José Caballero made the Yankees pay twice, Cam Schlittler kept the Rays quiet for eight innings, and New York opened its four-game set in Tampa Bay with a 5-1 win Monday night.
Schlittler, now 9-5, bounced back from the worst outing of his season in a big way. After giving up a career-high six runs to Detroit in his last start, he struck out eight, scattered four hits and didn’t issue a walk. It was the second time this year he worked eight innings, and his longest outing since he went eight on April 23 against the Boston Red Sox.
The game turned in the fifth after Rays starter Griffin Jax had retired the first 13 Yankees he faced. Jasson Domínguez and Jazz Chisholm Jr. drew walks with one out, and Caballero followed by launching a 395-foot homer to left field. Caballero, dealt from Tampa Bay to New York last July, struck again in the eighth with a career-best 10th home run, this one off Chris Roycroft.
Ben Rice added the Yankees’ final blow in the ninth, tagging Roycroft for his 25th homer. That was it for New York’s offense, though the three long balls were enough. The Yankees managed only three hits and struck out 17 times against four Tampa Bay pitchers.
Tampa Bay got on the board in the fifth when Chandler Simpson reached on an infield single, moved to second on a fielder’s choice and scored on a single from Richie Palacios. Palacios finished with two of the Rays’ four hits.
The Rays have now dropped three straight and still lead the Yankees by three games in the AL East.
David Bednar closed it out with a perfect ninth for New York.
The teams meet again Tuesday in the second game of the series, with right-hander Will Warren (7-3, 3.73 ERA) set to start for the Yankees. Tampa Bay has not named a starter.
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One of the more interesting additions is Ben Rice, who is set to take part for the first time as the Yankees keep watching his profile rise in a very different kind of spotlight. Philadelphia could still get a pair of hometown-relevant names in Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper if everything lines up, while Pete Crow-Armstrong has already bowed out, leaving the rest of the field to take shape around a few unresolved decisions. [Read more 🡒]
