Tampa Bay Rays, Houston Astros
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The Rays are tired of hearing about their problems at Steinbrenner Field. That makes 2,000,000 of us. Tampa Bay did a lot of things right on Monday night — including fighting back from an early three-run deficit — but still came up short in a 4-3 loss to the Astros in front of announced sellout of 10,
The Rays knew what they were up against Wednesday afternoon. Astros right-hander Hunter Brown has been one of the Majors’ most dominant starters this season, with six wins, an ERA lower than everyone but Max Fried and an arsenal full of devastating pitches.
The Rays enter Saturday with a 20-24 record, holding down fourth in the American League East. Of those 24 losses, the lion's share have come in "home" games. The team holds an 11-17 record at "home," with a 9-7 record on the road.
TAMPA — Evan Longoria’s induction into the Rays Hall of Fame has been only a matter of time, and the team on Wednesday provided the framework, announcing the ceremony will take place sometime next year at Tropicana Field.
Hunter Brown suffered his worst start of an otherwise brilliant season, giving up three home runs as the Astros dropped the rubber game against the Rays.
There has been plenty of discussion about the Rays’ struggles at George M. Steinbrenner Field and what they need to do to turn things around inside their temporary home ballpark. Indeed, the numbers are jarring.
TAMPA — The Rays turned a frustrating night into a celebratory one, rallying for two runs in the eighth inning to tie the Astros, then walking them off in the ninth for a 3-2 win.