Junior Caminero kept the power surge rolling Friday night, and the Rays made sure the Mariners had no answer for it.
Caminero launched his 28th home run and Tampa Bay went deep four times in a 7-2 win over Seattle in St. Petersburg, Fla. Richie Palacios, Cedric Mullins and Victor Mesa Jr. also went yard, while All-Star Nick Martinez worked efficiently into the sixth inning to help the Rays control the game from start to finish.
Martinez improved to 8-2 after allowing two runs and four hits in 5 1/3 innings. Earlier Friday, the 35-year-old right-hander picked up his first All-Star selection, replacing injured Boston left-hander Ranger Suárez.
The Rays opened the scoring in the third when Caminero doubled and came around on Chandler Simpson’s two-out single. From there, Tampa Bay kept stacking damage. Palacios led off the fourth by sending a 396-foot homer off Mariners starter Luis Castillo, and the fifth brought another pair of punches: Mullins worked through consecutive two-strike pitches before lifting a slider over the right-field wall, and Mesa followed with a 398-foot shot on another two-strike slider to make it 4-1.
Seattle briefly answered in the fifth on Cole Young’s 11th homer of the season, then added an RBI grounder from Dominic Canzone in the sixth. But Caminero slammed the door in the seventh, turning on an opposite-field, two-run homer to right off Jose Ferrer that pushed Tampa Bay ahead 6-2.
Castillo fell to 3-8 after giving up four runs and nine hits in five innings.
The loss was another hit for Seattle, which had just been swept by the Marlins in Miami and has now dropped four straight to slip behind Texas into second place in the AL West.
Up next, Mariners right-hander Logan Gilbert (7-5, 3.19 ERA) starts Saturday against Rays right-hander Griffin Jax (4-6, 3.60).
In Other News...
Rays Make A Huge No. 2 Bet On Shortstop Grady Emerson
The Rays used the No. 2 overall pick in the 2026 MLB Draft on shortstop Grady Emerson, the Fort Worth Christian High School standout who has long been regarded as one of the most polished young hitters in the class. Emerson brings advanced bat-to-ball skills, athleticism and the kind of upside that has scouts projecting more power as he matures, making him a fitting target for a Tampa Bay front office that has never been shy about betting on ceiling and feel.
Emersons resume already carries plenty of weight beyond the draft stage, from his national recognition as the 2026 Gatorade National Player of the Year to his experience on multiple USA Baseball teams. He also arrives with the added wrinkle of a college commitment to Texas, which gives the Rays another layer to navigate as they try to turn a premium pick into a cornerstone in the middle infield. [Read more 🡒]
White Sox Just Made A Rebuild Move That Could Change Draft Night
A busy scouting scene around Minnesota on Tuesday offered another reminder that catching help is becoming one of the more watched markets before the Aug. 3 trade deadline. Ryan Jeffers drew attention from the Yankees, and the Rays were also in the building, with clubs clearly keeping tabs on a catcher who has been productive this season and is eligible for free agency after the year.
The draft angle is where Chicagos latest move starts to matter for Tampa Bay, even if the full ripple effect is still unfolding. Pittsburgh sent the 34th overall pick and minor league pitcher Jaden Woods to the White Sox for Jacob Gonzalez and Brandon Eisert, giving Chicago another premium selection to go with its top draft capital and adding a new layer to how teams around the league may approach Saturday night. [Read more 🡒]
Rays Just Landed A Rare Draft Opportunity Fans Have Waited For
The draft lottery gave Tampa Bay a rare kind of lift, one that immediately changes the way the organization can think about its next wave of talent. With the top of the board now set and the usual mix of rebuilding clubs clustered near the front, the Rays suddenly find themselves in position to add a premium prospect to a farm system that always seems to be reloading.
For a franchise that has not picked this high in years, the opportunity carries real weight beyond one night of lottery luck. Tampa Bay has not had a top-10 draft choice since 2017, and the front office now gets a chance to chase the kind of high-upside player that can reshape a system, especially with the draft still far enough away to leave plenty of room for scouting, debate, and a little anticipation. [Read more 🡒]
