Junior Caminero keeps forcing the conversation in Tampa Bay, but Shane McClanahan gave the Rays exactly what they needed Wednesday night.
Caminero homered for the sixth straight game, a two-run blast three batters into the matchup at Kauffman Stadium, and McClanahan answered with six shutout innings as the Rays beat the Royals 4-0. Three relievers finished it off, but McClanahan’s work set the tone for a club that has kept climbing in the AL East even while questions linger around the rotation.
The homer was Caminero’s 24th of the season, and the power surge is starting to look historic. His six-game home run streak is the first in the majors since Rafael Devers did it in 2024, and at 22 years old, he became the youngest player in MLB history to pull it off, passing Ken Griffey Jr.
That’s the headline-grabbing part of Tampa Bay’s run, but it’s not the whole story. Caminero’s bat has helped cover for some uneven starting pitching, even as he puts together the third-best offensive season in the big leagues with a 159 wRC+.
The Rays entered Wednesday with a 3.78 team ERA, good for ninth, yet their rotation has been thinner than that number suggests. Outside of McClanahan and Griffin Jax, the group has often failed to give the club enough length, leaving the relief corps to pick up more of the load.
That matters with manager Kevin Cash using an “opener” every fifth start, a setup that could make another starting arm or two a real need before the Aug. 3 trade deadline. MLB insiders have already pegged the rotation as Tampa Bay’s biggest in-season issue.
For now, though, the results keep rolling. The Rays are 50-33, have won seven straight, and now sit 3.5 games ahead of the Yankees, who have dropped seven in a row. Caminero’s power streak has grabbed the spotlight, but McClanahan’s six scoreless frames were every bit as important to keeping Tampa Bay in front.
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