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  Tuesday, May 30 7:05pm ET
Extent of injury not known
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

BOSTON -- The game already seemed insignificant in the wake of Boston's big series with the rival New York Yankees.

John Valentin
John Valentin of the Red Sox falls to the ground in pain as umpire Mike DiMuro calls for a timeout at Fenway Park Tuesday night.
And when Red Sox third baseman John Valentin crumpled to the dirt in agony, the 8-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals became almost irrelevant.

"When I saw him go down, it looked pretty ugly," said second baseman Jeff Frye, who has torn ligaments in both knees, missing a full season each time. "I kind of had a flashback when I heard him say he felt it pop."

Trot Nixon, Carl Everett and Mike Stanley homered, and Jeff Fassero won his fifth consecutive decision. But the Red Sox were in no mood to celebrate after seeing Valentin's left leg crumpled under him when he went to field Carlos Beltran's ground ball in the second inning.

Trainers rushed to help Valentin, and he was taken off the field on the back of a groundskeeper's cart. The 33-year-old infielder was taken to a hospital for tests; the Red Sox said no additional information would be forthcoming Tuesday.

"You know that he's seriously injured," manager Jimy Williams said. "They had to take him off on a cart. Can't get up and walk. Not good."

Beltran was credited with a single. He scored on Brian Johnson's fielder's choice to make it 2-1 before Boston put the game away in the third.

Nixon, who homered with two outs in the ninth inning to beat the Yankees on Sunday night, received a 20-second standing ovation before his first at-bat on Tuesday. He hit a 3-1 pitch over the Green Monster in left field to give Boston a lead it never relinquished.

Jeff Fassero (6-1) allowed two runs and eight hits in 6 2/3 innings, striking out four to win his fifth consecutive decision. Nomar Garciaparra was 3-for-4 with his first stolen base of the season.

Jeff Suppan (2-5) lasted just 2 2/3 innings, allowing six runs and eight hits and four walks. He has allowed 15 homers in 70 innings this season.

"I really pitched terribly," the former Red Sox farmhand said. "There's nothing else I can say."

Everett and Stanley hit back-to-back homers in the third to make it 5-1. Troy O'Leary walked, took third on Jason Varitek's double and scored on Suppan's wild pitch to make it 6-1.

Valentin, the longest-tenured Red Sox player, had surgery on his left knee during the offseason to clean out scar tissue behind his kneecap. He was ready by opening day, but he went on the disabled list with tendinitis in his left knee and missed 35 games.

Valentin played in just nine games this season, hitting .257 with two homers and two RBIs in 35 at-bats. He is a career .283 hitter with 120 homers and 523 RBIs in an eight-year-career, all with the Red Sox.

"I think if you go through something like that, when is it ever going to be 100 percent?" Williams said. "But he's worked awfully hard to come back. It's too bad, as hard as this kid's worked."

Game notes
Carlos Febles broke an 0-for-10 slump with a first-inning single. ... The Red Sox lead the major leagues with seven shutouts. .... Boston won the season series 8-2 last year. ... The Royals are 17-7 at home and 8-18 on the road. ... The outing was Suppan's shortest of the year, and it matched the most runs he has allowed. ... Fassero won only five games all of last year.
 


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Kansas City 2

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Anaheim 1

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NY Yankees 4

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