Stealing the Thunder
Steven Wright grabbed the spotlight Wednesday night -- even though it was supposed to belong to someone else. The Red Sox knuckleballer baffled the Yankee batters on Wednesday night, reducing the offensive juggernaut that scored 13 runs the night before to a run and four hits and striking out nine over eight innings.
Wright outpitched the impressive Yankee rookie Luis Severino, who displayed a blazing fastball that hit 97 miles an hour at times in his major league debut.
But Severino was sabotaged in the 2nd inning by Chase Headley's throwing error. It was just too far off-target for Mark Teixeira to handle.
The miscue was then followed by a booming double by Alejandro de Aza for the first Red Sox run to give Boston a lead it never relinquished. David Ortiz later blasted a solo homer off the rookie.
Wright outpitched the impressive Yankee rookie Luis Severino, who displayed a blazing fastball that hit 97 miles an hour at times in his major league debut.
But Severino was sabotaged in the 2nd inning by Chase Headley's throwing error. It was just too far off-target for Mark Teixeira to handle.
The miscue was then followed by a booming double by Alejandro de Aza for the first Red Sox run to give Boston a lead it never relinquished. David Ortiz later blasted a solo homer off the rookie.
Wright is a hardly a pheenom. He'll turn 31 at the end of August. His nine minor league seasons were marked by inconsistency as he bounced between AA and AAA ball. He was only 2 - 5 when the Red Sox brought him up earlier this year. But he earned the spotlight Wednesday, outpitching the ultra-promising Severino and halting the Yankees express, at least for one night.
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