Christian Yelich hit his fourth home run in six games and the Milwaukee Brewers extended their winning streak to eight games, beating the host Cincinnati Reds 3-2 Monday night.

Yelich — named the National League Player of the Week earlier in the day — connected on a full-count slider from Brady Singer (6-4) and drove it 417 feet to straightaway center and off the batter’s eye to break a 2-2 tiein the third inning.

Aaron Civale (1-1) picked up his first win of the season in his third start since missing nearly two months due to a strained left hamstring. The right-hander, who went 5 1/3 innings, rebounded after allowing two runs in the first and struck out five.

Trevor Megill retired Cincinnati in order in the ninth for his 12th save in 13 opportunities.

Angels 7, Red Sox 6: Mike Trout had three hits, including a three-run, 454-foot homer off the left-center field light stanchion in a six-run first and Los Angeles edged Boston at Fenway Park.

Zach Neto homered to lead off the game, and the Angels opened a 5-0 lead before Red Sox starter Richard Fitts (0-3) recorded his first out. Jo Adell also homered in the first and added a solo shot in the sixth after Boston cut the lead to 6-5.

Jarren Duran had three hits for Boston, including a double to start a four-run fifth. Ceddanne Rafaela homered to make it 7-6 in the eighth.

Trout spent a month on the injured list with a bone bruise on his left knee. He returned on Friday and has gone 8 for 14 since then.

Rockies 6, Marlins 4: Hunter Goodman homered twice, including a go-ahead two-run shot in the fifth inning, and Colorado won at Miami to snap its fourth eight-game losing streak of the season.

Mariners to honor Johnson: Hall of Fame pitcher Randy Johnson’s No. 51 will be retired by the Seattle Mariners during a pregame ceremony next season, the club announced Monday.

Johnson, a Walnut Creek native who attended Livermore High School, threw the first no-hitter in Mariners’ history on June 2, 1990 and in 1995 became their first Cy Young Award winner.

Johnson, 61, went 130-74 with a 3.42 ERA across 10 seasons with the Mariners. He pitched with the Giants in 2009 to finish his 22-year big league career, which included four consecutive Cy Young Awards from 1999 to 2002 with Arizona and a World Series championship with the Diamondbacks in 2001.

A’s make moves: The Athletics placed right-hander Gunnar Hoglund on the 15-day injured list with a left hip impingement and third baseman/outfielder Miguel Andujar on the 10-day injured list with a strained right oblique. The A’s recalled right-hander Elvis Alvarado and outfielder JJ Bleday from Triple-A Las Vegas.