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Benintendi's walk-off gives Red Sox 4-game sweep of Yankees

Boston Red Sox's Andrew Benintendi celebrates after driving in the winning run during the tenth inning of a baseball game against the New York Yankees in Boston, Monday, Aug. 6, 2018. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)

— Andrew Benintendi's hit bounced a handful of times before finding its way into center field for the winning run and a big four-game sweep over the rival Yankees.

The Red Sox now find themselves in firm control of the AL East.

Benintendi's RBI single with two outs in the 10th capped Boston's rally from three runs down in the ninth against New York closer Aroldis Chapman, and the Red Sox completed a four-game sweep with a 5-4 victory Sunday night.

"Any 10 hopper that goes through for a hit feels pretty good," the usually quiet Benintendi said, breaking into a grin. "Everybody knew how big the series was. We came in and did what we wanted to do. We kind of stole this one."

Boston opened a 9 1/2-game lead atop the division over the Yankees, who lost their season-high fifth straight.

"It feels like another great win, obviously it was against our rivals," Boston's J.D. Martinez said.

Mookie Betts hit his 26th homer for Boston (79-34), which has won eight of nine games and owns the majors' best record.

The Yankees hadn't been swept in a four-game series by the Red Sox when they entered a series 30 or more games over .500 since Hall of Famer Ted Williams' rookie season in 1939, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

"A tough way to obviously end a tough weekend, but we can't let this define what's been a great season," manager Aaron Boone said.

Sandy Leon looped a two-out single off Jonathan Holder (1-3) in the 10th and advanced on a wild pitch. Tony Renda pinch-ran before Benintendi's single up the middle to the right of the second-base bag into center field.

Matt Barnes (4-3) worked a perfect inning in the top of the 10th.

For the Yankees, it was a stunning reversal of the Boston Massacre in 1978 when the Yankees came to town and swept the Red Sox en route to erasing a large lead and capturing the AL East.

"We lost these four games here, but what I can tell you is that we're gonna keep battling. We're gonna keep playing ball," Chapman said through a translator. "There's no looking back."

It snapped his streak of converting 22 straight opportunities since his last blown save on May 4.

With New York leading 4-1 in the ninth, Chapman loaded the bases on walks before Martinez's two-out, two-run single pulled Boston within one. Third baseman Miguel Andujar then bounced a throw to first on Xander Bogaerts' grounder, with pinch-runner Jackie Bradley Jr. racing home with the tying run.

Red Sox starter David Price took a shutout into the seventh, giving up two runs and four hits with five strikeouts and three walks.

Playing on a beautiful mid-summer night with a sellout crowd amped from the opening pitch, Price and Masahiro Tanaka were locked in a scoreless duel before Betts hit a hanging cutter completely out of Fenway Park over the Green Monster in the fifth.

Price, tagged for 12 runs over 4 1/3 innings in his other two starts against the Yankees this season, left to a rousing ovation with two on and nobody out in the seventh.

Heath Hembree walked Shane Robinson before Bogaerts booted what looked like a sure double-play grounder, allowing two runs. Stanton followed with an RBI single and Gleyber Torres had a sacrifice fly.

Tanaka gave up one run and six hits, striking out nine and walking one in 4 2/3 innings.