BOSTON’S Christian Vazquez, right, is congratulated by Chris Young after scoring against the Oakland Athletics during the ninth inning of a baseball game in Oakland, Calif. on Sunday. The Red Sox won, 12-3.

BOSTON’S Christian Vazquez, right, is congratulated by Chris Young after scoring against the Oakland Athletics during the ninth inning of a baseball game in Oakland, Calif. on Sunday. The Red Sox won, 12-3.

OAKLAND, Calif.

A five-run ninth inning for the Red Sox that lasted more than a half-hour derailed any chance Eduardo Rodriguez had of getting his first career complete game.

Not that the left-hander was complaining.

 

 

After a bitter loss to Oakland a year ago when he allowed just one hit over eight innings, Rodriguez was more than happy with the way things turned out.

Rodriguez earned his second straight win, Mitch Moreland homered in his third consecutive game and Boston beat the Oakland Athletics 12-3 on Sunday to avoid a four-game sweep.

“I wanted to go back out there but they hit the ball pretty good in that inning and I know I had to get out of the game,” Rodriguez said about the long wait. “I’ll take it because we score more runs, I have a chance to win. If every inning’s like that, I’ll get out of the game after five.”

Rodriguez (3-1) allowed three runs over eight innings. He struck out eight, walked one and retired 14 of his final 15 batters.

“Where he was with the pitch count, it’d be nice for him to go out there for the ninth inning given where he was and how well he was throwing the baseball,” Red Sox manager John Farrell said. “But at that point you’re up nine, probably about a 35-minute inning, didn’t want to take any chances.”

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Hanley Ramirez and Christian Vazquez had three hits apiece to power a Red Sox lineup that tallied 15 hits. Every player in Boston’s starting lineup had at least one hit, and eight of the nine drove in runs.

Chad Pinder homered and drove in two runs for Oakland.

Boston, which hasn’t been swept in a four-game series since July 2015, trailed 3-2 before scoring 10 runs over the final five innings.

“It felt we had them on the run a little bit,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “They get the lead and then we come back and take the lead again and you feel pretty good. But they were pretty persistent today.”

Pinder went deep in the fourth, his fourth home run in eight games and fifth overall.

The A’s committed three errors, giving them a major league-leading 42.

Bradley’s defensive gems — Red Sox right fielder Mookie Betts gave the A’s trouble with his running and defense. Betts scored twice from first base and also made a pair of strong defensive plays. He made a sliding catch on Mark Canha’s sinking liner in the eighth and then slammed into the wall after catching Khris’ Davis fly to end the inning.

“This place during the daytime plays very difficult,” Farrell said. “What Mookie was able to do a couple times in right field, those aren’t easy plays. To be able to stay with it, go up against the wall a couple of times, we played very good outfield defense here today.”

Up next for Red Sox — Cy Young Award winner Rick Porcello (2-5) faces Texas on Tuesday in the opener of a three-game series at Fenway Park. Porcello has lost three of his last four decisions.


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