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Pedroia, Beltre Lead Red Sox Past Royals

Boston starting pitcher Clay Buchholz throws to Kansas during the first inning of the game on Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. (AP)
Boston starting pitcher Clay Buchholz throws to Kansas during the first inning of the game on Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. (AP)

The Boston Red Sox survived two scares on Sunday - a possible serious injury to left fielder Jacoby Ellsbury and a Kansas City Royals rally.

Dustin Pedroia collected four hits, including a home run, to lead Boston to an 8-6 victory.

Adrian Beltre had three hits and three RBIs for the Red Sox, but was part of a ninth-inning collision that resulted in Ellsbury being helped off the field.

"He kneed me right in the ribs," Ellsbury said. "I was worried about, a broken rib. I'm sure there is quite a bit of swelling in there cause it is a little tough to breath. It didn't feel too good initially.

"They got good enough X-rays. They'll just probably blow them up on a bigger monitor (Monday) and make sure there is nothing like a minor break. There was nothing obvious on it."

Jose Guillen homered twice and drove in four runs for the Royals. Gil Meche lasted just 3
1-3 innings in his first start after being sidelined by a stiff shoulder.

Ellsbury and Beltre were chasing Mitch Maier's foul fly ball. Ellsbury remained on the grass for several minutes and isn't sure if he'll be able to play Monday at Minnesota.

"I guess (it will be) pain tolerance," he said. "I know it's going to be really sore tomorrow."

Pedroia's homer in the fourth was his third in six games. He connected in the 2009 season opener, then went 190 at-bats before his second homer on May 31.

"I don't know how many games it was, but it seemed like forever," Pedroia said. "I'm
actually seeing the ball good. I usually have a tough time early. I've got three pitches on the inner part of the plate and I hit them. I'm just trying to get my pitch and do damage with it. That's been my game plan."

Guillen led off the second with a drive to center and hit a three-run shot off Ramon Ramirez in the eighth to get Kansas City within two. Ramirez failed to retire any of the three hitters he faced.

Daniel Bard and Jonathan Papelbon combined for the final six outs, with Papelbon earning his second save in two opportunities.

"The good news is Bard and Pap did a great job," manager Terry Francona said. "The flip side is we had to get to them. We came out of the chute with a lot of energy and did some good things and then hung on for dear life."

Boston sent eight men to the plate during its four-run first. Victor Martinez singled in Ellsbury and scored on Beltre's base hit. Jeremy Hermida added a two-run double.

Beltre doubled in two more runs in the fourth to give Boston an 8-3 lead.

Clay Buchholz (1-0) worked five innings for the Red Sox, yielding three runs, two earned and seven hits.

Meche (0-1), in the fourth season of a $55 million, five-year contract, allowed seven runs and eight hits. Royals starting pitchers had a 2.51 ERA in the first five games of the season.

"My outing was terrible," Meche said. "I felt fine, probably felt too good, coming out of the bullpen. My intensity was too high. I just couldn't get the ball down. My release point was off pretty much the whole day. They hit some balls up and capitalized early. I made a lot of mistakes."

This program aired on April 12, 2010. The audio for this program is not available.

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