Yankees Ace Bounced Back At The Rays Worst Possible Time

After a rocky performance, Cam Schlittler transformed criticism into fuel for his outstanding dominance against the Tampa Bay Rays, proving doubters wrong.

Cam Schlittler didn’t just answer his critics Monday night. He silenced a hot Tampa Bay lineup and made it clear the noise from his last start had stuck with him.

After the Yankees beat the Rays 5-1 at Tropicana Field, Schlittler said the chatter around his June 30 clunker lit a fire under him.

"Last week was tough. They want to say that there's f-----g regression because I have one bad outing, so it was personal to go out there and have a dominant start and put this team in the right position," Schlittler told reporters after New York's 5-1 win at Tropicana Field, according to Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News.

That frustration came on the heels of the roughest outing of his season. Against the Detroit Tigers, Schlittler was tagged for six runs and four homers in a 9-3 loss, easily the most damage he has allowed in a big-league start. Monday looked nothing like that night.

The 25-year-old was in full command from the jump, carving through one of baseball’s better offenses with eight strikeouts, no walks and just four hits allowed. Tampa Bay’s only run came on a fifth-inning Richie Palacios single, and by then New York was already in front 3-0.

Manager Aaron Boone wasn’t surprised to see Schlittler snap back the way he did.

"I'm not surprised he bounced back from arguably his toughest outing of his young career so far," Boone said, per YES Network. "He was great.

He was dominant. He was efficient.

Great way to get the road trip started."

The timing mattered just as much as the performance. The Yankees entered the opener having dropped 12 of 15, and they were staring at a first-place Rays club that had opened the day four games ahead of them.

Schlittler, though, gave them exactly what they needed. His season numbers now sit at an AL-best 2.01 ERA, a 0.93 WHIP and 131 strikeouts across 19 outings, and he said the goal was simple after the Detroit setback: stop the slide and give New York a chance.

"You want to stop the bleeding, (and I) just wasn't able to do that (against Detroit)," Schlittler said. "So, (I) feel like I dedicated myself this week to just kind of being more locked in and, again, trying to go out there and put the team in a position to win against the first-place team in our division."

In Other News...

Rays Could Be Eyeing Their Boldest Deadline Swing Yet

With Tampa Bay sitting atop the AL East, the Rays are once again in position to think bigger than a routine deadline tweak. Jim Bowden of The Athletic floated the idea that the club could be ready for a more aggressive swing this month, the kind of move that reflects both where the Rays are in the standings and how willing they may be to press their edge while the market is open.

The fit Bowden pointed to comes with real intrigue because it would mean betting on a pitcher who has already shown he can handle a heavy workload while working back from a major arm injury. Detroits Tarik Skubal has been effective this season, and his profile only adds to the sense that Tampa Bay could be exploring a deal with far more impact than the typical deadline rental. [Read more 🡒]

Two Injured Rays May Finally Be Pushing Toward A Return

The rehab assignments at Triple-A Durham are starting to look like something more than just box-score maintenance for two Rays trying to work their way back. Gavin Lux handled designated hitter duties and went 3-for-4, a solid sign as he continues to recover from left shoulder inflammation after already navigating other injuries earlier in the year. For a club that has had to keep patching together its roster, any encouraging swing from Lux matters.

Jake Fraley also gave Durham a lift, launching a three-run home run and spending time in right field as he inches back from a sports hernia procedure. He has been out since May 16, so every healthy step on a rehab assignment carries extra weight, especially when it comes with power and defensive work. The Rays still have to decide when both players are ready for the next move, but the early signs are at least pointing in the right direction. [Read more 🡒]

Rays Cant Ignore This Catcher Problem Any Longer

The Rays are weighing whether to address catcher before the trade deadline, and it is not hard to see why. Nick Fortes and Hunter Feduccia have given Tampa Bay steady defense behind the plate, but the offense from that spot has lagged enough to make a lineup upgrade feel like more than a luxury for a club with postseason ambitions.

Among the names being discussed, Ryan Jeffers, Tyler Stephenson and Hunter Goodman all fit the basic need for more impact at catcher, with Goodman standing out as the kind of bat that could change the conversation quickly. Tampa Bay does not have to fix everything at once, but if it is serious about making a run, the front office may have to decide how aggressive it wants to be in a market where catching help is getting harder to find. [Read more 🡒]