Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes
This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.
BALTIMORE (AP) — In spite of their inability to pull out of a horrific hitting slump, the Tampa Bay Rays are still hovering around .500 and remain in the thick of the AL East race.
That's why manager Joe Maddon isn't losing sleep over his team's inability to generate any offense during the first month of the season.
Tampa Bay got only six hits Wednesday in a 3-0 loss to the Baltimore Orioles, its third straight defeat.
Although the Rays were outscored 10-1 in the rain-abbreviated, two-game series and have scored only 14 runs in their last nine games, they're 7-8 following a 3-5 road trip.
"To be in this position without sustained offense is good," Maddon said. "Regardless of the record, we have had some good things happen."
The Rays came up empty against the third and fourth pitchers in the Baltimore rotation. After Wei-Yin Chen excelled on Monday night, Miguel Gonzalez righted himself at the expense of the struggling Tampa Bay lineup.
Gonzalez and two relievers blanked the Rays, allowing only one extra-base hit and striking out Wil Myers three times.
"We faced 153 pitches today and didn't score a run. That's difficult to do," Maddon said. "Our at bats have been good; the results haven't been."
Myers, who is batting .200, said, "We're not getting it done with the bats. Especially me. I haven't done too much at the plate."
Tampa Bay's biggest threat came in the seventh, when a walk and singles by Yunel Escobar and Jose Molina loaded the bases against Zach Britton with one out. Ben Zobrist hit into a force play at the plate, and Myers struck out.
"I had a chance to make something happen and couldn't get the big hit," Myers said. "That's been the frustrating thing, not getting the hit to help the team."
Tampa Bay starter Jake Odorizzi (1-2) allowed three runs and five hits in five innings.
Gonzalez (1-1) gave up three hits and three walks in five innings after entering with a 9.64 ERA. Britton permitted two singles over three innings to keep his ERA at 0.00, and Tommy Hunter got three outs for his fourth save.
Because Tuesday night's game was postponed by rain, all players wore No. 42 to honor Jackie Robinson a day later than originally planned. The jerseys were worn over long-sleeved shirts, because the temperature at the start of the game was 39 degrees.
Playing at designated hitter instead of center field after returning from an illness, Baltimore's Adam Jones reached on a bunt in a two-run fourth inning and drove in a run with a 50-foot chop down the third-base line in the fifth.
"Sometimes you've just got to be able to use your legs," Jones said. "You're not always going to be able to swing the bat to the best of your ability or the way you would like to. So in certain situations it's smart to drop a bunt down and get your timing back."
Both starting pitchers dominated until the fourth inning. In the top half, the Rays got runners on first and second with one out before David DeJesus hit a sinking liner to right. Markakis caught the ball and threw to second for a double play.
In the bottom half, Baltimore used a walk and two singles to load the bases with no outs. After Matt Wieters delivered a fly ball to the warning track that advanced all three runners, J.J. Hardy hit a run-scoring grounder for a 2-0 lead.
Baltimore loaded the bases with two outs in the fifth before Jones hit a dribbler down the line that stopped on the chalk.
NOTES: Tampa Bay heads home for a four-game series against the New York Yankees beginning Thursday night. David Price (2-0) faces CC Sabathia in the opener. ... The Orioles have Thursday off before facing Boston from Friday through Monday. Monday's 11 a.m. start, which comes after a Sunday night meeting, is the annual Patriots Day game and the one-year anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombing will be commemorated. "What that day represents to Boston and our country, we all consider it an honor to be lucky enough to have the schedule fall that way," Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. "I think we're all looking forward to paying the respect due there." ... Orioles 1B Chris Davis has reached base in 13 straight games. He stole his second base of the season. ... Wieters has 54 RBIs against Tampa Bay.
Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.