HOUSTON -- Mason Englert’s season has been defined by constant shuffling, but on Sunday the Rays needed him in one spot and he delivered.
The 26-year-old right-hander, who has bounced between Tampa Bay and Triple-A Durham multiple times and also spent a brief stretch on the injured list after making the Opening Day roster, was summoned to start the series finale against the Astros at Daikin Park. He had flown in the night before and was ready when his number was called.
“He flew in last night, and he was ready to go,” Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash said after the Rays’ 2-0 loss. “Showed it when he got on the mound.”
It was only Englert’s fourth career Major League start and his second this season, but he handled the assignment like someone far more settled. Tampa Bay used the move to give its rotation extra rest during a stretch without a day off until the All-Star break, and pitching coach Kyle Snyder said the club saw this game as the cleanest way to do it.
“We figured this was the one that made the most sense,” Snyder said before the game. “Rather than going to the bullpen one game in this stretch of games without an off-day, it was something that we prioritized.”
Englert made the most of the opportunity. He struck out four of the first seven hitters he faced and didn’t allow a hit until the fourth inning, eventually tying a career high with nine strikeouts. Houston still got to him for two solo homers, but that was the extent of the damage in a career-best 5 2/3 innings.
“He was outstanding,” Cash said. “Really appreciate his efforts.
Mixed through that lineup really well. Had all the pitches going; a lot of strikes.
Gave him some lengthier at-bats at times but felt like he had an answer besides the two solo homers he gave up.”
Statcast credited Englert with 16 swing-and-misses, and 10 of them came from his changeup and fastball. The changeup was especially sharp, producing four strikeouts on its own.
“Mixing really well,” Cash said. “Getting ahead of hitters and then mixing.
He had the changeup, the cutter, the big curveball. Just kept them off balance quite a bit.”
The 2018 fourth-round Draft pick allowed five hits, walked one and gave Tampa Bay exactly what it needed: innings. Because Englert worked deep into the game, the Rays only had to turn to Cam Booser and Craig Kimbrel, sparing the rest of the staff in a week with seven games in seven days before the break.
“You can come up and serve the team and do a job of covering innings in a meaningful way to help the guys stay fresh,” Englert said. “It means a lot whenever they can have fresh arms and good starts down the stretch.
“It’s a job to take pride in. It’s kind of like doing a dirty job, not a lot of glory in it, but it’s also super fulfilling to help these guys out.”
With a four-game series against the Yankees beginning Monday and the Mariners waiting after that, Tampa Bay could use every bit of help it can get. Cash said Englert’s outing put the club in a better position heading into the homestand.
“It’s huge," Cash said. "We’re in a better spot heading into our homestand because of the performance that he just had.”
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