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The Royals did not cash in on early opportunities and the Rays did. Sometimes it is that simple. In the end the score was 5-3, but two of those three for Kansas City came because of an inning where the Rays made two back-to-back errors.

The Royals had runners in scoring position in the 1st, 2nd, and 4th innings against Griffin Jax who Tampa Bay is trying to convert into a starting pitcher mid-season. They went 0-5 with RISP in these opportunities including a double play to end the threat in the first inning. Meanwhile, the Rays started the bottom of the 3rd inning with a pair of singles and a sac bunt to get two runners set up to score. That forced the Royals to intentionally walk Junior Caminero to load them and set up a double play as an escape hatch. Next up was Ryan Vilade who hit a hard ground ball to Jac Caglianone who stepped on first and threw home. Unfortunately, the throw home was rushed and off target. It actually hit Nick Fortes coming home and that error allowed a second run to come in as well. Jonathan Aranda added an RBI single to left before Noah Cameron could get out of the inning down 3-0.

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In the 4th, Tampa started the inning with a double just past Nick Loftin at third base. He was sac bunted over to third, just like last inning. The struggling Fortes was up again and reached for the second time in as many innings when Cameron hit him with a pitch. Yandy Diaz made him pay for that with an RBI single moving Fortes to third and Jonny DeLuca promptly doubled to score him. Caminero was walked to load them unintentionally this time, and Vilade was back in the same position as the inning before. This time he struck out and so did Aranda when Salvador Perez challenged a ball call and turned it into strike three. Recently Kansas City has made a habit of coming back from big deficits though, and they immediately went to work trying to get back in this one.

It was not entirely the Royals who got the comeback started in the 5th inning. They got some help from the Rays’ defense. Jensen got on with a walk and was still on first with 2 outs when the red hot Jac came up. He hit a pretty routine looking groundball up the middle that somehow got past the short stop, Taylor Walls, playing right near second. Jensen made it to third and Cags hustled to second. Salvy was up next and crushed a liner right at Chandler Simpson in left, it looked like a sure out. It was knuckling on him, and it hit him right in the chest. With two outs the baserunners were going on contact and both scored. Two errors and two runs to get the score to 5-2 Rays.

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Noah Cameron was just not very sharp in this one. He did stay in and have a nice quiet 5th inning ending with a final line of 5IP, 8H, 3BB, 5K, and 5ER over 108 pitches.

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The rest of the game was mostly bereft of baserunners. Lucas Erceg did allow a runner but faced the minimum with a GIDP. Daniel Lynch had a clean 7th and he and Erceg combined threw just 18 pitches in those two innings. The Tampa bullpen was equally effective and the two teams rattled off six pretty easy scoreless innings. After giving up a run last night with a huge lead, Beck Way was given the 8th and there was finally another interesting one. He walked Simpson who stole second and was advanced to third on a Yandy chopper to third with two outs. Way got DeLuca to groundout for the seventh goose egg in a row and the Royals had three more outs to win or extend this one. On a side note, Beck Way has now allowed runs in just two of eight outings in the big leagues this season.

Bryan Baker came on to close it out for Tampa Bay and he struck out Kameron Misner to begin the inning. The Royals did manage their first earned run of the game on the next batter when Josh Rojas hit his first home run as a Royal while pinch hitting for Tolbert. They still needed two more runs though, and Carter Jensen struck out followed by a Nick Loftin lineout to left. Those early missed opportunities came back to bite the team in the end.

Tomorrow they will get another opportunity to win the series in in a day game that starts at 11 in the morning.

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