Caminero and Aranda went back-to-back in the second, and the Rays never scored again.
Tonight’s game was a story that has felt all too familiar. A couple of big swings early to spark some hope, one bad pitch from the starter that erased it, and then an offense that spent the rest of the night searching for another gear it never found.
The Blue Jays got on the board first. George Springer smoked a double in the bottom of the first, and Nathan Lukes poked a single just past Carson Williams at shortstop to get him in and give the Blue Jays an early 1-0 lead. Adrian Houser coaxed a double play from Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to stop the bleeding.
Then the young Rays changed the script. Junior Caminero led off the second and turned a Shane Bieber fastball into a laser show, a line drive to right that left no doubt the second it cleared the infield. It was his 45th homer of the year, and he made it look effortless. Six pitches later in the next at-bat, Jonathan Aranda launched one toward right field, and it just kept going until it landed in the bullpen. Back-to-back, bang-bang, and suddenly the Rays had life. For the moment, the Rays flipped the game. Jake Mangum added a single, but then Shane Bieber retired three in a row to get out of the inning.
Then Toronto reminded them that momentum is fragile. Daulton Varsho doubled in the bottom half, and Ernie Clement tied it with a broken-bat bloop single to right. Just like that, it’s a 2-2 game.
From there, both starters locked in and pitched like veterans. Bieber bent but didn’t break, stranding runners in the fourth and fifth. Houser found his groove too, working mostly soft contact and grounders, until the game tilted on one pitch in the bottom of the fifth.
After Springer lined a single, Houser got behind Nathan Lukes 0-1 and pitched a changeup that stayed up just enough over the plate. Lukes, the former Rays’ minor leaguer, unloaded on it and sent it soaring to right-center for a two-run homer. Toronto up 4-2, Rogers Centre alive, and the Rays suddenly back in the hole.
Houser’s night wasn’t bad. Six innings, seven hits, four runs, five strikeouts, and two walks. He competed, he got ground balls, and he paid dearly for one mistake. Bieber was sharp as well with five innings with only the two homers given up, and that was enough to give Toronto’s bullpen the ball with the lead.
After that, Tampa Bay’s offense went quietly into the night for the most part. They had a couple of baserunners sprinkled in, but not much else. Mason Fluharty carved up the sixth with two strikeouts, Giménez made a sliding grab to take away a bloop, and by the seventh it already felt like the Rays needed something lucky to break through.
Their chance came in the eighth. Caminero singled and advanced on a wild pitch. Aranda walked, Richie Palacios pinch-ran, Christopher Morel pinch-hit, and the stage was set for one big swing. Instead, Morel lifted a routine fly to right. Lukes, because of course, was the one waiting under it.
That set up the ninth, which teased drama but ended the same way so many of these nights have. Josh Lowe walked. Hunter Feduccia walked. Suddenly, the Rays had two on, one out, and Chandler Simpson chopping his way into an infield force that at least kept the inning alive. Then Simpson stole second, his 44th, and Yandy Díaz came up with the tying runs in scoring position. If you’re writing a Rays script, this feels like the scenario you want with Diaz in his first game in Toronto since May 2024, in part due to passport issues. Jeff Hoffman didn’t care. He got Díaz to roll one to third, Ernie Clement fielded it cleanly, and that was the ballgame.
Two more games left before the Rays can officially put this season in the rearview. Tomorrow these teams face off for a mid-afternoon 3:07 pm first pitch with RHP Joe Boyle (1-3, 4.40) scheduled to take the mound for the Rays opposite RHP Trey Yesavage (0-0, 5.00) for the Blue Jays.
Hopefully, this season can go out with a bang instead of a fizzle.
Category: General Sports