Franchy Cordero, center, celebrates with teammates after hitting a grand slam in the 10th inning Sunday to give the Red Sox an 8-4 win over the Seattle Mariners. Steven Senne/Associated Press

BOSTON — Franchy Cordero hit a grand slam with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning, lifting the surging Boston Red Sox to an 8-4 victory over the Seattle Mariners on Sunday.

Trevor Story continued his recent power surge with his fifth homer over the Green Monster in four days and Christian Arroyo added a solo shot for Boston, which posted its season-high fifth straight victory and completed a four-game sweep over Seattle.

“Did you see how I reacted? I was going nuts,” Arroyo said, wearing a Celtics’ Jayson Tatum jersey. “We’ve got that feel, kind of how it was last year. We were winning games late, a reliever would come in and we’d be down by three, it doesn’t matter. We were always battling back.”

Boston posted its first win in extra innings after losing its first six tries.

The Red Sox trailed 4-3 when pinch-hitter Christian Vázquez singled against Andrés Muñoz (1-2) in the 10th, advancing automatic runner Bobby Dalbec. After Kiké Hernández hit a tying single, Vázquez was thrown out at the plate by right fielder Dylan Moore on Rafael Devers’ single, a play upheld by review.

Following an intentional walk and Story’s flyout, Cordero won it with his drive to right on 0-2 pitch. Seattle left fielder Jesse Winker and center fielder Julio Rodríguez stood out in the field in disbelief for a while before slowly walking off as the Red Sox celebrated at home plate, spilling over toward their dugout.

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“I was looking for a pitch up in the zone,” said Cordero, wearing a Celtics’ Marcus Smart jersey, through a translator. “He hung that slider and I was able to hit it well. … Super excited to see the boys jumping around.”

Adam Frazier had a go-ahead single in the 10th inning for Seattle after Eugenio Suárez’s homer tied it with two outs in the ninth.

Frazier also had a two-run homer for the Mariners, who have lost six of seven and 19 of 25.

“It’s continuing to focus on getting better, and we’ve had some adversity early in the season, more than we had really bargained for,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said. “That’s just the way it goes. You’ve got to figure out a way to fight through it. ‘What can I do to help the team win today?’ We need everybody to chip in. It’s not just one guy.”

With thunder and lightning off to the first-base side, Frazier lined an RBI single to center against Jake Diekman (1-0).

Suárez homered into the Monster seats against Hansel Robles.

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The Red Sox nearly wasted a solid start from Nathan Eovaldi, who rebounded from a historically bad outing by striking out 11 while allowing two runs and four hits over 6 2/3 innings.

He became just the third pitcher in MLB history to get tagged for five homers in an inning during a loss to Houston last Tuesday, joining Toronto’s Chase Anderson (Sept. 17, 2020, vs. Yankees) and Milwaukee’s Michael Blazek (July 28, 2017, vs. Nationals).

“I got back to the basics for me,” Eovaldi said. “Sticking the heaters down and away, but making sure I was getting them down in the zone. … I felt like I did a better job of really commanding the zone.”

Story lined a 94 mph fastball off Logan Gilbert that barely cleared the top of the 37-foot Monster in the sixth, landing in the first row to make it 3-2.

Story finished the series with five homers and 13 RBI, going deep three times in the opener and hitting a grand slam on Friday.

Gilbert gave up three runs and five hits in seven innings.

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Frazier hit a fly ball that hooked around the Pesky Pole.

Inserted into the lineup when J.D. Martinez was a late scratch because of back spasms, Arroyo hit the first pitch off a billboard above the Monster seats in the second.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Mariners: Placed second baseman Abraham Toro on the 15-day injured list because of a sprained left shoulder he suffered hitting the ground after colliding with right fielder Adam Frazier in Saturday’s loss. They were chasing a pop in shallow right that Toro caught. … Gilbert was hit on the back of the right leg by Kevin Plawecki’s grounder for a single but didn’t need a visit from the trainer.

Red Sox: Outfielder Alex Verdugo was out after leaving Saturday’s game with flu-like symptoms, but Manager Alex Cora said he tested negative for COVID-19.

COOLER THOUGHTS

With temperatures unseasonably in the 90s, the Fenway Park organist had a sense of humor before the first pitch, playing ‘Let it Snow!’ and a few songs later adding ‘I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas.’

TEMPER, TEMPER

Winker struck out swinging to end the fourth and flung his bat to the ground in disgust.