Red Sox Players who have homered from both sides of the plate in the same game
From SoSH
Reggie Smith - 4 times
8/20/1967 - Smith connects on a three-run shot in the 1st off George Brunet and a two-run blast in the 6th off Pete Cimino to lead the Red Sox to a 12-2 win. Reggie added another homerun in the second game of the double-header for a total of 3 on the day.
8/11/1968 - Smith's 7th inning two-run shot off John Hiller and 9th inning solo dinger off John Wyatt were not enough to lead the Sox past Detroit, as Boston starter Gary Bell, and relievers Bill Landis, Jerry Stephenson, and Sparky Lyle combined to allow 4 runs on 5 hits in the Tiger 9th.
7/2/1972 - Bill Parson's and Earl Stephenson allowed homers in back-to-back innings to Smith, as the Red Sox pounded the Brewers 15-4 in the first game of a double-header.
4/16/1973 - Smith connected on a Mickey Lolich offering in the 6th inning and touched up Lerrin LaGrow for his second homer of the day in the 8th. It wasn't enough though, as Sox starter Marty Pattin got lit up for eight runs in 3.2 innings.
Carl Everett - 2 times
4/11/2000 - Crazy Carl ripped a 2nd inning solo shot off Joe Mays and a 6th inning two-run job of Mark Redman, leading the Sox over the Twins 13-4.
8/29/2000 - In one of Pedro Martinez' greatest games, few people remember Everett's feat. Carl homered off Cory Lidle and Doug Creek to hit a homerun from both sides of the plate for the second time that year. Overshadowing Everett, Pedro was charged by Gerald Williams in the 1st inning after being beaned. Martinez retired the next 26 batters, until John Flaherty led off the 9th with a single, foiling Pedro's no-hit bid.
Bill Mueller - 2 times
7/4/2003 - Mueller hit one of his homeruns off the Yankees' David Wells, who allowed 5 homeruns that day, and another off Dan Micelli in the 9th to become the fourth Red Sox player to drill homeruns from each side of the plate in one game.
7/29/2003 - Topping his feat of two homeruns in one game from the Left and Right side of home, Billy hit three homers, including two Grand Slams. He became the first man in MLB history to jack a Grand Slam from each side of the plate in the same game.
7/28/1995 - Alicea dropped a three-run bomb off Scott Taylor in the 2nd inning and a solo shot off Terry Burrows in the 7th. The Rangers' starter, Taylor, only pitched 15.1 innings in his career, compiling a 9.39 ERA.

