The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)
Trouble with Tampa
Yankees drop series; Romo gets save, plays third
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Sergio Romo got to view the game from the perspective of Brooks Robinson, Mike Schmidt and Wade Boggs. And he got a save, too.
Romo relieved in the eighth inning, shifted to third base when Jonny Venters replaced him in the ninth and then struck out Brett Gardner to end the game with two on and give the Tampa Bay Rays a 3-2 win over the New York Yankees on Wednesday.
Romo became the 11th pitcher to also play third base in the same game since 1908, and the first since Philadelphia’s Bill Wilson at Pittsburgh on Aug. 6, 1971, according to Baseball Reference.
“Just to be able to say I played third base in the big league, it’s in the books,” Romo said. “It was a fun game. Very, very fun game.”
Scheduled Rays starter Nathan Eovaldi was traded to AL Eastleading Boston about two hours before game time, and manager Kevin Cash used six pitchers to combine on a seven-hitter.
“Cash and the other guys around here aren’t afraid to mix things up,” Rays center fielder
Kevin Kiermaier said. “They thought it was the best chance for us to win, and we did. So they look like geniuses.”
Tampa Bay improved to 19-23 in games it used its bullpen throughout rather than a traditional starting pitcher.
New York has lost just two series since May, and both are against the Rays. Tampa Bay swept three games in late June, took two of three this week and has won six of its last seven against the Yankees. New York, 14-14 over its last 28 games, acquired reliever Zach Britton from Baltimore late Tuesday but said he will not
report until Thursday’s homestand opener against Kansas City.
“That’s a tough loss,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “Sure, frustrating.”
Neil Walker hit a sacrifice fly in the second inning, but the Rays took a 3-1 lead in the sixth when Kiermaier hit a two-run homer off Luis Cessa (1-2) and C.J. Cron added a homer against Jonathan Holder.
Romo relieved Jose Alvarado with two on and one out in the eighth, allowed Giancarlo Stanton’s sacrifice fly and struck out Gleyber Torres, who went 0 for 3 with a walk in his return from a strained right hip that caused the rookie to miss 15 games. He also made a nifty play up the middle on Matt Duffy’s first-inning grounder.