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Lester, Red Sox Beat Angels 4-3

Red Sox starting pitcher Jon Lester reacts as shortstop Marco Scutaro throws out Los Angeles Angels' Howie Kendrick at first base on a close play to end the fifth inning, Friday in Anaheim, Calif. (AP)
Red Sox starting pitcher Jon Lester reacts as shortstop Marco Scutaro throws out Los Angeles Angels' Howie Kendrick at first base on a close play to end the fifth inning, Friday in Anaheim, Calif. (AP)

The way Jon Lester started out, it looked as though he would get deep into the game.

He only lasted six innings because of a high pitch count, and had to sweat it out before Jonathan Papelbon saved another one for him.

Lester scattered four hits without allowing a run, and the Boston Red Sox overcame some shaky relief by Matt Albers and Bobby Jenks to beat the Los Angeles Angels 4-3 on Friday night. The Red Sox improved to 8-5 following a season-opening six-game losing streak, making manager Terry Francona's 52nd birthday a happy one.

"I had good fastball command early, but it got away from me a little bit," said Lester, who struck out his first four batters. "I nit picked a little bit and got into some deep counts, and there were a lot of foul balls. I just didn't get that early contact that I needed. So unfortunately, I wasn't able to go real deep in the game and I just had to grind it out."

Lester (2-1) struck out eight, walked two and departed with a 4-0 lead after throwing 111 pitches. Boston's starters have allowed no more than two earned runs in any of the last seven games, with a 1.19 ERA during that stretch.

"I remember back about the middle of that homestand, somebody asked me: 'What's the best way to get it going?"' Francona said. "And I said, 'A time or two through the rotation and have them give us a chance every night.' And that's exactly what's happened."

Dan Haren (4-1) allowed four runs, two earned, in six innings. The right-hander struck out six and walked three en route to his first loss in 13 starts since Aug. 20 at Minnesota.

"I don't want to lose, obviously, but the chances were that I wasn't going to go 34-0. So it was probably going to happen at some point," Haren said. "It was kind of a weird game. A couple of balls found holes, so it's not like it was flying everywhere."

Albers, activated from the 15-day disabled list Thursday after missing 11 games with a strained muscle in his back, made his first appearance since April 5 for the Red Sox and gave up an RBI single to Jeff Mathis in the seventh.

Jenks surrendered an RBI single in the eighth to Bobby Abreu that ended an 0-for-15 drought. Abreu got to second on a wild pitch and came all the way home on a passed ball by Jarrod Saltalamacchia, but Papelbon pitched a scoreless ninth for his fifth save in as many attempts.

"As far as consistency, I think Mariano Rivera's No. 1 on that list, but Pap has shown over the years that he's going to be every bit as good as him," Angels left fielder Vernon Wells said. "When he comes into the game, you know you've got your work cut out for you."

Red Sox third baseman Kevin Youkilis, 3 for 16 lifetime against Haren, got the night after fouling a pitch off his left shin in the first inning of Thursday night's series opener. Francona said Youkilis would be back in the lineup Saturday night to face Ervin Santana.

Saltalamacchia doubled with one out in the third, as nine-time Gold Glove winner Torii Hunter had trouble making the catch against the wall in right-center. Saltalamacchia advanced to third after Hunter caught Marco Scutaro's flyball near the right-field line, and Jacoby Ellsbury drove in the game's first run with a double.

Manager Mike Scioscia went to the mound and got into a very animated conversation with Haren before the three-time All-Star struck out Pedroia to end the inning.

"Mike was a little frustrated, as everyone was," Haren said. "We thought some calls weren't going our way, so we kind of talked it out and he made sure I stayed focused."

The Red Sox capitalized on a tough error charged to center fielder Peter Bourjos to score a pair of unearned runs and increase their lead to 3-0. After a two-out walk to Jed Lowrie and a double by J.D. Drew, slumping Carl Crawford followed with a lazy flyball to short right-center. Bourjos, Hunter and second baseman Howie Kendrick all converged on it, but no one took charge, and Buorjos made a last-second lunge at it before the ball hit off his glove.

Drew delivered Boston's fourth run with an RBI single in the sixth. The Angels have lost 11 of the last 12 meetings since sweeping Boston in the 2009 AL division series.

This program aired on April 23, 2011. The audio for this program is not available.

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