Max Fried improves to 6-0 as Braves beat Red Sox

AP photo by Charles Krupa / Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Max Fried delivers to the plate during the third inning of Monday's game against the host Boston Red Sox.
AP photo by Charles Krupa / Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Max Fried delivers to the plate during the third inning of Monday's game against the host Boston Red Sox.

BOSTON - Austin Riley had a tiebreaking, bases-loaded triple to help Atlanta Braves teammate Max Fried improve to 6-0 as the National League East Division leaders beat the rebuilding Boston Red Sox 6-3 in an interleague matchup Monday night.

Adam Duvall belted a homer over the Green Monster, and Nick Markakis had three hits and drove in two runs for Atlanta, which entered the three-game set winless (0-12-3) in its past 15 series against the Red Sox.

"That's the goal every time I go out there," Fried said after the Braves improved to 8-0 in his starts this season. "I didn't have the best stuff and put us down."

After trading five players off its MLB roster in the last two weeks, Boston, buried in last in the American League East, lost for the 23rd time in 35 games in this pandemic-shortened season.

Alex Verdugo had three doubles for the Red Sox.

Fried gave up two runs for just the second time in eight starts this season, breaking his string of six straight allowing one or none. In five innings, he gave up five hits, fanned five and walked two.

"He wasn't real sharp," Braves manager Brian Snitker said. "That's the thing about Max: He keeps making pitches and got through it."

Mark Melancon got the final three outs for his seventh save in eight chances.

With the score tied at 2 in the fifth, the Braves loaded the bases against starter Colten Brewer (0-3) before Riley's triple off the top of a low wall down the right-field line on the second pitch from reliever Phillips Valdez.

"I forgot how low it was down there," Riley said. "I thought it was foul at first. I was lucky to get a triple."

Duvall's homer left Fenway Park and tied it in the fourth after Fried balked home a run.

Brewer was charged with five runs in four-plus innings.

"We tried to give him a chance to get a win and try to get him actually into the fifth inning. He's been going three or four. Thought because his pitch count was down we'd do it, and it didn't work so well," Boston manager Ron Roenicke said.

After getting into the area around 4 a.m. after their wild, four-hour plus victory over the Phillies in Philadelphia on Sunday night, the Braves jumped ahead 1-0 on an RBI double by Markakis in the first.

Rafael Devers' run-scoring single tied it in the bottom half.

Braves outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. was out of the lineup with tightness in his right hamstring that forced him out of Sunday's victory. Snitker didn't have an update before the game on how much time he could miss.

Snitker said left-hander Cole Hamels, the team's big offseason pickup who hasn't pitched yet this season due to triceps tendinitis, has been "throwing bullpens" and the next step was live batting practice.

Snitker was asked if he was "disappointed" before the game that the club failed to make any moves at the trading deadline.

"No. We've been a pretty good team here for a month and a half," he said. "We'll see what we can do to try and win games."

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