The Yankees didn’t exactly solve their offensive problems Monday night. They struck out 17 times, managed only three hits, and still walked out of Tampa Bay with a 5-1 win over the Rays.
That’s the kind of night that tells you a lot about where this team is right now. The bats were a mess for long stretches.
The lineup looked stuck. But Cam Schlittler was dominant, José Caballero delivered the knockout swings, and New York opened this four-game series with a result it badly needed.
The win pushed the Yankees to 50-40, while the Rays fell to 52-36. Tampa Bay still leads the division by three games, so nobody is celebrating anything bigger than one good night. Still, for a Yankees club that couldn’t afford to drift into this series flat, it was a sharp response.
Schlittler owned the game from the start. He went eight innings, allowed four hits and one run, didn’t issue a walk, and struck out eight on 101 pitches. After Detroit tagged him for a career-high six runs in his last outing, he answered by attacking the zone and never letting Tampa Bay settle in.
The Rays only scratched out one run against him in the fifth. Chandler Simpson reached, moved up, and Richie Palacios brought him home with a single. That was the extent of the damage.
David Bednar finished it off in the ninth without any trouble.
The Yankees’ offense was ugly early, and Griffin Jax made it look even worse by retiring the first 13 hitters he faced. Then the game flipped. Jasson Domínguez drew a walk, Jazz Chisholm Jr. followed with another, and Caballero launched a three-run homer to left.
He wasn’t done.
Caballero struck again in the eighth with his second homer of the night, giving him a career-best 10 on the season. The former Ray finished with two hits, two homers and four RBI, and he was the difference in a game where New York needed somebody to break it open.
Ben Rice added some cushion in the ninth with his 25th home run, giving the Yankees a little more breathing room.
The strikeout total was still brutal. Goldschmidt struck out three times.
Bellinger struck out three times. McMahon struck out three times.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. struck out twice. Domínguez struck out twice.
That’s not a sustainable formula.
But Monday wasn’t about sustainability. It was about surviving a rough offensive night, getting a huge start from Schlittler, and letting Caballero do the damage against his old team.
The Yankees got exactly that.
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