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It’s good to be home.

The Rays came back home Friday night needing something that felt a little less like the last few days in Baltimore and a lot more like the team that had made Tropicana Field a very uncomfortable place for visitors. After four straight losses, a sweep they would like to forget, the Rays opened the homestand against the Los Angeles Angels. The good news for the Rays is has been different. The Rays entered with the best home record in baseball and a chance to become just the first team this season and the third team in franchise history to reach 20 home wins before June.

Nick Martinez opened the night like a veteran trying to get this team to end the losing streak. He struck out Zach Neto, got Mike Trout to fly out in foul territory, and punched out Vaughn Grissom to end a clean and efficient first inning.

Then Yandy Diaz came out swinging in the bottom half of the inning.

On the first Rays plate appearance of the night, he launched a Walbert Ureña sinker for a solo homer to right, his ninth of the season, giving the Rays a quick a 1-0 lead. Junior Caminero would draw a walk later in the inning but that was all the offense Tampa Bay would get in the opening frame.

Martinez worked around two singles with two outs in the second, but the Angels tied it in the third after Neto doubled, moved to third on Trout’s flyout, and scored on Grissom’s two-out single. The Rays, meanwhile, had their own chance in the bottom half when Jonathan Aranda singled and Caminero doubled with two outs. Two runners in scoring position, a chance to answer right back, and Ryan Vilade grounded out.

In the fourth, Tampa Bay had another ideal setup. Chandler Simpson beat out a bunt single, Ben Williamson followed with a soft grounder for an infield hit, and the Rays had two on with nobody out. Instead of retaking the lead, Richie Palacios struck out and Nick Fortes rolled into a double play ending the potential rally.

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The Angels took advantage in the fifth when Jose Siri, returning to the Trop in a different uniform, doubled to start the inning, then moved to third on a Martinez wild pitch. Neto singled him home, and suddenly the Rays trailed 2-1. Martinez limited the damage by getting Trout to ground into a double play to keep the game close.

Tampa Bay had another window in the sixth after an error by Neto put Vilade aboard, and Williamson was hit by a pitch. Williamson, in his first game back from injury, had to leave the game. Oliver Dunn took over as a pinch-runner. Once again, the Rays could not finish it with runs. Palacios struck out after an ABS challenge, and Fortes lined out to left. Through six innings, the Rays had chances, but chances aren’t runs. It was the baseball equivalent of loading your cart online and never checking out.

Then the seventh inning happened, and the best way I can describe it is the game turned into a sampler platter of ways to get outs and ways to score runs for the Rays.

Nick Madrigal lead off with a single to left, deflected off Caminero, and for a moment the Angels had a chance to add on while clinging to that 2-1 lead. But the Rays quickly shut the door. Logan O’Hoppe popped out in foul territory on a ball Caminero charged in for calling Fortes off late, then Madrigal tried to swipe second and got tagged out after oversliding the base, turning a leadoff baserunner into two outs in a blink. Jose Siri followed with a soft liner to Oliver Dunn at short, and Martinez was through seven with the deficit still only one. The Rays were still within one swing of a tie game.

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Ureña was gone and Ryan Zeferjahn entered in relief for the Angels. Cedric Mullins immediately drew a walk after looking like he was prepared to bunt in the first pitch of the at-bat. That brought Yandy back to the plate, and Yandy apparently decided one homer was just an appetizer. He launched a two-run shot to left-center, flipping the game from 2-1 Angels to 3-2 Rays. It was his second homer of the night, but this one landed in the mostly shirtless “Tarps off” section of the ballpark, sending the place into a frenzy.

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