Rays combine for four homers in blasting visiting Yankees

Rays combine for four homers in blasting visiting Yankees

Published Aug. 23, 2013 10:11 p.m. ET

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- Chris Archer is young, confident and also
unbeaten against the Yankees. Just don't suggest the Tampa Bay rookie
pitcher might have New York's number.

"Don't want to go there," manager Joe
Maddon said Friday night after the Rays topped their AL East rivals 7-2,
with Archer winning three times with a 1.23 ERA in three starts against
the Yankees.

"We're not going to canonize the guy.
We'll just let him keep pitching," Maddon added. "He's doing a great
job. He's a young man and he's very focused; I want to keep him on this
path. He looks good."

Jose Lobaton homered and drove in four
runs in support of Archer (7-5), a 24-year-old right-hander who won
twice earlier this season at Yankee Stadium, including a two-hit shutout
on July 27. He gave up four hits over seven innings this time.

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Evan Longoria, Matt Joyce and Ben
Zobrist also went deep for Tampa Bay, hitting solo shots off Hiroki
Kuroda (11-9), who tied a career high for homers allowed -- the first
given up by the Yankees starter in nearly two months.

The loss stopped a five-game winning streak for New York, which had won 10 of 12 to climb back into the AL playoff race.

"It's one game," Yankees manager Joe
Girardi said. "We've just come off playing extremely well. You have to
turn the page and go win tomorrow."

Archer, who also won in New York on June
23, yielded a run-scoring single to Alfonso Soriano in the first inning
and Brett Gardner's triple and Robinson Cano's RBI grounder in the
sixth. In three starts against the Yankees, he's allowed three runs, 12
hits and struck out 14 in 22 innings.

"The defense was incredible. We made
play after play, so I was just getting more comfortable out there. ... I
really didn't feel like I could fail," Archer said.

Alex Rodriguez, playing while appealing
his 211-game suspension, was booed every time he came to the plate and
went 0 for 4 with a strikeout for the Yankees. Eduardo Nunez had two of
New York's four hits off Archer, including an infield single.

Archer walked two, hit a batter and
struck out four to win for the first time since beating the Yankees 1-0
last month. Over his next four starts, he went 0-2 with a 4.79 ERA.

Before the game, the Rays honored
Mariano Rivera, who's making his last regular-season visit to Tropicana
Field, by unveiling a sand sculpture of the Yankees closer near the main
entrance of the domed stadium. The team also presented him with check
for $3,150 for the Mariano Rivera Foundation -- $50 for each save he's
earned against Tampa Bay during his career.

Meanwhile, newly acquired outfielder
David DeJesus made his debut for the Rays, going 1 for 3, scoring a run
and making a nice running catch up against the wall in left field. Tampa
Bay obtained him from Washington earlier in the day for a player to be
named or cash.

"That's why we picked him up," Archer said. "He's a great defensive player and a clutch hitter."

Lobaton's three-run, second-inning
homer off the right field foul pole was the first off Kuroda since June
30, when the 38-year-old right-hander gave up three in a loss at
Baltimore. Longoria and Joyce homered in the third for a 5-1 lead.
Lobaton added a RBI single in the fourth and Zobrist homered in the
fifth to make it 7-1.

"When you get in a hole like that, it's
tough to get back out of it, especially when somebody is throwing the
ball as well as Archer," Gardner said. "It just wasn't our day."

Kuroda allowed a season-high seven runs over six innings. He also matched a season high by yielding nine hits.

"It was really strange," Girardi said. "He just didn't have his stuff tonight."

NOTES:
Girardi said SS Derek Jeter (strained right calf) will continue his
rehab assignment with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre through at least
Saturday. ... With rookie RF Wil Myers getting a night off, Matt Joyce
moved to right field and DeJesus was inserted into Tampa Bay's lineup in
left field. To make room on the roster for the 33-year-old DeJesus, the
Rays designated OF Jason Bourgeois for assignment. ... New York 1B Lyle
Overbay was out of the lineup due to flulike symptoms.

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