It was a day of crooked numbers for much of the American League East. The Yankees rode their 13-run (!) third inning to victory over the Athletics. Meanwhile, Boston and Toronto were on opposite ends of high-scoring games with the BoSox emerging victorious as the Jays got routed by Baltimore.
Unfortunately for New York, Tampa Bay also won on Sunday. The Rays’ victory means the Yanks gain no ground on the division leaders. The two clubs are tied in the win column but the Rays have three games in hand.
One of those games will be made up Monday with the Yanks off while Tamps hosts the cellar-dwelling Detroit Tigers. Go Detroit… words I don’t often say.
Tampa Bay Rays (36-20) 5, Los Angeles Angels (23-37) 2
It is probably asking too much for the stumbling, bumbling Angels to take a series from the AL East-leading Rays. They gave it the old college try, however, blowing out Tampa Saturday after choking away a late lead Friday. Sunday, the Rays didn’t quite lead wire-to-wire to take the series, but it was close. After the two clubs swapped runs in the opening two innings, Tampa plated two in the third, giving them a lead they never surrendered. First, Victor Mesa, Jr. drove in a run with a single. Then, Cedric Mullins drew a bases-loaded walk to make the score 3-1.
The Angels managed to close within one but in the seventh Tampa kept tacking on. After Ben Williamson singled in a fourth Rays run, Yandy Díaz walked with the sacks juiced to make it 5-2. I’d say the Angels should stop walking guys with the bases loaded, but on a day when Angels pitching walked nine Rays in total, it was probably inevitable a couple of them happened at the worst possible time.
Shane McClanahan was nails outside of the run he allowed in the second inning. The southpaw threw five innings of one-run ball, lowering his season ERA to 2.45. For his career, he’s now pitching to a 2.96 ERA with a 1.09 WHIP. He also now has a 1.29 career ERA against the Angels in five starts, spanning 28 innings. I suspect they’re getting mighty sick of McClanahan, who looks like he’s back in peak form after missing all of 2024 and 2025.
Other Games
Toronto Blue Jays (29-31) 5, Baltimore Orioles (28-32) 9: This was the very definition of “not as close as the box score suggests.” Thanks in large part to a Colton Cowser three-run home run, Baltimore bullied Toronto early, staking themselves to a 6-0 lead through three innings. For Cowser, who’s had a miserable last year-plus at the dish, that had to feel good. Not content, the O’s scored three more in the sixth to go up 9-0. The Jays broke the goose egg in the run column in the seventh and then salvaged some dignity with a four-run eighth. The loss leaves the Jays nine games back of the division-leading Rays as the calendar turns to June.
Cleveland Guardians (34-27) 4, Boston Red Sox (25-33) 9: The BoSox are another team looking at a big deficit early, though they picked up a win Sunday. The seventh was the key inning: trailing 4-3 when the stanza began, by the time Boston finished hitting they scored six to take a commanding late lead. Masataka Yoshida’s two-run single gave Boston a 6-4 lead then a pair of former Yankee legends took over. First, Isiah Kiner-Falefa singled in a run, continuing his strong start at the plate (in admitttedly limited playing time). Then, Caleb Durbin, off to a horrific start at the dish, plated two more with a triple.
Seattle Mariners (31-29) 3, Arizona Diamondbacks (31-27) 2 (10 innings): Piggybacking two established starting pitchers off each other seems like a good way to annoy the crap out of both of them. But it seems to be working for the Mariners with Bryce Miller and Luis Castillo. The former got the start and hurled five shutout innings, lowering his ERA to 1.71, before handing the ball over to the struggling Castillo. Castillo surrendered a narrow 2-1 Seattle lead in the eighth, allowing a Ketel Marte sacrifice fly to plate the game-tying run that eventually sent this to extras. With Castillo entering the game in the sixth, he still had plenty left in his arm and kept the D-Backs from plating their Manfred Man in the top of the tenth. In the bottom, a Victor Robles single off old friend Jonathan Loáisiga brought home the winning run for the AL West-leading M’s.











