always compelling
Whenever the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees get together — as they did on Friday night — something buzzworthy is bound to happen. Flash back to June 7, 2011. At Yankee Stadium, former Mississippi State star Jonathan Papelbon, pitching for the Red Sox, nailed down his 200th career save, doing so in his 259th appearance, faster than any reliever ever. The previous record was held by none other than Yankees legend Mariano Rivera. Papelbon gave up a walk and a hit but struck out two, including Alex Rodriguez for the final out, in Boston’s 6-4 victory. Papelbon had a tremendous career. He had 13 saves in three years at MSU before Boston took him in the fourth round of the 2003 draft. He still ranks 11th on the all-time MLB saves list with 368 and holds the career record for both the Red Sox (219) and Philadelphia (123). During his occasionally tempestuous 12-year big league career, he made six All-Star Games and won a World Series with the ’07 Red Sox, closing out the clincher against Colorado. Alas, he lasted just one year (in 2022) on the Hall of Fame ballot. … Flash forward to June 6, 2025. At Yankee Stadium, former Jackson Prep star Will Warren, pitching for New York, got his first taste of the Red Sox-Yankees rivalry and came away a winner. Given an early lead, rookie Warren blanked Boston for four innings before yielding a homer in the fifth and three runs in a clunky sixth. Warren went 5 1/3 innings in the 9-6 victory, running his record to 4-3 with a 5.34 ERA in 13 starts. Before a crowd of 46,783, he struck out the first batter of the game and six all told and now has 75 K’s in 57 1/3 innings for the first-place Yanks. Friday’s game was the first meeting of the season between the old rivals. Stay tuned. P.S. Spencer Turnbull, Madison Central High alum, had a rough outing in his latest minor-league tune-up. The veteran right-hander, who recently signed with Toronto as a free agent, gave up five runs in 4 2/3 innings Friday for Triple-A Buffalo. He is 0-3 with a 7.13 in five minor league appearances between A-ball and Triple-A.