News
A’s Fall Victim to ‘Storybook Ending’ for Siri, Rays
Comments
Link successfully copied
Brandon Lowe of the Tampa Bay Rays slides in safely with an RBI triple ahead of the throw to Oakland Athletics third baseman Abraham Toro in St. Petersburg, Fla., on May 29, 2024. (Mike Carlson/AP Photo)
By The Associated Press
5/29/2024Updated: 5/29/2024

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.—Jose Siri made a tremendous catch in the top of the ninth inning and singled home the winning run in the bottom half as the Tampa Bay Rays defeated the Oakland Athletics 4–3 on Wednesday night.

Amed Rosario doubled leading off the ninth against Michael Kelly (2–2), went to third on Alex Jackson’s sacrifice bunt, and scored on Siri’s hit.

“Unreal [catch], and then it’s like a storybook ending,” Rays starting pitcher Ryan Pepiot said.

Tampa Bay’s Pete Fairbanks (1–2) survived the ninth after allowing a leadoff double to Miguel Andújar. He retired the next three batters on balls all hit 102.3 mph or more, including Zack Gelof’s 107.7 mph drive to center that Siri caught with a leap.

Siri, through a translator, called his catch “pretty impressive.

“I was very concentrated and never took my eye off the ball,” he said.

Andújar had a fourth-inning sacrifice fly and put the Athletics up 2–1 with an RBI infield single in the sixth. He hit a three-run homer in Oakland’s 3–0 victory over the Rays on Tuesday night.

Tampa Bay won for the second time in nine games. Oakland has dropped 17 of its past 23 games.

Max Schuemann was on second when JJ Bleday singled to left in the eighth and, after getting the signal to try and score, stopped and returned to third when left fielder Randy Arozarena threw to the plate. When Jackson threw to second to retire Bleday, Schuemann broke for the plate and scored to draw Oakland even at 3–3.

Isaac Paredes had an RBI double in the seventh to give Tampa Bay a 3–2 lead.

Tampa Bay pulled even at 2–2 on pinch-hitter Jonathan Aranda’s sixth-inning, run-scoring single. The inning ended when Arozarena was thrown out by Scott Alexander on a straight steal attempt of home with Jackson, who is in a 0-for-25 slide, batting.

“Arozarena is a real aggressive player,“ Oakland Manager Mark Kotsay said. ”Thankfully, the dugout yelled loud enough for Scott to step off, and he made a smart baseball play.”

The Rays tied it 1–1 on Brandon Lowe’s RBI triple off Joey Estes in the fourth.

Estes, in his fourth start this season and sixth overall, allowed one run and two hits in five innings.

Rays pitcher Ryan Pepiot throws against the A's in St. Petersburg, Fla., on May 29, 2024. (Mike Carlson/AP Photo)

Rays pitcher Ryan Pepiot throws against the A's in St. Petersburg, Fla., on May 29, 2024. (Mike Carlson/AP Photo)

“I thought he had good stuff,” Mr. Kotsay said. “I thought he performed really well and gave us a chance to win the game.”

Pepiot gave up two runs, three hits, and struck out seven over 5 2/3 innings.

The game was delayed about 10 minutes with one out in the fifth inning when plate umpire Brian O’Nora departed. O'Nora appeared to have cold-like symptoms early on and got hit on the mask by a foul ball in the fourth.

Second-base umpire Derek Thomas replaced O'Nora behind the plate.

Trainer’s Room

Athletics: First baseman J.D. Davis, who left Tuesday night with a bruised hand after getting hit by a pitch, didn’t play but avoided the injured list.

Rays: Infield prospect Junior Caminero (quadriceps strain) was placed on the injured list by Triple-A Durham, N.C., and is expected to miss four to six weeks.

Up Next

A’s left-hander Kyle Muller (0–1, 3.48 earned-run average) is set to make his first start of the season Thursday after 13 relief appearances. Rays lefty Tyler Alexander (2–3, 6.06) is expected to either start or follow an opener.

By Mark Didtler

Share This Article:

©2023-2025 California Insider All Rights Reserved. California Insider is a part of Epoch Media Group.