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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 7:08 p.m., Sunday, October 5, 2008

ANGELS 5, RED SOX 4
Rodriguez, Napoli help Angels avert another sweep

By JIMMY GOLEN
AP Sports Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Los Angeles' Mike Napoli rounds third base en route to scoring on an Erick Aybar single giving the Angels the go-ahead run in the 12th inning. The Angels cut the Red Sox's series lead to 2-1 with a 5-4 victory tonight.

CHARLES KRUPA | Associated Press

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Los Angeles Angels shortstop Erick Aybar hits an RBI single to drive in Mike Napoli with the go-ahead run in the 12th inning against the Boston Red Sox during Game 3.

STEVE SENNE | Associated Press

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BOSTON — Francisco Rodriguez's biggest save of a record-breaking season came in a tie game.

Rodriguez wriggled out of a bases-loaded jam in the 10th inning, Mike Napoli hit two early homers before scoring the go-ahead run in the 12th and the Los Angeles Angels avoided another playoff sweep by beating the Boston Red Sox 5-4 on Sunday night in a game that lasted 5 hours, 19 minutes.

Boston had beaten Los Angeles in 11 consecutive AL playoff games, including three-game sweeps in 2004 and '07 en route to a pair of World Series titles. But the Angels chased Red Sox ace Josh Beckett early, then got six scoreless innings from five relievers to keep them in the game.

Jon Lester will face Angels right-hander John Lackey in Game 4 on Monday night, and if the Angels can win that one they would return home for the decisive fifth game on Wednesday.

Napoli hit a mammoth homer off the Green Monster light stanchion to tie the game 3-all in the third, then gave Los Angeles a lead with his second homer before the Red Sox tied it 4-all in the fifth. It stayed that way until Napoli singled to lead off the 11th, went to second on Howie Kendrick's sacrifice bunt and scored when Erick Aybar blooped a single to left-center.

Jered Weaver, making his first career relief appearance, pitched two scoreless innings for the win. Javier Lopez, the sixth Boston pitcher, took the loss in a game

Winners of a major league-best 100 games in the regular season, Los Angeles was in danger of the shortest possible stay in the playoffs against the wild-card Red Sox. After losing the first two at home, the Angels came to Boston needing to beat Beckett, who has been virtually unbeatable in October.

But Beckett struggled from the start, giving up a double on the first pitch of the game and needing 30 pitches to get through the first half-inning, which took 22 minutes. Meanwhile, the Angels left the bases loaded in the first and fourth — stranding eight in the first four innings.

The air was crisp, the baseball was not.

The Angels misplayed a popup into a three runs — the first three-run single in postseason history. Beckett failed to cover the bag on a grounder to first. Mike Lowell, playing with a sore hip, two-hopped a throw to first that Kevin Youkilis dug out to avoid an error. Torii Hunter was thrown out trying to stretch a single into a double to lead off the ninth.

The Red Sox loaded the bases against Angels closer Francisco Rodriguez in the 10th, but he got Jed Lowie on a routine fly to right to end the threat.

Beckett had been the presumptive Game 1 starter before a side strain in the last week of the regular season left him in need of a few more days' rest. When the Red Sox opened a 2-0 lead in the series behind Jon Lester and Daisuke Matsuzaka, the prospect of sending their ace out for the clincher seemed to guarantee their third straight playoff sweep of the Angels.

But Beckett struggled from the beginning, giving up a double to Chone Figgins on the first pitch of the game and then, after a pair of strikeouts, handing out two walks and a single. Napoli grounded out to end the inning but came back in the third with a mammoth, two-run shot off the light stanchion to tie it 3-all and then again with a solo shot in the fifth that made it 4-3.

Jacoby Ellsbury and Kevin Youkilis doubled in the bottom of the fifth to tie it 4-all and spare Beckett the loss.

In all, Beckett was charged with four runs on nine hits and four walks, striking out six in five innings. The fiery right-hander, who shut the Angels out in Game 1 of last year's first-round sweep, saw his postseason ERA balloon to 2.09 from 1.73, which had been the third-best in baseball history (minimum 40 innings).

Saunders, who was making his first postseason start, received a rough initiation.

He gave up four runs on five hits and four walks, striking out two in 4 2-3 innings. But instead of the line-drive homers that cost Beckett, Saunders was hurt most by a fluke popup that dropped to the grass for the three-run single.

After the Red Sox loaded the bases on two walks and Jason Varitek's single, Ellsbury worked the count full and lofted a blooper to short center. Torii Hunter came in, Howie Kendrick and Erick Aybar went out, and at the last minute Hunter and Kendrick gave up on it and let it fall.

Crisp, running all the way with two outs, scored easily from first, while Ellsbury held up with a single. It was the first three-run single in postseason history, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, and it gave Boston a 3-1 lead.