Xander Bogaerts high-fives Red Sox teammates after scoring in the sixth inning Sunday against the Minnesota Twins. Boston won, 8-1. Michael Dwyer/Associated Press

BOSTON — Michael Wacha and Trevor Story can now feel right at home.

Wacha pitched five scoreless innings in his Fenway Park debut with Boston and Story drove in his first two runs in his new ballpark, leading the Red Sox to an 8-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Sunday.

“It’s everything and more,” Story said of having Fenway as his home park. “Just coming here as a visitor two different times, it’s a hostile environment, you can feel that. Much better feeling coming as a Red Sox. It’s been great, the energy, the atmosphere is everything I thought it was.”

It was the second straight day the Red Sox beat the Twins after losing their home opener.

J.D. Martinez had an RBI double and sacrifice fly for Boston.

The teams close out the four-game series in Boston’s annual Patriots Day game on Monday morning with a scheduled first pitch of 11:10 a.m. It’ll be the first time since 2019 that the game will be played in conjunction with the running of the Boston Marathon.

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Signed to a $140-million, six-year deal as a free agent during spring training after playing six seasons in Colorado, Story hit a two-run single during a six-run eighth inning. Wacha, signed to a one-year, $7-millon deal during the offseason, allowed a single with five strikeouts and two walks.

“To come out here and get a team ‘W’ is great,” said Wacha, who faced the Red Sox in Fenway twice with the Cardinals when they lost the World Series to them in 2013.

“Most definitely different,” he said, smiling. “Wasn’t getting harassed down in the bullpen, in the dugout and, basically, on the mound the entire time. It was good hearing the cheers on my side.”

Matt Strahm (1-0) got his first win in a Red Sox uniform by recording four outs.

Bailey Ober (1-1) gave up two unearned runs and four hits in six innings, walking one and striking out three.

“The vibe here is still great,” said Twins shortstop Carlos Correa, who signed a $105.3 million, three-year deal with opt outs after the first two years during spring training.

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“We’ve been in every game,” he said. “We’ve had a chance to win every game, so that’s great. That’s the positive side of it. Now we’ve just got to put all the pieces together.”

Wearing their yellow-and-powder blue uniforms for the second straight day, the Red Sox broke in front 2-0 in the sixth inning on sacrifice flies on consecutive pitches by Martinez and Alex Verdugo, after Rafael Devers reached when Miguel Sanó booted his grounder for an error and Xander Bogaerts doubled off the Green Monster.

The Twins avoided being shutout for the third time this season and second day in a row when Trevor Larnach hit a sacrifice fly in the seventh.

Mixing his fastball in the mid-90s with his changeup and cutter, Wacha breezed through four hitless innings before Gio Urshela opened the fifth with a single up the middle.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Twins: Placed Right-hander Sonny Gray on the 10-day injured list, a day after he left his start in the second inning because of a strained hamstring. Manager Rocco Baldelli said he expects Gray to miss one start. The club activated right-hander Cody Stashak (right biceps tendinitis) off the IL to take his spot.

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Red Sox: Left-hander Josh Taylor (back soreness) began a rehab assignment with Triple-A Worcester. He pitched one inning and allowed one hit – a home run to Roman Quinn.

THAT WAS A TEST

Wacha got Carlos Correa on a called strikeout with a fastball on the outside corner, capping a 15-pitch at-bat leading off the fourth.

“It was a good at-bat,” Correa said. “I felt like I needed an at-bat like that, where I could see a lot of pitches. My timing has been on and off, some days I feel good, some days I’m not, which is usually what happens in spring training.”

MORE PATRIOTS’ DAY

The Red Sox have been scheduled to play at home on Patriots Day, a holiday in Massachusetts and Maine that celebrates Paul Revere’s ride and the battles of Lexington and Concord in 1775, every year since 1959. The game was canceled because of weather six times, by the players strike in 1995 and the pandemic in 2020. Boston is 71-53 all-time.

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