Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Alex Cobb fans 12 as Rays win 11th of past 12 games

Final
Series: Game 2 of 3

Brewers 1

(59-49, 29-23 away)

Rays 5

(53-54, 26-29 home)



84°
Clear

7:10 PM ET, July 29, 2014
Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, Florida 

123456789 R H E
MIL 000010000 1 3 0
TB 00000104 - 5 8 0
W: A. Cobb (7-6)
L: W. Smith (1-3)
 
 
 
 
Associated Press
Cobb Shuts Down Brewers
Baseball Tonight Spotlight: Alex Cobb struck out 12 over eight innings as the Rays rolled to their 11th win in 12 games.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Alex Cobb pitched, Ben Zobrist hit and the Tampa Bay Rays won again.
Tuesday night's 5-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers was the Rays' 11th in 12 games and it moved them within one game of .500 (53-54) for the first time since April 23.
"This is the team we are," said Zobrist, who drove in the Rays' first two runs with a home run and a double. "We knew that this is the team we could be in spring training. It just took a long time for it to show up.
"From here on out, I don't think we're ever going to return to the way we were playing before June 11."
Since that date the Rays are 29-12, the best record in the majors over that span.
Cobb struck out 12 in eight innings and won his third straight start, attaining a winning record (7-6) for the first time this season.
"I wish it would have happened sooner, but when you go into a rut you learn a lot about yourself mechanically," he said. "But it does feel like I'm starting to get in the groove again. Right now everybody's clicking and it'll make for a nice run."
With the Brewers up 1-0 in the sixth, Zobrist hit his ninth homer, the only run off Milwaukee starter Matt Garza. Zobrist's double in the eighth off reliever Will Smith (1-3) put the Rays ahead for the first time. Pinch-hitter Logan Forsythe followed with another RBI double and the Rays broke it open with a four-run inning.
Garza, who pitched for the Rays for three seasons, gave up five hits and two walks in seven innings, striking out two.
"I knew runs were going to be at a minimum," he said. "We lost to a team that's really, really hot right now. You make a mistake and they make you pay for it."
Cobb, who is 5-0 in his last six starts, gave up only three hits and two walks before Grant Balfour finished it for Tampa Bay.
"We're playing for the World Series," declared Rays manager Joe Maddon. "That's our objective from Day One, to get to the playoffs and World Series. That has not changed. I'm telling you our record is not reflecting it yet, but if we keep playing like this it soon shall."
The Brewers, who have lost four of five, have scored two runs and had 12 hits in their last three games while striking out 30 times.
Scooter Gennett drove in Milwaukee's run with a sacrifice fly in the fifth after a leadoff single by Aramis Ramirez.
TRAINER'S ROOM
Brewers: The team expects to make a decision soon about the roster status of reliever Jim Henderson, who pitched in a rehab game late Tuesday.
Rays: Outfielder Wil Myers (broken right wrist) plans to take batting practice Saturday. Catcher Ryan Hanigan (strained left oblique) is sore after two days of batting practice and is expected to remain out until next week.
ON DECK
Brewers: Right-hander Yovani Gallardo (5-5) makes his first start against Tampa Bay Wednesday.
Rays: Left-hander David Price (11-7) looks to win his seventh consecutive start Wednesday.
STRANGE TIME TO GET TOSSED
Rays shortstop Yunel Escobar was ejected by umpire Bob Davidson during the Rays' eighth-inning rally for arguing a called strike with the bases loaded. It was the third time Escobar has been ejected this season and the second time in a week.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press
 
 
 
 

Game Information

StadiumTropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
Attendance16,249 (47.7% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time2:56
Weatherindoors
UmpiresHome Plate - Bill Welke, First Base - John Tumpane, Second Base - James Hoye, Third Base - Bob Davidson

Research Notes

Matt Garza has gotten hitters to chase his slider outside of the strike zone 38.7 percent of the time this season, which is 3.7 percentage points above the league average among qualified starters. However, the Rays have Ben Zobrist, Desmond Jennings and Matt Joyce in their lineup. These are the players with the three lowest chase percentages against sliders among qualified hitters.
 

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