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Pirates lose both split squad games

BRADENTON, Fla. – Clay Buchholz pitched three hitless innings, Mike Carp hit a long homer and the Boston Red Sox beat a Pittsburgh Pirates split squad 4-1 on Sunday.

Buchholz faced nine batters and got five outs on grounders. He walked one and struck out one.

Jackie Bradley Jr., trying to win a job in center field, gave the Red Sox a 2-0 lead in the second by grounding a two-run single into right field.

In the third, Carp hit his second home run of the spring onto the boardwalk in right-center.

Pirates right-hander Charlie Morton worked the first three innings and allowed three runs (one earned) on five hits.

Pittsburgh was hitless until the sixth, when Gregory Polanco led off with an infield single.

STARTING TIME

Red Sox: Buchholz breezed through the first two innings on 17 pitches. The only ball hit out of the infield during that stretch was Jaff Decker’s blooper, which was caught by left fielder Alex Hassan.

Pirates: Morton struggled in his third outing this spring. He let six of his 16 batters reach base.

“It was just bad,” Morton said. “I was falling behind hitters. When I was ahead of hitters, everything turned out OK. The problem was I didn’t get ahead of many.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Red Sox: Right-hander Jake Peavy, who has a gash on his non-pitching hand, is expected to start Thursday. Peavy threw a simulated game Saturday. … Outfielder Shane Victorino (lower back tightness) will play Monday or Tuesday. “It won’t be both,” manager John Farrell said. The Red Sox are off Wednesday.

Pirates: Travis Ishikawa played in his first spring game after sitting out with a tight right hamstring. As the designated hitter, he went 0 for 2 with a strikeout. Ishikawa came to camp as a fringe candidate for a backup spot at first base and right field, but likely is ticketed for Triple-A Indianapolis.

ROSTER BATTLES

Red Sox: Bradley is getting pressure from Grady Sizemore for a spot on the opening-day roster. Sizemore did not travel to Bradenton, but is expected to be in the lineup Monday and Tuesday. If Sizemore shows he’s healthy and wins the spot, Bradley would likely begin the season at Triple-A Pawtucket. Bradley went 1 for 4 with two RBIs on Sunday. He is 4 for 21 with five strikeouts this spring.

Amid reports that the Red Sox are unhappy with the play of third baseman Will Middlebrooks, Farrell declined to discuss whether the team would reconsider re-signing infielder Stephen Drew. “I really don’t have anything to say about Drew,” Farrell said. “He’s a free agent and that’s where it stands.”

Pirates: Chris Dickerson, who hit .238 in 56 games last season with Baltimore, is trying to make the roster as a fifth outfielder. Dickerson has a .262 career batting average, but his forte is defense. “He’s quick, he’s got instincts and savvy,” outfield coach Rick Sofield said. “Chris was covering ground (Saturday) as well as any center fielder I’ve been around. He’s the real deal on defense.”

CALL TO THE ‘PEN

Red Sox: Francisco Cordero has pitched well so far, but still faces an uphill battle to crack the opening-day bullpen. The 38-year-old right-hander last pitched in the majors in 2012 with Toronto and Houston. Cordero tossed one scoreless inning Sunday and has allowed three hits in four scoreless appearances.

“He’s not pitching like a guy who’s been out for a year,” Farrell said. “He’s thrown a lot of strikes. He’s made the necessary adjustments. As a pitcher gets deeper into his career, he has to pitch a little bit more and use an assortment of pitches, rather than just relying on velocity. He’s showing that in spring training.”

Pirates: The back-end combo of setup man Mark Melancon and closer Jason Grilli dominated in what was the second spring outing for each pitcher. Grilli got two strikeouts and a foul popup. Melancon struck out Hassan and David Ross and got Carp on a grounder.

SARASOTA, Fla. – Chris Davis had a long home run and three RBIs, J.J. Hardy hit a three-run shot and Wei-Yin Chen pitched three shutout innings to help the Baltimore Orioles beat a Pittsburgh split squad 9-2 on Sunday.

Edinson Volquez started for the Pirates and gave up six runs on seven hits in 2 2-3 innings. In two starts, Volquez has allowed nine runs in five innings.

Andrew McCutchen and Tony Sanchez homered for Pittsburgh.

STARTING TIME

Pirates: Volquez left without talking to reporters. Sanchez, his catcher, said he could tell Volquez wasn’t having a good day.

“Unfortunately, that was the first time I’ve ever caught him, and him and I weren’t on the same page,” Sanchez said.

“I could see he was uncomfortable throwing to me and it kind of affected him. I take that to heart. I did not feel good back there because I knew he wasn’t really in sync. There was a lot of shakes, a lot of time in between pitches. I knew he wasn’t in the rhythm that he wanted to be in.”

Orioles: Chen was much stronger in his second start than his first. He allowed two runs and five hits Tuesday against the New York Yankees.

“I think the main difference is my command is better than the last outing. I was able to keep the ball low and hit both sides of the plate,” Chen said through a translator. “I’ve got a feel for my pitches, and in the next few outings, I was going to try to get a better feel for all my pitches. Everything is on track for the moment.”

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