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  Monday, Jul. 3 8:05pm ET
Red Sox slug 4 homers in 4th inning
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Morgan Burkhart won't allow himself any time to stop and reflect on his new surroundings.

Instead, the 28-year-old Boston rookie, who hit his first major league home run Monday night as part of a fourth-inning barrage in which the Red Sox tied a team record with four homers, was all business after boosting his average to .400 since he was called up June 27.

Morgan Burkhart
Morgan Burkhart is congratulated by Red Sox teammate Brain Daubach after his fourth-inning homer.

"I try not to (think about it)," Burkhart said an 11-8 win over the Minnesota Twins. "Hopefully I'm not done."

Manager Jimy Williams sure thinks about Burkhart, who spent four seasons with the Richmond Roosters of the independent Frontier League from 1995-98 and was MVP of the Mexican winter league last season.

"This kid, since he's joined us, has gotten some big hits for us," Williams said. "He's seeing the ball good out of the pitchers hand."

Burkhart has hit safely in five of the seven games since being called up from Triple-A Pawtucket when Trot Nixon went on the disabled list.

Burkhart, Carl Everett, Troy O'Leary and Jason Varitek tied a Red Sox record by homering in the nine-run fourth. The Red Sox matched a club mark for homers in an inning last accomplished July 18, 1998, against Detroit. Boston has done it eight times since 1940.

Everett and O'Leary started the burst with consecutive home runs and both doubled later in the inning. Burkhart, Varitek and O'Leary each finished with three RBI and Everett scored three runs.

Hipolito Pichardo (3-1) got the win in relief of starter Ramon Martinez, who gave up six earned runs on eight hits and four walks in three innings. Derek Lowe pitched 1 1/3 innings for his 18th save in 22 chances.

Williams said Martinez's performance was acceptable, even though he looked overmatched in the fourth, allowing the Twins to creep back in the game.

"If you just looked at his line, maybe you'd say he had a bad night, but he did keep us in the game," Williams said.

Minnesota's Jacque Jones said the key to roughing up Martinez was taking pitches early in the count.

"We were making him throw pitches," Jones said. "We were patient and when he did put them in there, we got hits."

The Twins took a 3-1 lead into the fourth. Everett and O'Leary homered to tie it and, after a walk to Ed Sprague, Varitek also homered. The three home runs came in a span of nine pitches against Mike Lincoln (0-2).

Boston chased Lincoln after Everett doubled for his second hit in the fourth. O'Leary then delivered a two-run double.

Lincoln, called up from Triple-A Salt Lake on June 16, has given up six home runs in 10 innings this season.

"Terrible baseball game. We pitched awful, had a hard time throwing the ball to a spot on location," Minnesota manager Tom Kelly said. "Rough day for the Twins."

The Twins went ahead 2-0 in the first when Ron Coomer hit an RBI double and David Ortiz walked with the bases loaded.

Ortiz had three RBIs in no official plate appearances before being removed for a pinch-hitter in the sixth. He had two sacrifice flies, tying a Twins record last set June 9, 1998, by Marty Cordova against the Chicago Cubs.

Game notes
Twins second baseman Jay Canizaro left with a strained back in the eighth. He will be evaluated Tuesday. ... The Red Sox have hit back-to-back home runs six times this season. ... Minnesota's Corey Koskie, who went 3-for-3, has hit safely in 17 of his last 18 games. ... Opponents are hitting .449 against Lincoln this season. ... Hector Carrasco threw two wild pitches in the fifth inning. ... The Twins have quietly launched a campaign to get Bert Blyleven into the Hall of Fame. Blyleven, now a commentator on Twins television broadcasts, was 287-250 with a 3.31 ERA in his 22-year major league career. He spent 10½ seasons with Minnesota. Twins public relations officials have been leaving copies of a flyer touting Blyleven's accomplishments in press boxes around the league. "We don't think he's gotten the number of votes he deserves," said Dave St. Peter, Minnesota's senior vice president of business affairs. St. Peter said the flyers are the first phase of the campaign, which will later include having Blyleven launch a web site and write a column.
 


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