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YANKEES 9, RED SOX 5

Circus atmosphere

Yankees come up big, top Red Sox in series opener

Terry Francona escorts a steamed Kevin Youkilis, who was hit by a pitch in the ninth, to first. (JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF)

Joe Torre wasn't kidding when he said this would be a circus, and the reason why the Yankees left Roger Clemens at home.

Fenway Park should have had a tent thrown over it, and not just because of the storm clouds that caused the start of last night's 9-5 Red Sox loss to the Bombers to be delayed by 30 minutes. About the only sideshows missing from this one were Zip the Pinhead, Tom Thumb, and Ula, the Painproof Rubber Girl.

There were grown men strutting about, wearing blond wigs and falsies and carrying signs that read, "I'm with A-Rod." Entire sections adjacent to the Yankees' dugout wore little princess Halloween masks. Johnny Damon was booed. Derek Jeter was booed. No one was booed louder than Alex Rodriguez, who tossed a ball to a fan in the stands, only to have it flung back on the field.

The Sox were the ones left to clean up the mess left by Tim Wakefield and the elephants. The carny act continued right to the end, though, as Yankees reliever Scott Proctor knocked down hot-hitting Kevin Youkilis like one of those milk bottles off a barrel in a game of chance.

Proctor's pitch grazed Youkilis in the helmet in the bottom of the ninth and emptied the benches. Home plate umpire Brian O'Nora ejected Proctor and kept the principals at bay, but Youkilis was clearly shaken, even though he chose to hold his tongue after the game.

But Sox owner John W. Henry was less diplomatic.

"Proctor's intent was clear and disturbing," Henry wrote in an e-mail after the game.

"If this is about getting hit, guys, I have no comment, it's over, tomorrow's another game, that's it," said Youkilis, who earlier extended his hitting streak to 23 games with an infield hit. "That's final. I don't want to hear another word about getting hit by a pitch."

Five batters in all were hit by pitches last night. Wakefield got Josh Phelps with a knuckler in the fourth, Kyle Snyder hit Rodriguez in the left shoulder in the fourth, and Javier Lopez hit Robinson Cano in the right shoulder in the ninth. Mike Lowell was hit in the top of his left hand by Chien-Ming Wang in the third, before Proctor got Youkilis, who wound up on his back.

Yankees catcher Jorge Posada walked down to first base to talk with Youkilis after Proctor's ejection, but Youkilis had no interest in discussing what was said. "It's over," he said. "What's on the field stays on the field. That's all I've got to say about that."

Proctor, meanwhile, protested his innocence, even as the services of Mariano Rivera were required before the Bombers could come away with their third win in the last four meetings between the teams. The Yankees took two of three last week, then lost five in a row while the Sox were winning five straight, a big reason they're 12 1/2 games in arrears in the American League East.

Cano hit a two-run home run off Wakefield in the second; that ball, too, was rejected as a souvenir, and hurled back onto the playing field. Torre, normally the epitome of cool, was ejected for arguing with an umpire during a pitching change in the fifth. Torre no doubt had peeked at a TV replay that showed third base umpire Jerry Crawford muffing Bobby Abreu's steal of third, Crawford ringing up Abreu instead before giving Torre the thumb.

Meanwhile, on the Sox' side, there was Manny the Pantomimer, standing at first base, gesturing incredulously to the dugout after third base coach DeMarlo Hale elected to hold up Youkilis at third on Ramírez's base hit in the second, when this was still a game. Ramírez appeared irate because with two outs, he didn't like the chances of The Invisible Bat (a.k.a. J.D. Drew) coming through with a hit with the bases loaded. Drew popped up to Rodriguez, who had 36,785 people screaming at him, "I got it."

Sox manager Terry Francona insisted Ramírez was just goofing around. "He was messing around -- you didn't see that?" Francona said. "He was laughing."

In the midst of the often-unintentional hilarity, two red flags went up for the Sox. After being hit, Lowell remained in the game for another inning, but Eric Hinske came out to play first base, with Youkilis shifting to third. Lowell was X-rayed, according to a press box announcement, and they came back negative. "It's a good bruise, but I'm not going to cry about it," said Lowell, who is hopeful of playing this afternoon.

Then Drew, who was just 1 for 13 on the homestand and had failed to get the ball out of the infield in his previous 11 at-bats, was lifted in the sixth for Wily Mo Peña. He had a strained right hamstring; Francona said he was day to day.

Wakefield was grim-faced after his outing, one in which he yielded eight runs in 3 2/3 innings. Wakefield walked six, including three straight in the second inning.

"I couldn't throw strikes," Wakefield (5-6) said after the briefest start by a Sox pitcher this season. "I couldn't even throw my fastball for strikes, and pretty much stunk it up tonight. And I am embarrassed about it and disappointed in my outing."

The Yankees took advantage of Wakefield's wildness, which against the Bombers has become a chronic condition. In his last four starts against the New Yorkers, Wakefield has walked 22 batters in just 20 2/3 innings. Last night, he threw more balls (43) than strikes (38). He is 0-3 with a 10.93 ERA against the Yankees this season.

When he wasn't walking Yankees, they were hitting the ball a long way. Cano hit a two-run home run in the second over the bullpen. Bobby Abreu followed with a double and scored on Damon's bases-loaded walk.

The Sox answered with two runs in the bottom of the second, the big hit a double by Dustin Pedroia, and tied the score in the third on another double by Pedroia, who has hit safely in 11 straight games.

But the Yankees sent 10 men to the plate in the fourth, when they knocked out Wakefield and heaped some additional abuse on Snyder.

Cano singled and advanced to second on a passed ball. Abreu walked and Phelps was hit by a pitch. Cano scored on a wild pitch, and a single by Melky Cabrera scored Abreu. Another passed ball, and Phelps scurried home to make it 6-3. Then it was a reload, as Wakefield walked Hideki Matsui and Snyder entered and hit the first batter he faced, Rodriguez, to load the bases again.

Posada promptly unloaded them with a double, and it was 9-3.

The Sox have lost two games in a row just twice this season; on each occasion, Curt Schilling pitched the next game and won. Schilling is lined up to face Mike Mussina this afternoon.

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