Final Apr 29
MIN 1 +118 o8.0
CLE 2 -127 u8.0
Final Apr 29
NYY 15 -170 o9.5
BAL 3 +156 u9.5
Final Apr 29
CHC 9 -146 o9.0
PIT 0 +134 u9.0
Final Apr 29
WAS 6 +168 o8.5
PHI 7 -185 u8.5
Final Apr 29
KC 3 +139 o8.0
TB 1 -151 u8.0
Final Apr 29
BOS 10 -130 o7.5
TOR 2 +120 u7.5
Final Apr 29
AZ 3 +117 o8.0
NYM 8 -126 u8.0
Final Apr 29
MIL 7 -244 o8.0
CHW 2 +220 u8.0
Final Apr 29
ATH 2 +176 o8.5
TEX 15 -193 u8.5
Final Apr 29
DET 4 +102 o8.0
HOU 6 -111 u8.0
Final Apr 29
ATL 8 -200 o11.0
COL 2 +182 u11.0
Final Apr 29
SF 4 -115 o7.0
SD 7 +106 u7.0
Final Apr 29
LAA 3 +193 o7.5
SEA 5 -214 u7.5
Final Apr 29
MIA 2 +181 o8.5
LAD 15 -200 u8.5

Tampa Bay @ San Diego preview

PETCO Park

Last Meeting ( Apr 25, 2025 ) Tampa Bay 1, San Diego 0

One of the Tampa Bay Rays' offensive mainstays for the past six years has started to hit.

Not surprisingly, Tampa Bay is starting to win games.

Yandy Diaz has seven hits and five RBIs in the past three games, all Rays victories, and will try to keep his roll going on Saturday when they go for a series win against the Padres in San Diego.

After logging three-hit games on Wednesday and Thursday night in wins at Arizona, Diaz managed a hit and the game's only RBI Friday night in a 1-0 blanking of San Diego. His sacrifice fly to deep left with the bases loaded in the top of the third inning scored Taylor Walls.

Diaz was hitting just .213 after going 0-for-4 Tuesday night in Arizona and hitting into a crucial double play that killed an eighth-inning rally with the team trailing just 3-1. His batting average is now .250.

"If we could hand-pick somebody to come up, that's him," said Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash of Diaz after Tuesday night's loss. "And we would do it again tomorrow night, and have confidence that he'll get it going."

Next up for the Rays to get going is second baseman Brandon Lowe, who's hitting only .209 after going 1-for-4 on Friday night. Lowe hasn't collected an extra-base hit since he slugged a home run at Texas on April 5 but has hit the ball harder than his average suggests.

"I've caught a really bad case of the at-'em balls," Lowe said.

The next potential opponent for Lowe is Dylan Cease (1-1, 6.04 ERA), the scheduled starter for San Diego. Cease allowed two runs on six hits and a walk Sunday night over five innings of his team's 3-2 win in Houston, striking out six, though he didn't figure in the decision. He's 1-2 with a 5.40 earned run average in six career starts against Tampa Bay.

The Rays will hunt a series win behind Ryan Pepiot (1-3, 4.82), who last worked on Sunday and took a 4-0 loss to the New York Yankees. He gave up six hits and three runs over six innings, walking one and striking out seven. Pepiot is 0-1 with a 5.73 ERA in three career games, two of them starts, against the Padres.

But he might be catching them at the right time. San Diego has lost five of its past seven games and hasn't scored a run in 25 innings, dating back to Tuesday night's 2-0 win in Detroit. The Padres are feeling the effects of playing without regulars Jackson Merrill (hamstring), Jake Cronenworth (broken rib) and Luis Arraez (concussion).

Manager Mike Shildt said Merrill and reserve outfielder Brandon Lockridge, also out with a hamstring injury, are getting closer to returning. Arraez is still working his way "back to full activity," according to Shildt. Cronenworth is likely to return in early- to mid-May though his rib might not be fully healed.

San Diego also sent No. 5 starter Kyle Hart down to Triple-A El Paso and cut its rotation to four until the fifth starter is needed again during a May series at New York against the Yankees.

"We wanted to make sure we were taking advantage of our off-days to rest our starters," Shildt said. "Nobody's going to get compromised."

--Field Level Media

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