
July just keeps getting better in Boston.
The Red Sox continued their midsummer surge with another offensive barrage, getting 17 hits and routing the Minnesota Twins 13-2 on Thursday night.
After closing out June by losing four of five, the Red Sox are 12-3 in July and standing alone atop the AL East.

Mookie Betts homered on the first pitch Boston faced and the Red Sox added home runs by Jackie Bradley Jr. and David Ortiz. Boston has won three straight and nine of 10.
The Red Sox managed to outdo their 16-hit total from an 11-7 win against San Francisco on Wednesday night and finished with at least 15 hits for the 15th time this season.
Betts, Ortiz and Xander Bogaerts had three hits apiece and Dustin Pedroia went 5 for 5 with two doubles as Boston climbed to a season best 15 games above .500 (54-39).
Steven Wright (12-5) tied his career high with nine strikeouts and held Minnesota to four hits in eight innings. He had just set down the Twins in order in the top of the first when Betts gave Boston a 1-0 lead by driving the first pitch he saw from Tyler Duffey out to left-center for his 19th homer.
“Wrighty had a quick inning and I figured we might as well ride that momentum going into our first at-bat,” Betts said. “We were ready to play. Today it was our turn, but tomorrow it could be the opposite.”
Maybe, but not lately in Boston. The Red Sox have won seven straight at home.
The Twins didn’t reach base against Boston’s knuckleballer until the fifth inning and finished with five hits.
“My goal is just to go as deep as I can until they tell me I’m done. Today I was lucky enough to go eight,” Wright said. “It makes it easy when the guys score 11 runs or 12 runs, but today was an all-around good day.”
Wright allowed four hits and Minnesota added a ground-rule double by pinch-hitter Eduardo Escobar in the ninth off reliever Clay Buchholz. The former starter came on to finish the game after Ortiz had capped off Boston’s outburst with a two-run homer in the bottom of the eighth.
Boston was up 3-0 after getting four hits against Duffey (5-7) in the first. Betts started it with the homer and Pedroia, Bogaerts and Ortiz followed with consecutive singles.
Betts hit the first pitch Duffey threw out to left, then led off the third with a single as Boston added three runs and led 6-0. Duffey allowed six runs before being pulled with one out in the third after Bradley doubled for Boston’s ninth hit.
Max Kepler got Minnesota’s first hit, singling with one out in the fifth to start a two-run rally that turned out to be the only offense for the Twins.
The Red Sox were up 11-2 in the eighth when Ortiz continued his farewell tour with his 24th homer, a shot deep into the seats in right field.
Note — Pedroia entered Thursday without a four-hit game so far this season, then went 5 for 5.
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