USA TODAY US Edition

Rays stinging with bats, too

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about 2,500 miles from home.

That’s just how they operate.

When you play in a midsized market in front of the smallest home crowds in the majors, that’s simply a fact of life.

“It’s nuts that we’re in second place in one of the toughest divisions in baseball and nobody’s saying anything about it,” outfielder Steven Souza Jr. said. “We love to be flying under the radar. One of the unique characteri­stics about this team is nobody needs to be in the limelight. We don’t really care about who’s paying attention or not. Eventually, somebody’s going to have to pay attention or they’re going to get caught off guard.”

Those assiduousl­y ignoring the Rays are missing the fifth-most-improved team in the majors, by winning percentage, and a burgeoning scoring force. These are not the offensesta­rved Rays of years past, when they relied on an ample supply of pitching and hoped to scratch out three or four runs.

Tampa Bay set a franchise record with 216 home runs last year but ranked next-to-last in the league in scoring at 4.15 runs per game, as 63% of its homers came with the bases empty. This year’s edition is on pace for 240 home runs. Although its percentage of solo shots is in the same range (61%), the club has raised its batting average and walk rate, leading to increased scoring.

The Rays are averaging 4.7 runs — their highest total since 2010 and nearly a full run higher than in 2014, which marked the beginning of their three-year spell of missing the playoffs after reaching the postseason four times in six years.

“A lot of guys have realized the type of team we are,” said Logan Morrison, whose 26 home runs are tops among five Rays in double figures. “We don’t get thrown out on the bases as much. That helps. And we take our walks.

“Yeah, we strike out a lot, but we walk a lot and we hit home runs. That’s what we do.

Morrison and Souza (19) have set season highs in home runs, lending a hand to a typically sturdy starting corps that ranks second in the league in ERA at 3.93.

Rookie Jacob Faria has sparkled since his June 7 debut, going 4-0 with a 2.00 ERA and completing at least six innings in all seven of his starts.

He joins Chris Archer, Alex Cobb, Jake Odorizzi and Blake Snell in a rotation that has been on a roll, firing quality starts in all four games after the break as the Rays (50-44) have surged to a season-best six games over .500.

That should be enough to get the attention of the division’s big names.

Tampa Bay holds a 11⁄ 2- game lead on the Yankees for the first wild-card spot, though it’s a bit early to start doing any postseason math, what with 68 games left in the regular season, including 10 against New York and eight against Boston.”

The more immediate focus might be getting help for the bullpen, which ranks 11th in the league with a 4.40 ERA and has blown 16 save chances. Tampa Bay executives are said to be scouring the reliever market ahead of the trade deadline July 31, with a lefty a particular­ly glaring need.

Alex Colome looked shaky Monday in allowing a ninth-inning run to raise his ERA to 3.80 — a lessthan-stellar figure for a closer — but still converted his 27th save in 31 chances.

Fortunatel­y for the Rays, the front office has already complement­ed the core, with a June trade for former Miami Marlins shortstop Adeiny Hechavarri­a, and the club retains significan­t flexibilit­y for further moves.

As for the players already here, Odorizzi’s outing Monday was highly encouragin­g, as he threw seven innings of one-hit ball while pitching almost exclusivel­y from the stretch, after a series of rough outings that had him hoping for a reset at the break.

He appears to have pressed the right button, and a return to his form of last season (10-6, 3.69 ERA) would add another valuable weapon to a club that seems to have a potent enough arsenal to stay in the race, whether anybody notices or not.

“I think it puts us above the rest if we can all throw like we’re capable of,” said Odorizzi, who improved to 6-4 with a 4.37 ERA.

“There’s been a lot of guys who have been throwing the ball good for us.

“Faria’s been fantastic, Archer’s been great, so has Cobb. It was on Snell and I to turn it around a little bit.

“The way our offense is going, if our pitching comes around like it’s coming right now, we’re going to be a tough team to beat going forward.”

“Yeah, we strike out a lot, but we walk a lot and we hit home runs. That’s what we do.” Rays first baseman Logan Morrison

 ?? RICHARD MACKSON, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? First baseman Logan Morrison leads the Rays’ rejuvenate­d offense with 26 home runs, a career high.
RICHARD MACKSON, USA TODAY SPORTS First baseman Logan Morrison leads the Rays’ rejuvenate­d offense with 26 home runs, a career high.
 ?? KIM KLEMENT, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Chris Archer, who is 7-5 with a 3.91 ERA, is part of a rotation that sports a 3.93 ERA that ranks second in the American League.
KIM KLEMENT, USA TODAY SPORTS Chris Archer, who is 7-5 with a 3.91 ERA, is part of a rotation that sports a 3.93 ERA that ranks second in the American League.

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