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Tolle Dominates Yankees in Career-Best Outing
27 Jun
Summary
- Payton Tolle pitched seven scoreless innings, allowing only one hit.
- Tolle's four-seamer averaged 94.4 mph, the lowest of his career.
- Willson Contreras hit a 418-foot home run, igniting a bench-clearing incident.

Payton Tolle delivered the most impressive outing of his career on Friday night, pitching seven scoreless innings and allowing just one hit in the Red Sox's 6-1 victory over the Yankees. The young lefthander, who is 23 years and 237 days old, became the youngest Red Sox pitcher with at least seven shutout innings since Eduardo Rodriguez in 2016, lowering his ERA to 2.78.
Tolle's performance highlighted an evolving skill set, as he effectively used his curveball and commanded his fastball, which averaged 94.4 mph. The Red Sox offense supported Tolle early, with Willson Contreras driving in a run with a triple and later hitting a 418-foot home run. Contreras's homer in the third inning was followed by an incident in the fifth inning where a pitch inside led to a verbal exchange and the benches clearing, though no physical altercation occurred.
The Red Sox secured their second consecutive win against the Yankees, with the offense continuing its streak of scoring at least six runs for three straight games. The Yankees managed to score one run in the eighth inning against reliever Tommy Kahnle, avoiding a complete shutout but unable to overcome the deficit.