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Nava's RBI, Drew's 2 HRs Give Boston 3-2 Win

Daniel Nava, right, and  J.D. Drew celebrate a 3-2 win over the Orioles, Friday.  Drew had two solo home runs and Nava had an RBI single, which broke a 2-2 tie, in the Red Sox win.(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Daniel Nava, right, and J.D. Drew celebrate a 3-2 win over the Orioles, Friday. Drew had two solo home runs and Nava had an RBI single, which broke a 2-2 tie, in the Red Sox win.(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Nava sliced a popup down the right-field line as a pinch-hitter in the eighth inning Friday night, scoring Marco Scutaro with the go-ahead run that gave the Boston Red Sox a 3-2 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.

Just 20 days earlier, he became the second player in major league history to hit his first pitch for a grand slam in a 10-2 win over the Philadelphia Phillies.

Friday's hit fell between three Orioles not far beyond first base.

"This one helped our team win, so I guess that's what's more important," Nava said. "The other one, obviously, was a lot of fun, but I think this one had more riding on it."

J.D. Drew hit two homers for the Red Sox in the second and fifth innings off Brad Bergesen (3-5), giving him 10 for the season. Baltimore's runs off Tim Wakefield (3-6) came on Nick Markakis' fourth homer in the fourth and an RBI single by Corey Patterson in the fifth.

Jonathan Papelbon had two strikeouts in a perfect ninth inning for his 19th save in 22 opportunities and Boston moved a half-game behind the first-place New York Yankees in the AL East.

Switch-hitter Nava pinch-hit for lefty Eric Patterson when lefty Will Ohman replaced righty Bergesen after Scutaro's two-out double.

"I wanted the lefty," Baltimore manager Juan Samuel said. "They had two lefties coming up in Patterson and (David) Ortiz."

But Nava hit right-handed and got the key single on a 2-1 pitch.

"I was really just looking for anything to drive, basically anything just to try to put the ball in play hard," Nava said, "which is funny because I didn't do it at all."

He didn't think the ball would travel far enough to drop safely. First baseman Ty Wigginton, second baseman Julio Lugo and right fielder Markakis gave chase, but it fell in front of Markakis.

"It's frustrating," Ohman said. "He (Bergesen) doesn't deserve to lose like that. We don't deserve a loss like that."

The game was Boston's shortest of the season, 2 hours, 7 minutes. The previous shortest games lasted 2:32 on May 12 and 20. And it was the shortest at Fenway Park since Sept 17, 2002, when Wakefield pitched eight innings in a 4-2 win over Cleveland that lasted 2:06.

"That was a tough one for us," Samuel said of Friday's loss. "It was well played by both clubs."

Wakefield allowed two runs and seven hits in eight innings for his second win in his last six decisions. But he broke a tie with Roger Clemens for most starts at Fenway Park with 201.

Before the game, the Red Sox placed catcher Jason Varitek and reliever Manny Delcarmen on the disabled list. There are 10 Red Sox on it, including Josh Beckett, Dustin Pedroia and Victor Martinez.

Manager Terry Francona said it was important for individual players not to try to do too much to pick up the slack.

"It would be great if guys want to get hot, but I don't think you go into a game thinking like that," he said.

The Orioles lost for the third time in eight games but scored three runs or less for the 45th time in their 79 games.

Bergesen pitched one of his best games of the season but remained winless since May 12.

"He did even more than we could have asked," Wigginton said.

Nava did just enough.

"Nava didn't crush that ball by any means," Francona said, "but it worked out."

This program aired on July 3, 2010. The audio for this program is not available.

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