Orlando Sentinel

A well-timed break, and a much-needed victory

- By Marc Topkin

ST. PETERSBURG — For all that has gone wrong for the Tampa Bay Rays against the Seattle Mariners the past couple of seasons, something went very right on Thursday.

Call it an evening-out, good luck, a well-timed break.

But also call it a game-winning hit, as Brett Phillips’ seventh-inning single off the leg of Seattle pitcher Chris Flexen provided the margin in a 2-1 victory.

“We won, so definitely it was a good break,” Phillips said. “If we would have lost and that would have happened, maybe a different answer.”

The game to that point had been a tense pitching duel, albeit somewhat unorthodox, between the Mariners starter and the first four of the six Rays relievers who delivered another impressive bullpen-day performanc­e.

Singles by Harold Ramirez and

Josh Lowe to open the seventh put the Rays in good position to take the lead, but Taylor Walls grounded into a double play. With Ramirez on third, Phillips quickly got down 0-2 before slapping a change-up back to the mound.

As the ball went by, Flexen kicked his back leg to try to stop it. Instead, he redirected it toward third, allowing Ramirez to score. There was no play at first on Phillips, as the Mariners had third baseman Abraham Toro shifted behind Flexen — right where the ball was headed before it was kicked.

“As soon as I knocked it down, I knew,” Flexen said. “Just very poor on my part. We had a guy [Toro] sitting right there to get out of that situation. We get the double play, and the guys are battling on defensivel­y. Just a poor job on my part.”

Ramirez, who had taken a lead about halfway home, said he immediatel­y knew it was a good break.

“If the ball doesn’t hit the pitcher, it’s going to be out,” Ramirez said. “So it’s good that it hit him.”

Phillips had a big hand in the win.

In the second inning, he guessed right on a cutter and flared a single to right with two outs to score Ramirez.

In the ninth, he reacted quickly to hold J.P. Crawford to a leadoff single, then made a heads-up play when second baseman Brandon Lowe misplayed a pop-up to short right, grabbing the ball and firing to second to force Crawford.

“That’s a tough play, right?” Phillips said. “He’s going back. That’s a blooper. I was just charging hard just in case that were to happen or fall in. I’m glad I took the initiative to run in fast, and I’m glad it worked out the way it did.”

The second bullpen-day outing by the Rays in five games worked out pretty well, too. Not as good as Saturday’s nine no-hit innings against the Red Sox, but close.

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA/AP ?? Rays left fielder Brett Phillips, center, celebrates with shortstop Wander Franco, left, and center fielder Kevin Kiermaier after they defeated the Mariners on Thursday.
CHRIS O’MEARA/AP Rays left fielder Brett Phillips, center, celebrates with shortstop Wander Franco, left, and center fielder Kevin Kiermaier after they defeated the Mariners on Thursday.

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