score before putting runners on first and second. He struck out Wigginton and Hughes, each of them on a 3-2 pitch, to earn his fifth save.

“It would have been nice to find a hole there to tie the game up. I was amped up and looking for a fastball on the first pitch and he got ahead of me,” Hughes said. “He made a good pitch. He got me. That’s why he’s one of the best closers in the game.”

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Hughes, called up earlier in the day from Triple-A, had an RBI single in his first major league at-bat and then singled again in his second.

“I thought he represented himself well,” Trembley said. “He had his first hit in the big leagues. It looked like it was going to be a storybook ending.”

Matt Albers (0-3) took the loss for the second straight night, facing four batters and getting just one out.

Matusz, the winning pitcher in both of the Orioles’ victories this season, was looking to make it three out of three when he took a 3-1 lead into the seventh. To get a feel for the ballpark, he and Jeremy Guthrie came to the Red Sox-Rangers game on Thursday night and sat for a few innings in the Monster seats.

“We watched the first couple of innings on the wall,” Matusz said. “It was pretty cool. We’re both big fans of the game.”

Matusz was coasting before walking Bill Hall leading off the inning and giving up a single by Jeremy Hermida, bringing in Albers.

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Pinch-hitter David Ortiz struck out, but Scutaro homered onto the shelf above the wall in left-center field to make it 4-3. After Dustin Pedroia doubled and Victor Martinez walked, Kam Mickolio came in and Youkilis hit a three-run shot down the left-field line to make it 7-3.

Lackey allowed eight runs in 31/3 innings in his previous start, against Tampa Bay on Monday.

NOTES: Luke Scott of Baltimore was hitless in 10 at-bats before his second-inning double. The Orioles recalled Hughes from Triple-A on Saturday and optioned Justin Turner to Norfolk of the International League. Orioles catcher Matt Wieters lost Pedroia’s foul pop fly in the first inning and it fell a few feet behind the dirt for no play. Pedroia, who had two hits, entered the day with one hit in his previous 24 at-bats. … Boston right fielder J.D. Drew, who is batting .158, got the day off.

 

WITH MIKE CAMERON and Jacoby Ellsbury on the 15-day disabled list, the Boston Red Sox boosted their outfield depth Saturday by reacquiring Jonathan Van Every from the Pittsburgh Pirates for a player to be named.

Boston had been rotating recent call-ups Josh Reddick and Darnell McDonald into left and center, along with utility player Bill Hall.

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Now they have someone to fit into the reserve role, allowing them to send Reddick back to Triple-A Pawtucket to play.

“We got Van Every back,” Boston Manager Terry Francona said before the team’s game against Baltimore. “I think the thought was that he and Reddick essentially do the same thing, but we didn’t want Reddick sitting (in the majors).”

Van Every played in Boston’s minor-league system most of the past two seasons, but did get into 18 games in the majors. He hit .286 (8 for 28) with a triple, home run and eight RBI. He also pitched in a blowout against Tampa Bay.

Francona said the team hopes Ellsbury, sidelined with four broken ribs, and Cameron, out with a lower abdominal strain, can start resuming normal baseball activities and travel on the trip this week.

 


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