Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Rays tighten AL East race

Shields pitches eight strong innings to outduel Sabathia in 4-3 victory

Image: RaysGetty Images

Tampa's Jeff Keppinger celebrates with Elliot Johnson after scoring during the Rays' 4-3 victory over the Yankees on Monday.

By FRED GOODALL

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 6:22 p.m. ET Sept. 3, 2012

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Baltimore isn't the only team barreling in on the sputtering New York Yankees in the AL East. Tampa Bay is closing fast, too.

James Shields pitched eight strong innings to outlast CC Sabathia and light-hitting Chris Gimenez drove in two runs Monday as the Rays beat the Yankees 4-3, further tightening the division and fueling Tampa Bay's bid to reach the playoffs for the fourth time in five years.

The Yankees, who led by 10 games earlier this summer, had their edge cut to one game by Baltimore, which beat Toronto 4-0. The Rays moved within 2 1-2 games of New York.

"This is the start of September, and this is where you want to be," Shields said. "In spring training, we always want to be in the playoff hunt, and now here we are again."

Shields (13-8) and the Rays ruined the return of Alex Rodriguez. The slugger went 1 for 4 with a strikeout in his first game after being sidelined six weeks with a broken left hand.

Gimenez snapped a 3-all tie in the eighth with a two-out grounder that just made it to the outfield for a single off David Robertson (1-5).

Gimenez, recalled from the minors on Saturday and batting just .203 when the day began, also had a RBI single off Sabathia in the second.

"I would say that is probably one of the funnest things that's happened. It was fun just to be up in that situation. It was a confidence booster, righty on the mound ? being who it is ? and he's pretty darn good himself," said the 29-year-old catcher, in his fourth major league season after stints with Cleveland and Seattle.

"Just getting a chance to go up there, hey, what's the worst that can happen? I get out? OK, I've done that before in my life," Gimenez added. "I told myself before I got in the box that this is definitely the biggest at-bat of your life, so you might as well do something fun."

Fernando Rodney pitched the ninth for Tampa Bay, striking out Rodriguez and earning his 41st save by fanning pinch hitter Curtis Granderson with the tying run on third base. Granderson had been out since leaving Saturday's game with tendinitis in his right hamstring.

"I just loved the way we played. I thought we were so up for that game from the first pitch," said Rays manager Joe Maddon, who was ejected in the eighth, before Tampa Bay scored the go-ahead run.

"When we're playing better teams, I think we play our better baseball," Maddon added. "Everybody talks about the difficulty of the schedule the remaining part of the season, I kind of like it. Actually, I think it's going to bring out the best of us."

Sabathia allowed three runs and eight hits, struck out four and walked two in seven innings. He gave up a solo homer to B.J. Upton in the third and a walk, single and Evan Longoria's RBI grounder that made it 3-3 in the fifth.

Robertson gave up a leadoff single to Jeff Keppinger in the eighth, and it didn't look like it would wind up hurting the Yankees when Russell Martin threw out pinch runner Rich Thompson on a close play at second. Maddon trotted out of the dugout to protest the call and was ejected after an animated discussion with second base umpire Bob Davidson.

But Tampa Bay wasn't finished. Ryan Roberts singled and stole second before Gimenez delivered his go-ahead hit on a grounder that just got past second baseman Robinson Cano.

Cano said he felt a twinge in his left hip when he reached for the ball. The All-Star who's hitting .303 with 28 homers and 71 RBIs said he wasn't sure if he'll be able to play Tuesday night.

"I was trying to reach for ball. It's a little tight," Cano said.

Rodriguez had been out since breaking his left hand on July 24, when he was hit by a pitch by Seattle's Felix Hernandez. Manager Joe Girardi plugged him into his customary cleanup spot as the designated hitter to bolster an offense missing the injured Mark Teixeira and Granderson, who have combined to hit 57 homers.

A-Rod said before the game that was not returning to "save the day" for the struggling Yankees, but rather to be "part of a winning team."

Rodriguez popped up in his first at-bat before singling up the middle and scoring on Raul Ibanez's triple in the fourth. Shields retired him on a grounder in the sixth inning, and Rodney struck him out to begin the ninth.


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