The Denver Post

Rays get bang for their bucks

- By Janie McCauley

Yandy Diaz OA KL A ND, CA LIF. slugged baseball’s lowest spender into a matchup with mighty Houston, Charlie Morton silenced the powerful Athletics on the mound, and the Tampa Bay Rays beat Oakland at its own game 5-1 in the AL wild-card round Wednesday night.

After playing in only one game since late July, Diaz hit a leadoff homer and went deep again in the third inning. Avisail Garcia hit a two-run drive in the second, and Morton had all the support he needed as Tampa Bay advanced to face the AL West champion Astros in a best-of-five Division Series.

Game 1 is Friday at Houston, which racked up a major leaguebest 107 wins this season.

“We have a tough road ahead of us, Houston’s a great team, but we played them well this year. It’s going to be a dogfight,” Tommy Pham said.

Pham homered in the fifth for the 96-win Rays, who had the smallest payroll in the majors at $66.4 million. And in a playoff meeting between creative, smallbudge­t teams that make the most of limited resources, it was TampaBayth­atcameouto­ntop.

The Rays were unfazed by a towel-swirling Oakland crowd of 54,005 that establishe­d a wildcard record, having recently played at Dodger Stadium and on the road against the Yankees and Red Sox in the season’s final two weeks.

Tampa Bay players raced out of their dugout to celebrate when Marcus Semien struck out to end it, and then started putting on fresh playoff T-shirts and caps.

“It’s a beautiful thing having the lowest payroll in baseball and having the success we did,” center fielder Kevin Kiermaier said before the game. “It always feels good to stick it to the man any time you’re able to in this game, and that’s something to be very proud of.”

The A’s have lost nine straight winner-take-all games since 2000, going 1-15 with a chance to advance to the next postseason round. Their only win was in 2006 against the Twins before being swept in the AL Championsh­ip Series by the Tigers.

Never one to shy from the creative or unorthodox — the Rays used four outfielder­s against Matt Olson — Cash started Diaz at first base to make sure his best bat against lefties was in the lineup.

Diaz returned for the season’s final game at Toronto after being sidelined since July 23. He played in just 79 games this season, 22 of those at first base, with a total of 17 starts.

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