Kevin Cash Just Got Overlooked Despite What The Rays Have Done

In a surprising twist, Kevin Cash faces stiff competition for AL Manager of the Year honors as Tampa Bay's unexpected success is overshadowed by the dramatic turnaround of the rival Chicago White Sox.

Kevin Cash has guided the Tampa Bay Rays into one of the biggest surprises of the first half, but that hasn’t been enough to put him on top of Jayson Stark’s AL Manager of the Year board.

Stark of The Athletic had Cash second in the race, behind Will Venables of the Chicago White Sox, even after the Rays opened the All-Star break with the best record in the American League at 56-38. Tampa Bay also sits three games ahead of the Yankees in the AL East, a sharp turn from the low expectations that surrounded the club before the season began.

A lot of the preseason chatter had the Rays finishing near the bottom of the division, especially with the Orioles, Red Sox, Yankees and Blue Jays all spending more in the offseason. Instead, Tampa Bay has flipped the script, and Cash has been central to that run.

Venables’ case is strong in its own right. Chicago entered 2026 with even less optimism, and the White Sox finished his first season as manager with 102 losses, a 19-game improvement over 2024, when they set the single-season record with 121 losses.

Now, after three straight 100-loss seasons, the White Sox would be in the playoffs if the season ended today. A postseason spot and possible AL Central title would put Venables in historic company.

The second-half picture could still change the race. Chicago is ahead of schedule, which raises the question of whether the front office will stay the course or add to the roster for a push. For Cash to close the gap, Tampa Bay likely needs to keep winning and maybe finish with its first division title since 2021.

That would only strengthen an already solid case. Cash has had to work around real holes and injuries, starting with the pitching staff. Ryan Pepiot missed the entire season, Joe Boyle took over and then went down after three starts, and Jesse Scholtens and Steven Matz also landed on the injured list.

That forced the Rays to reshuffle the rotation with Griffin Jax and Ian Seymour, both of whom began the year in the bullpen, joining Drew Rasmussen, Nick Martinez and Shane McClanahan. Pitching coach Kyle Snyder also deserves a share of the credit for how that group has held together.

The lineup hasn’t exactly been a smooth ride either. Second base remains a major gap after Brandon Lowe was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates in an offseason deal, and the outfield has been better than it was in 2025 but still not fully settled.

Even with those issues, Cash has kept pressing the right buttons. That’s a big reason Tampa Bay has stayed in the mix as a legitimate World Series contender.

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