baseball

Tampa Bay Better Than the Back Bay: Rays 8 Red Sox 4

Yahoo Sports

This game had a little bit of everything, both good and bad. The second inning was the story early on as the Rays showed to a national audience how they had won 12 of their last 13, before then reminding those same viewers how they got off to a 2-5 start this season with defensive issues and pitching command problems. A month ago, this would have been one of those game that went from bad to worse (see series vs Cubs), but this red hot team showed its character by putting the second inning behind them and sticking with the flat swings and soft contact to come back in the mid stanza before bringing out the late inning thunder against the Boston bullpen to put the bow on a 8 to 4 victory over the Red Sox.

Griffin Jax continued his evolution into a starter facing 17 batters and throwing 59 pitches, 38 for strikes. One could argue the results would have been better with even normal defensive execution by the infield, but instead decided to revisit some of the defensive lapses which plagued the club in the early part of the season. Jax threw six different pitch types on the evening, using the full arsenal to both righties and lefties.

He got off to an efficient 10-pitch first inning, but the second inning saw him and the club give it all back with some poor pitch and defensive execution. The inning led off with one-hopper rocket down the line to a diving Junior Caminero, who popped up and threw a seed across the infield that pulled Jonathan Aranda slightly off the bag, which was not caught live but replay quickly overturned: Story quickly, and easily, swiped second base to erase a potential double play and that was followed up by a five-pitch walk to Masataka Yoshida which involved four pitches well out of the strike zone. Cedanne Rafaela then drove in Story with another hard hit ball to Caminero that rebounded off him and Taylor Walls allowing Story to score from second on a ball which barely reached the outfield grass: View Link Jax came back to retire Rafaela on a forceout on a grounder to Ben Williamson setting up a potential double play with Connor Wong at the plate.

Jax did his part in that equation, but Walls did not, and it was u-g-l-y without an alibi. Needless to say, this play will likely not come up on the next Waechter Wednesday interview. I would embed the video, but the play was not recorded.

It was a textbook groundball for a 6-4-3 which was first booted and then scooped over Williamson’s head into shallow right field allowing Yoshida to score and Mayer to advance to third. Mayer was then driven on on a single through the infield with Aranda close to the bag holding on Wong. The double play that should have come earlier in the inning finally did happen as Jax induced the required grounder from Jarren Duran to bring the sloppy inning to a merciful end.

Continue to the original source for the full article.