Orlando Sentinel

Rays squander lead in 9th before losing at Baltimore in

- By Marc Topkin

BALTIMORE — The top of the first inning seemed eventful enough Sunday afternoon.

The Rays started with three straight hits — the last of which forced Orioles starter Spenser Watkins from the game with an injury — got a three-run home run from Isaac Paredes and scored four runs overall.

But there was an awful lot more to come, including a frustratin­g ending with a 7-6 loss in 11 innings, the second time they were walked off in three days.

Rougned Odor bounced a ball that got past first baseman Ji-Man Choi (that was scored a fielder’s choice) to score the winning run off Dusten Knight, a reliever called up Sunday morning after Andrew Kittredge went on the injured list. Chris Owings had bunted Adley Rutschman to third to start the inning.

All that came after the Rays blew a two-run lead in the ninth, facilitate­d by a balk when reliever Ryan Thompson dropped the ball; sat through a 51-minute rain delay; and then failed to score in the top of the 10th and 11th despite having multiple runners on base.

Thompson got off to a tough start in the ninth when Ryan Mountcastl­e blooped a ball to shallow centerfiel­d that Kevin Kiermaier charged in and slid for but couldn’t grab.

An out later, Thompson walked Ramon Urias to put the tying run on first. While facing Odor, who beat the Rays on Friday, Thompson dropped the ball, moving the runners to third and second.

After a popup to third for the second out, with the dark clouds moving over Camden Yards and the wind swirling, pinch-hitter Austin Hays laced a single to leftfield to score both runs and make it a 6-6 tie.

There was plenty before that:

Randy Arozarena continued his Baltimore bashing with two more hits, made a diving catch in the third that saved two runs and the lead, then an awkward-looking error on a fly ball in the seventh that cost the Rays a run.

Veteran Corey Kluber had a rough start, lasting just three innings while throwing 73 pitches, forcing the Rays to use six relievers.

Former high school teammates Brett Phillips and Joey Krehbiel got to face off for the first time in the majors. Phillips singled and stole second off the Orioles reliever, who was pressed into first-inning duty when Watkins was struck on the right arm by Choi’s 105.9mph line drive and sustained a bruise. Phillips had three

hits on the day.

Manager Kevin Cash was ejected, for the first time since 2020, by home plate umpire Bill Welke after Choi was called out on strikes to start the fifth.

 ?? TERRANCE WILLIAMS/AP ?? Tampa Bay’s Isaac Paredes is greeted at home plate by Ji-Man Choi (second from right) and Vidal Brujan (right) after hitting a three-run homer to get the Rays off to a promising start on Sunday that turned into a disappoint­ing loss at Baltimore.
TERRANCE WILLIAMS/AP Tampa Bay’s Isaac Paredes is greeted at home plate by Ji-Man Choi (second from right) and Vidal Brujan (right) after hitting a three-run homer to get the Rays off to a promising start on Sunday that turned into a disappoint­ing loss at Baltimore.

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