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Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Red Sox Sweep Rays Doubleheader

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BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JULY 17: Wilyer Abreu #52 of the Boston Red Sox celebrates with Willson Contreras #40 after hitting a two-run home run against the Tampa Bay Rays during the first inning of game two of the doubleheader at Fenway Park on July 17, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Fresh off of the All-Star break, the Yankees had a disappointing start to the second half of the season. New York’s offense was quiet, while a clutch homer from Max Muncy sealed the deal for the Dodgers later in the game. Despite the unfortunate return in Yankeeland, there was plenty of baseball going on elsewhere, so let’s take a look at the goings on coming out of the break.

Boston Red Sox (47-48) 10, Tampa Bay Rays (56-39) 0 (Game 1)

With a doubleheader on tap between the Rays and Red Sox, Boston was looking to stay hot on Friday, and that they did. Sox starter Jake Bennett had the good stuff on the mound, while the bats put up double-digit runs on Tampa Bay’s pitchers.

The Red Sox kicked off scoring in the second inning when a sacrifice fly followed by Carlos Narváez’s RBI single had them up 2-0. Later on, a Masataka Yoshida solo homer off Griffin Jax had them up by three, but Boston’s six-run sixth inning was where they really separated themselves. In that inning, Jarren Duran tallied his second and third RBIs of the afternoon, while three other Sox notched ones of their own.

All the while, Bennett was dealing on the mound, as the lefty worked six scoreless innings, allowing just one hit and striking out three. His effort was the driving force in keeping the Rays out of the run column in game one.

Narváez’s capped off his big day with a solo shot in the seventh, which put Boston up by the final of 10-0. It was their 10th consecutive win, with more to come on the day.

Boston Red Sox (48-48) 5, Tampa Bay Rays (56-40) 3(Game 2)

In the nightcap of the doubleheader, though the process was a bit different, the results were not. The action started early in this one, with Jonny DeLuca’s single scoring a pair, before homers from Wilyer Abreu and Willson Contreras flipped things in favor of Boston in the bottom half of the first.

Junior Caminero smacked his 29th home run of the season in the top of the third, which knotted things back up, as both Eduardo Rivera and Mason Englert had forgettable days on the mound. In the bottom half of that inning, Wilyer Abreu stayed hot and belted his second homer of the game, one that gave his crew a lead they would hold onto the rest of the day.

The second win of the day was the 11th straight for the smoking-hot Red Sox, as they are charging back into contention at the expense of the Rays to kick off the second half. It’s Boston’s longest winning streak since 2016. So while the Yankees did gain a half-game on Tampa Bay despite their own loss to the Dodgers, it’s at least an uneasy feeling with Boston now in a virtual tie with Minnesota (who beat the Cubs 5-2) for the last Wild Card spot.

Other Games

Chicago White Sox (51-45) 12, Toronto Blue Jays (45-52) 5: It was a good day for sock teams, as those of the Chicagoan variety also put up double-digit runs on Friday. A five-run second inning, fueled in part by Sam Antonacci’s two-run homer had them in business early, while three runs in the fifth and four in the seventh just about sealed the deal. It was too much to keep up with for the Jays, as the White Sox were able to maintain their slim lead in the Central for at least another day. (The Guardians’ game against the Pirates was postponed due to the wildfire smoke conditions in Cleveland.)

Atlanta Braves (55-40) 15, Texas Rangers (47-45) 1: Keeping with the theme of the day, the Braves also put a hurtin’ on the Rangers by putting up 15 runs at home. Atlanta plated multiple runs in five different innings, forcing an early and unfortunate exit for Cal Quantrill, though his pals out of the bullpen didn’t fair any better. The Rangers tallied just one run on five hits, while the Braves managed 19, three of which left the park. Most amusingly, an actual pitcher got a hit in garbage time, with Atlanta reliever Victor Mederos singling off old friend Kyle Higashioka.

San Francisco Giants (41-55) 7, Seattle Mariners (48-49) 0: In the late slate of games, the Giants took an easy win from the Mariners in a west coast matchup. Landon Roupp was excellent on the mound for San Francisco, as he tossed seven shutout innings, with Willy Adames’ grand slam being the big blow on the offensive side. With both the Mariners and Rangers losing (as did the Astros, for good measure), Texas retains their 1.5-game lead in the West despite sitting just one game over .500.