Times Colonist

Arozarena stars as Rays beat Jays

- FRED GOODALL

TAMPA BAY 5 TORONTO 1

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida — Randy Arozarena homered and drove in two runs, celebratin­g his solo shot by signing autographs for fans after returning to the dugout, to lead the Tampa Bay Rays to a 5-1 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Saturday.

“It makes me happy to be able to sign autographs for the kids because you never know, it could be their dream and they can identify with me there,” the All-Star outfielder said through a translator. “Hopefully, one day they can make it to the major leagues as well and do the same.”

Right-hander Zack Littell (1-0) allowed four singles over six scoreless innings for the Rays, who have won two straight after losing by six runs to their AL East rivals on opening day.

Arozarena, a first-time AllStar a year ago, had an RBI single off Yusei Kikuchi (0-1) in the third inning, then went deep against the Toronto starter in the fifth.

Littell walked two and struck out six while only allowing just one runner past second base in a 90-pitch outing.

The game was delayed briefly when benches cleared at the end of the seventh inning, after Blue Jays reliever Génesis Cabrera exchanged words with Tampa Bay’s José Caballero and shoved the shortstop, who had been tagged out at third base to end the inning. “I’m just playing baseball. I don’t want any problems with anyone,” Caballero said. “I didn’t want it to go farther than what it was. Unfortunat­ely, he didn’t think the same way.”

Since getting solo homers from Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., George Springer and Cavan Biggio in an 8-2 season-opening win at Tropicana Field, Toronto has been held to just three runs over the next two games — one on them on Springer’s second homer.

The Blue Jays gave themselves a chance to get back in the game in the seventh, when Daulton Varsho drew a leadoff walk and Ernie Clement singled off reliever Colin Poche. Biggio’s two-out single trimmed Toronto’s deficit to 3-1 before Phil Maton came on to get Springer to fly to centre to end the threat.

Kikuchi won a career-high 11 games last season, while also posting career highs for innings pitched (167 2/3), strikeouts (181) and ERA (3.86). A pair of two-out walks set the stage for Arozarena to give Tampa Bay a 1-0 lead with his run-scoring single.

The 32-year-old lefty escaped further damage in the third by getting Curtis Mead to ground into an inning-ending force play with the bases-loaded.

Arozarena’s opposite-field homer to right made it 2-0 in the fifth. Caballero’s sacrifice fly drove in a third run off Kikuchi, who yielded three runs and six hits over 4 1/3 innings.

 ?? STEVE NESIUS, AP ?? Umpire Manny Gonzalez and Toronto Blue Jays catcher Brian Serven watch as the Tampa Bay Rays’ Randy Arozarena hits a solo home run off Toronto starter Yusei Kikuchi during the fifth inning on Saturday.
STEVE NESIUS, AP Umpire Manny Gonzalez and Toronto Blue Jays catcher Brian Serven watch as the Tampa Bay Rays’ Randy Arozarena hits a solo home run off Toronto starter Yusei Kikuchi during the fifth inning on Saturday.

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