The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Rays split series vs. Yanks with 2-1 win

- By MARK DIDTLER Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. >> Charlie Morton came up big again for the Tampa Bay Rays.

He struck out 10 in 5 2/3 innings to help the Rays split a fourgame series with the AL Eastleadin­g New Yok Yankees, 2-1 on Sunday.

Morton (10-2) allowed one run, five hits and one walk in lowering his AL-best ERA to 2.32. The AL All-Star has given up two or fewer runs in 15 of 19 starts.

“I feel good about my body of work in the first half,” Morton said. “I think for the most part I kept the team in the game.”

Emilio Pagan, the fourth Tampa Bay reliever, worked the ninth to get his fifth save and complete the five-hitter.

Brett Gardner homered and James Paxton (5-4) gave up two runs and seven hits with 11 strikeouts over six innings for the Yankees, who have a 6 ½ lead over Tampa Bay.

“We’re in a really good spot,” Gardner said. “Overall, I think the first half has gone really well for us. We played some good baseball. We’ve, obviously, dealt with a lot of adversity.”

New York has had 21 players in 24 stints on the injured list. Ace Luis Severino, reliever Dellin Betances and slugger Giancarlo Stanton are among 13 players currently on the IL.

New York took the first two games of the series, both in extra innings, before the Rays won Saturday on Travis d’Arnaud’s tiebreakin­g solo homer with two outs in the ninth.

“We were in every game, and they know that,” Rays left fielder Tommy Pham said.

“It could have gone four games to zero either way. That just shows how tough we play each other.”

D’Arnaud doubled leading off the first and scored when secondplac­e hitter Pham hit a liner to center that resulted in a double when the Yankees left second base uncovered.

“It was heads-up by Pham,” New York manager Aaron Boone said.

Pham went to third on Yandy Diaz’s single and came home to put the Rays up 2-0 on a grounder by Avisail Garcia.

Gardner homered for the third consecutiv­e game on a secondinni­ng solo shot. It was his third homer in 17 at-bats against Morton.

Morton worked out of a two-on, no-out jam in the third by striking out Aaron Hicks and Aaron Judge, and getting a fly ball from Didi Gregorius.

“There were a couple of jams that he got out of,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “To do it against that lineup, which is as good as anybody in baseball, it shows how much he was on today.”

Judge took a third strike called by plate umpire Vic Carapazza, which the slugger and Boone thought was low.

“I really thought Judgy worked a walk there, which is a big play in that game,” Boone said. “Very frustratin­g.”

Judge struck out in all three atbats against Morton.

“He can work that two-seam fastball on both sides of the plate,” Judge said. “And then he keeps you honest with that big curve

ball. It’s a tough at-bat.”

 ?? SCOTT AUDETTE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Charlie Morton works from the mound against the New York Yankees during the first inning of a baseball game Sunday July 7, 2019, in St. Petersburg, Fla.
SCOTT AUDETTE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Charlie Morton works from the mound against the New York Yankees during the first inning of a baseball game Sunday July 7, 2019, in St. Petersburg, Fla.

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