Ben Rice became the first Yankees rookie to hit three home runs in a game and had a career-high seven RBIs in New York’s 14-4 drubbing of the Boston Red Sox on Saturday.
Rice led off the bottom of the first with a long homer off Josh Winckowski, added a three-run shot off Chase Anderson during a seven-run fifth and took Anderson deep again in the seventh for another three-run blast.
Rice entered the game with one home run in his first 46 major league at-bats.
The Yankees snapped a four-game losing streak and won for just the fourth time in 16 games.
The 14-hit attack bailed out Gerrit Cole, who allowed seven hits and four runs over 4 1/3 innings with eight strikeouts and two walks.
Rafael Devers homered off Cole and had an RBI single in the third for his 1,000th career hit.
Boston was bidding for a season-high sixth straight win.
Twins’ Miranda ties record with hits in 12 straight at-bats
Jose Miranda tied a major league record with hits in 12 consecutive plate appearances and the Minnesota Twins got home runs from Byron Buxton and Brooks Lee in a 9-3 victory over the Houston Astros.
Miranda entered with the team record of hits in 10 straight at-bats and was hit by a pitch in his first plate appearance. He then singled in his first two official at-bats to match the MLB record set by the Chicago Cubs’ Johnny King (1902) and matched by Boston’s Pinky Higgins (1938) and Detroit’s Walt Dropo (1952).
Miranda’s streak ended in the sixth inning on a routine flyout to left field.
Willi Castro added three hits for the Twins, who have won seven of 10.
Every Minnesota starter had at least one hit by the fourth inning. Lee hit a two-run homer for the first of his major league career in the third to put the Twins up 7-1.
Jon Singleton belted a three-run homer for Houston, which lost for only the third time in 16 games.
Wood’s big day powers Nationals to rout
Top prospect James Wood hit his first major league home run and drove in a career-high five runs to lead the Washington Nationals to a 14-6 rout of the St. Louis Cardinals.
Wood hit a 383-foot, three-run opposite field homer in the second inning to put the Nationals ahead 7-0. He added a two-run double in the third for his fifth RBI, tied for second all-time for a Washington rookie. Danny Espinosa had six RBIs on Sept. 6, 201.
Wood has reached based in all six games as a National, tied with Ian Desmond (2009) for second overall in club history.
The homer and double were his first extra-base hits at the major league level.
Keibert Ruiz and CJ Abrams also homered for Washington, which scored a season high in runs on 15 hits with three homers and four doubles to win for the third time in four games.
Lance Lynn was rocked for a career worst 11 runs and nine hits in 2 2/3 innings.