ANAHEIM, Calif. – John Lackey kept the line moving — a variation on one of Boston Manager Terry Francona’s favorite expressions regarding his potent batting order. Only this time, it has to do with the Red Sox’s starting rotation.

Lackey beat his former team again with eight superb innings, Carl Crawford hit his first home run in a Boston uniform, and the Red Sox completed a pitching-dominated four-game sweep of the Angels on Sunday with a 7-0 victory that extended their winning streak to five.

Red Sox starters have gone at least five innings while allowing fewer than three runs in nine consecutive games, tying the longest such streak in franchise history, set in 1946. The rotation has a 0.88 ERA during this stretch.

“Sure, there’s definitely a sense of not wanting to be the guy to stop the streak,” Lackey said. “It’s a pretty good run, but it’s not unexpected. We’ve got some guys here with some pretty good track records.”

Lackey (2-2) scattered six hits, struck out six and stranded eight baserunners, becoming the third straight Boston starter to hold the Angels scoreless. The right-hander’s solid outing came on the heels of Daisuke Matsuzaka’s eight innings of one-hit ball in Saturday night’s 5-0 victory.

Josh Beckett allowed two runs and three hits over eight innings in the series opener, which the Red Sox won 4-2 in 11 innings. The next night, Jon Lester gave up four hits in six scoreless innings of a 4-3 win, helping Boston’s rotation carve out a minuscule 0.60 ERA in the series. The only blemish was Torii Hunter’s two-run homer off Beckett.

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“I think it obviously helps to see somebody do it. You just try to follow it and not screw it up,” Lester said after Sunday’s game. “We’re just executing pitches right now. That’s the main thing. We’re very confident. We just have to stay healthy. We’ve been in this position before with a good rotation and weren’t able to stay healthy, which didn’t get us anywhere. So if everyone keeps taking their turn, everything should take care of itself.”

Lackey, who spent his first eight big league seasons with the Angels and won Game 7 of the 2002 World Series as a rookie, is 4-0 with a 2.45 ERA in four starts against them. Two of those wins have come at Angel Stadium, where Lackey is 51-32 with a 3.93 ERA in 114 starts, including a 4-2 victory for the Red Sox last July 27.

“I’ve won a few games in this stadium for sure,” said Lackey, who left Anaheim to sign a five-year, $82.5 million free-agent contract with the Red Sox in December 2009. “This is a great place to pitch, especially with that ocean air coming through here a little bit. So you’ve got to hit it pretty good.

“It’s nice to come back here and see some guys you know. But, really, if you look at their lineup today, there’s not too many guys that I played with for an extended period of time.”

Adrian Gonzalez had three hits and two RBI for the Red Sox, who have won 13 of 14 games against the Angels since Los Angeles swept them in the 2009 AL division series. The sweep dropped the Angels’ record to 12-10.

“We’ve squeaked out about as many wins as you could expect from having so many issues on the offensive side right now,” Manager Mike Scioscia said. “Do we need more offense? Yes. Are we lucky to be where we are? No. I don’t think it’s luck. I mean, it’s not luck when you have guys like Jered Weaver and Dan Haren pitching as well as they are.”

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Neither Haren nor Weaver pitched Sunday, however. Matt Palmer (1-1) allowed four runs and six hits in five-plus innings.

Crawford, who signed a seven-year, $142 million deal with the Red Sox in December after setting career highs with 19 homers and 90 RBI last season for Tampa Bay, made it 6-0 in the sixth with a drive to right-center on a full count against Hisanori Takahashi after Kevin Youkilis chased Palmer with a leadoff single. Crawford’s homer came in his 81st at-bat with the Red Sox.

“It just felt good to hit the ball hard and have it leave the yard,” Crawford said. “I was just glad I got the first one out of the way and was able to do something good to help the team. I’ve been feeling a little bit better, but I’m not out of the woods yet. I’m still in a grind mode.”

A light but steady rain pelted Angel Stadium all morning, but the only part of the infield that was covered was the mound. The Angels have been rained out at home only 15 times in franchise history and 10 times since moving down to Anaheim.

“That’s the first time I’ve pitched in the rain here, I think,” Lackey said. “It was pretty crazy to warm up in the rain. But I’ve played in Boston for more than a year now, so I’ve gotten used to throwing in the rain.”

 

NOTES: This was Boston’s first four-game sweep at Anaheim since June 1980. The Red Sox swept a four-game set from the Angels last May at Fenway Park.

 

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