Rays rally in 10th on Walls, Aranda; extend Yankees’ skid

The recap below covers how the Tampa Bay Rays staged two late rallies to beat the New York Yankees 5-4 in St. Petersburg. New York’s skid stretched to four straight games.

It highlights the dramatic 10th-inning finish and the performances that shaped the night on both sides. The loss stings for New York and shifts the tone of the series.

Rays pull off back-to-back late rallies to walk it off

The Rays found life in the late innings, tying things up in the eighth before landing the final blows in the 10th. St. Petersburg watched a tense showdown as Tampa Bay toppled New York with a walk-off finish that showed off the Rays’ resilience at Tropicana Field.

In the 10th, the automatic runner started on second. A squeeze play and a costly miscue cracked the door open for Tampa Bay.

Walls dropped down a bunt and chaos broke out on the bases, forcing a rushed throw home. Mullins scored the tying run. The play went down as a single.

After Díaz was intentionally walked, Hunter Feduccia struck out. Then Aranda’s one-hopper skipped off Jazz Chisholm Jr.’s glove, and Simpson scored standing up on a fielder’s choice.

The Rays had their moment and didn’t let it slip away.

Walls and Aranda deliver the 10th-inning heroics

Taylor Walls and Jonathan Aranda brought the late-inning spark that decided the game. Walls’ bunt in the 10th set up the tying run, while Aranda’s sharp grounder finished it off as Simpson crossed the plate.

Earlier, the Rays erased an early deficit. The pitching matchup helped them hang around.

Nick Fortes doubled and Yandy Díaz followed with an infield hit to tie the game in the eighth. The Rays showed up with clutch, opportunistic swings.

Caballero’s timely blows lift the Yankees’ offense

A former Ray, José Caballero came through for New York. He delivered a two-run double in the eighth and an RBI single in the 10th, keeping the Yankees alive.

Caballero’s big night showed the visiting club can still answer in big moments, even as the recent slide drags on.

New York’s offensive drought and notable performances

  • The Yankees’ offense has slumped to a .202 team batting average over the four-game skid, managing just six extra-base hits in that span.
  • Aaron Judge went 0-for-3 with two walks on Saturday and remains stuck at .212 for the season, a testament to the hot-and-cold nature of a star slugger in a tough stretch.
  • Offensively, the Yankees found few answers as the Rays leaned on timely hits and disciplined defense to hold the line late in the game.

Pitching notes and series implications

On the mound for the Rays, Nick Martinez gave Tampa Bay a solid outing, allowing one run in 4 2/3 innings. The bullpen picked up the rest.

In the other dugout, Max Fried went eight innings and gave up three runs on six hits. He brought length and efficiency to a game that stayed tight the whole way.

The series finale will feature Cam Schlittler for the Yankees and Drew Rasmussen for the Rays. This matchup could swing the momentum either way.

What this means going forward

Both teams have a lot to think about as they move on. The Rays want to ride the energy from those late-inning rallies.

The Yankees, meanwhile, need to pull themselves together fast if they don’t want to slide even further down in the standings. That wild finish in St. Pete? Just another example of how a couple of sharp hits and a gutsy bunt can tip the scales in baseball when the stakes are high.

 
Here is the source article for this story: Rays extend Yanks’ skid to 4, rally on Walls and Aranda infield grounders in 10th for 5-4 win

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