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Rays bounce back in big way, blast Orioles behind Aranda, Diaz homers

Marc Topkin, Tampa Bay Times on

Published in Baseball

BALTIMORE — Apparently, the Rays were right.

You can get your butt kicked in ugly and record-threatening ways, then flush the frustration, come out the next day and get back to what you were doing right.

The result was an 11-3, series-evening win over the Orioles, a good salve for the sting of Friday’s 22-8 loss.

The Rays improved to 47-36, moving to a season-high-matching 11 games over .500 and back to within one-half game of the American League East-leading Yankees. They improved their majors-best record since May 20 to 26-10.

Saturday’s game started somewhat similarly, with the Rays grabbing an early lead, this one 4-0 in the first.

Josh Lowe led off against ex-teammate Zach Eflin with a double, and Brandon Lowe singled him in. With one out, Jonathan Aranda came up big — a 467-foot homer to right that ranks as the third longest of the Statcast era (since 2015), both in Rays history and at Camden Yards.

The combination of a Junior Caminero single, another well-placed Jake Mangum single and Chandler Simpson beating out the back end of a potential double play made it 4-0.

Unlike Friday, the Rays hung on to the lead, and added on.

After Simpson created a run by reaching on a walk, stealing second, going to third on an errant throw and scoring on a sacrifice fly, Yandy Diaz did the heavy lifting in the fourth, swatting a three-run homer.

The Rays got to nine runs when Caminero walked to open the fifth, moved up on the second of Mangum’s three hits, went to third on another Simpson fielder’s choice grounder and scored on Taylor Walls’ second sacrifice fly.

They made it 11- in the seventh, when Mangum and Simpson singled and Matt Thaiss delivered a two-run triple.

Zack Littell won’t get much attention in the game recaps, but his efforts were much appreciated. He worked seven innings, allowing one run on three hits and two walks with five strikeouts, lightening the load on the taxed bullpen.

 

Lefty Joe Rock gave up a two-run homer in the ninth as part of his MLB debut.

Stat of the day

Aranda joined some impressive Statcast era (since 2015) company on Saturday:

Longest homers by a Ray

Avisail Garcia, 485 feet, 5/14/2019

Mike Zunino, 472 feet, 5/11/2021

Aranda, 467, 6/28/2025

Longest homers at Camden Yards

Carlos Correa, 474 feet, 8/10/2019

Ryan Mountcastle, 474 feet, 8/8/2023

Aranda, 467, 6/28/2025


©2025 Tampa Bay Times. Visit at tampabay.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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