Red Sox 4, Yankees 3

12345678910 R H E
NYY (89-73) 0000010020 3 9 1
BOS (95-67) 1000000201 4 7 0

Final

 in 10
W:D. Hansack (1-0)
L:J. Veras (5-3)

Mussina gets 20th win in opener; BoSox win nightcap in 10th

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Regular Season Series
Series tied 9-9 (as of Sun 9/28)
Fri 4/11 NYY 4, @BOS 1 Recap
Sat 4/12 @BOS 4, NYY 3 Recap
Sun 4/13 @BOS 8, NYY 5 Recap
Wed 4/16 @NYY 15, BOS 9 Recap
Thu 4/17 BOS 7, @NYY 5 Recap
Thu 7/3 BOS 7, @NYY 0 Recap
Fri 7/4 BOS 6, @NYY 4 Recap
Sat 7/5 @NYY 2, BOS 1 Recap
Sun 7/6 @NYY 5, BOS 4 Recap
Fri 7/25 NYY 1, @BOS 0 Recap
Sat 7/26 NYY 10, @BOS 3 Recap
Sun 7/27 @BOS 9, NYY 2 Recap
Tue 8/26 BOS 7, @NYY 3 Recap
Wed 8/27 BOS 11, @NYY 3 Recap
Thu 8/28 @NYY 3, BOS 2 Recap
Fri 9/26 NYY 19, @BOS 8 Recap
Sat 9/27 Postponed/Delayed Information
Sun 9/28 NYY 6, @BOS 2 Recap
>Sun 9/28 @BOS 4, NYY 3 Box Score
· Complete Schedule: Red Sox | Yankees
Scoring Summary
NYYBOS
1stC Carter grounded out to first, C Crisp scored.01
6thX Nady grounded into fielder's choice to third, R Cano scored, J Giambi out at second.11
8thS Casey singled to center, C Crisp and A Cora scored, C Carter to second.13
9thJ Miranda hit sacrifice fly to right, W Betemit scored, J Damon to third.23
9thR Cano singled to left, J Damon scored, M Cabrera to second.33
10thJ Van Every singled to right, A Cora scored, J Bailey to third, S Casey to second.34
· View complete Play-By-Play
Game Information
StadiumFenway Park, Boston, MA
Attendance37,440 (101.3% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time3:10
Weather65 degrees, cloudy
Wind4 mph
UmpiresHome Plate - Jim Wolf, First Base - Jerry Layne, Second Base - Randy Marsh, Third Base - James Hoye
Associated Press

BOSTON -- Mike Mussina wrapped up a postgame television interview on the field then returned to the New York Yankees clubhouse.

In a season with little to celebrate, his teammates gave him a rousing welcome -- one he had waited his entire 18-year career to receive. Mussina had just become the oldest pitcher to win 20 games in a season for the first time as the Yankees beat the Boston Red Sox 6-2 Sunday in the opener of a rain-delayed day-night doubleheader.

Better Late Than Never

It took 18 years and every start of the 2008 season, but Mike Mussina finally won 20 games. He became the oldest pitcher to ever accomplish the feat.

Team Year Age
Mike Mussina Yankees 2008 39
Jamie Moyer Mariners 2001 38
Allie Reynolds Yankees 1952 37
David Wells Blue Jays 2000 37

"This is one of those things that I think will take a while to sink in," said Mussina, who has won at least 18 games five other times.

The playoff-bound Red Sox won the second game 4-3 on Jonathan Van Every's bases-loaded single with two outs in the 10th.

Less than three months before his 40th birthday, Mussina (20-9) gave up three hits in six shutout innings in his final start of the season. He returned to the field to bring out the lineup card for the second game.

Last year he had the highest ERA of his career (5.15). This season, it was 3.37 after he allowed one earned run in 16 innings over his last three starts.

"I'm proud of myself to be able to do this after last year," he said.

Previously, the oldest first-time 20-game winner was Jamie Moyer, who was 38 when he went 20-6 for Seattle in 2001. Mussina, who hasn't committed to playing next season, could be the first pitcher to retire following a 20-win season since Sandy Koufax.

"I just had a lot of fun playing this year," Mussina said. "I don't know what the future holds. When you've got 18 seasons in, it could always be your last year."

Mussina is 269-153 with a 3.69 ERA in his career. and his previous high for wins came in 1995 and 1996, when he won 19 games each year for Baltimore. Mussina went 0-2 in his last four starts in 1996, leaving his final one with a 2-1 lead after eight innings only to watch Armando Benitez allow a tying homer to Toronto's Ed Sprague in the ninth.

With defending World Series champion Boston heading to the AL division series at the Los Angeles Angels starting Wednesday night and New York missing the postseason, the doubleheader lacked the usual intensity of Yankees-Red Sox matchups.

In the opener, after Boston closed to 3-2 in the eighth on Chris Carter's RBI grounder off Joba Chamberlain and Jacoby Ellsbury's run-scoring single against Damaso Marte, Rivera struck out Dustin Pedroia to end the inning. The Yankees added three runs in the ninth against Jonathan Papelbon, and Rivera finished with a hitless ninth for his 39th save in 40 chances.

Rivera returned from tests in New York and may have arthroscopic shoulder surgery.

"Joe told me a couple days ago he'd have everybody ready, and I guess that means Mo in the eighth," Mussina said. "I know he's not feeling 100 percent but he's still throwing the ball great. I'm glad he came back from New York."

Rivera got his 49th save in a game that Mussina won, trailing only the combination of Oakland's Bob Welch and Dennis Eckersley (57) and the Yankees' Andy Pettitte and Rivera (55).

"Guys were so happy," manager Joe Girardi said. "They were clapping when he came in and there were a lot of hugs."

Pedroia went 2-for-4 to increase his batting average to .326 but likely will finish second in the AL batting race to Minnesota's Joe Mauer, who was at .330. Even if the Twins play an AL Central tiebreaker on Tuesday, Mauer would have to go 0-for-7 for Pedroia to overtake him.

"I'm not real big into personal achievements like that," Pedroia said. "I've had a great season and if I finish second or third, or whatever it is, I'm happy with that. It's fine."

Xavier Nady hit a three-run homer in the fourth off Daisuke Matsuzaka (18-3), who lost for the first time in eight decisions since July 28, going four innings in his playoff tuneup.

"I didn't have any big goals today, but just to be able to throw in the game," Matsuzaka said through translator Masa Hoshino. "With how the weather has been, [that] was enough for me."

In a pregame ceremony, Johnny Pesky's No. 6 was retired by the Red Sox as the 89-year-old former shortstop stood under an umbrella at home plate wearing the team's white home uniform with his number on the back. The other five numbers retired by the team are Bobby Doerr (1), Joe Cronin (4), Carl Yastrzemski (8), Ted Williams (9) and Carlton Fisk (27).

In the second game, Van Every singled off off Jose Veras (5-3).

"Van Every gets a hit that will mean nothing in the standings," Boston manager Terry Francona said, "but it's more fun to go home with a win."

Devern Hansack (1-0) pitched the 10th for the win as Boston prevented the Yankees (89-73) from reaching 90 wins for the seventh straight season. New York finished five games back of the wild-card Red Sox and missed the postseason for the first time since 1993.

"It was a tough season for us," Girardi said. "Yes, I am sad. I want to be playing on Wednesday or Thursday. We're not going to, unfortunately, and it's a motivating factor for next year."

Game notes
The Red Sox went over the 3 million mark in home attendance for the first time and finished at 3,048,248. ... Ellsbury extended his hitting streak to 18 games. ... Abreu has reached base in 27 straight games at Fenway Park. ... Pedroia had 213 hits, tying Jim Rice for the fourth-highest season total in team history.


Series At A Glance

New York won 2-1
Details [+]

MLB Scores

Sunday, September 28th 2008
Tampa Bay 8 Final
Detroit 7 in 11
Florida 4 Final
NY Mets 2
Toronto 10 Final
Baltimore 1
Washington 3 Final
Philadelphia 8
NY Yankees 6 Final
Boston 2
Cleveland 1 Final
Chi White Sox 5
Chi Cubs 1 Final
Milwaukee 3
Atlanta 1 Final
Houston 3
Kansas City 0 Final
Minnesota 6
Cincinnati 4 Final
St. Louis 11
Texas 0 Final
LA Angels 7
Pittsburgh 6 Final
San Diego 1
LA Dodgers 1 Final
San Francisco 3
Oakland 3 Final
Seattle 4
Colorado 1 Final
Arizona 2
NY Yankees 3 Final
Boston 4 in 10