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Rays top Twins, halt three-game skid
TAMPA BAY 7, MINNESOTA 3
 

By Brian Hall
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

MINNEAPOLIS (Ticker) -- For Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Jason
Hammel, the answer to staying in the starting rotation is simple
- just keep having outings like Thursday night.

Hammel went six strong innings, giving up three runs on six hits
while striking out five, and Tampa Bay used a four-run fifth
inning to beat the Minnesota Twins, 7-3, on Thursday night.

Carl Crawford and rookie Evan Longoria each had two hits and an
RBI, and Eric Hinske added his fourth home run of the season in
the winning effort.

J.P. Howell earned his first career save with three scoreless
innings of relief.

A 6-foot-6 righthander, Hammel (1-1) was coming off a
career-high seven-inning performance his last time out in a
no-decision. With injured starters Scott Kazmir and Matt Garza
throwing on the side, Hammel's spot in the rotation might be
short-term.

"I am not thinking about that right now," Hammel said. "I am
pitching to win like the other guys in the rotation. We're all
throwing the ball well. I am confident I will stay in the
rotation if I throw like this."

His counterpart Boof Bonser (1-3) allowed runs in four of the
first five innings. But the righthander really ran into trouble
in the fifth, surrendering an RBI single to Carl Crawford and
then walking B.J. Upton to load the bases with no outs.

Bonser lasted just four-plus innings, giving up seven runs - six
earned - as he walked two and failed to record a strikeout.

"I didn't feel like I had great stuff, but I felt like I could
have stayed out there," Bonser said. "I mean, I was throwing
pitches. Yeah, I threw a lot, but at the same time I wasn't
getting them to hit it at anybody."

Tampa Bay kept things going off reliever Brian Bass as five
straight batters reached base. Nathan Haynes added a two-run
single and later scored on an RBI groundout by Jonny Gomes to
make it 7-2.

The Rays were able to capitalize quickly against Minnesota.
Leading off the game, Akinori Iwamura looped a liner into right
field that right fielder Denard Span charged. But the rookie
seemed to lose the ball in the lights, allowing Iwamura to go to
second on the error. He later scored on an RBI groundout by
Upton.

Upton went 1-for-4 with a walk, an RBI and two runs scored. He
is 13-for-38 (.342) in his last 11 games with two home runs, 11
RBI and nine runs scored.

"To win games like that, of course we scored seven runs, but
when you pitch like that, and we caught the ball, and we did all
of the right things today, and that's why you win." Rays
manager Joe Maddon said.

Hinske's second-inning home run gave Tampa Bay a 2-0 lead.
Signed as a minor league free agent in February, Hinske earned a
spot on the opening day roster and has been a mainstay in the
lineup. He is second on the team in home runs, trailing only
first baseman Carlos Pena.

Tampa Bay was dealt a blow when Pena left the game in the fourth
inning after grounding to third. The Rays already have had a
major league-high 10 players hit the disabled list this season.

Pena is listed as day-to-day and was optimistic after the game
that the injury wasn't serious. He will be re-evaluated Friday.

"I think I went over my speed limit and my leg let me know,"
Pena said. "I felt some discomfort in the back of my leg,
behind my knee, so I pulled up."

Longoria added an RBI single in the fourth.

Hammel made the early run support stand up. It was a welcome
sight, for Tampa Bay had scored just two runs for him in the
first two outings.

"When you get seven runs from your hitters early it makes it
much easier," Hammel said. "It was nice, but it's ups and downs
all the time. You can go out and give up eight runs, and
they'll pull out nine runs for you. And there's other nights
you go eight shutout innings and don't get a run. It's
baseball."

The Twins pecked away with single runs in the third, fourth and
fifth innings. Rookie Matt Tolbert, Delmon Young and Joe Mauer
each had RBI singles.

"We just couldn't find a way to get some runs off that guy over
there," Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire said. "I thought we
had a good chance there early in the game, but it got away from
us. It looked like we were attacking and putting men on base,
and had opportunities. But then the game got away from us in
the fifth."

Tolbert's fourth multi-hit game of the season raised his average
to .419 with a 2-for-4 night to go with a run scored and an
RBI.


 
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