Toronto Blue Jays vs. Tampa Bay Rays Pick & Prediction SEPTEMBER 24th 2023

Stadium: Tropicana Field St. Petersburg
Logo Toronto Blue Jays
VS
Logo Tampa Bay Rays
8
OPENER
-102

8o -115
CURRENT
1.5 -205

+107
MONEYLINE
-121

9
SCORE
5

Despite blowing a ninth-inning lead on Saturday, the Toronto Blue Jays feel good about the state of their game heading into the last seven games of the regular season.

On Sunday afternoon in a significant matchup at St. Petersburg, Fla., Toronto will face Tampa Bay Rays in the finale of a three-game series between the American League East rivals.

Toronto rallied from a 5-0 deficit in the middle contest, but closer Jordan Romano failed to hold a one-run lead as the Rays (95-61) came back to win 7-6 and assured themselves of -- at worst -- home-field advantage as the No. 1 AL wild-card team.

Toronto (86-69) is one game up on Houston (85-70) in the chase for the second AL wild card, with the Seattle Mariners (84-70) just a half-game behind the Astros.

"It helps playing in meaningful games," Blue Jays right-hander Kevin Gausman said. "You get that extra bit of adrenaline knowing that. To be honest, I'm trying to do better for my teammates than I am for myself.

"That's kind of the point where we're at. However bad you feel (following a loss), everybody else feels just as bad if not worse."

Yusei Kikuchi (10-6, 3.74 ERA) will get the start for Toronto on Sunday. The left-hander has turned in a pair of good performances and two poor ones in September, going 1-2 with a 4.58 ERA. He got a win in his most recent appearance, striking out seven while tossing five-plus innings of one-run ball against the New York Yankees on Tuesday.

Against the Rays in seven career outings (six starts), the southpaw is an impressive 4-1 with a 2.83 ERA. In two starts vs. Tampa Bay this year, he is 1-1 with a 4.91 ERA.

Tampa Bay will give the ball to Taj Bradley (5-7, 5.36) In his most recent start, on Tuesday against the Los Angeles Angels, the rookie right-hander turned in his best performance since his last win on June 21. Bradley yielded just one run on three hits in five innings during the Rays' 6-2 victory against Los Angeles, though he wasn't involved in the decision.

He struck out six, walked one and surrendered a solo homer to Logan O'Hoppe.

Bradley will hope to get offensive support from the Rays' Saturday hero, Josh Lowe. The right fielder went 3-for-5, homered and drove in four runs. He delivered a slicing single near the left field line with two outs in the ninth to give Tampa Bay a walk-off victory.

That helped erase the sting of a blown five-run lead and facing a 6-5 deficit with three outs to play.

Lowe was not surprised by the result, which featured rookies Curtis Mead and Junior Caminero -- in his major league debut -- contributing in the ninth.

Mead tied the game at 6-6 with a single.

Caminero, a 20-year-old who is the organization's top prospect, legged out a potential double-play grounder that was challenged and overturned into a fielder's choice -- allowing Lowe's heroics as the next batter. Caminero finished 1-for-4 with a walk and a run.

"Two good days for (Mead)," Lowe said of the third baseman, who hit his first homer on Friday. "We're going to see some of these guys who are just coming up contribute. They're doing great so far. A good moment today."

--Field Level Media

PREDICTION
Toronto Blue Jays
4
5
Tampa Bay Rays

Toronto Blue Jays vs. Tampa Bay Rays Recap SEP 24TH 2023

George Springer's three-run inside-the-park homer in a five-run outburst headlined the Toronto Blue Jays' 9-5 win over the Tampa Bay Rays Sunday afternoon in St. Petersburg, Fla.

The right fielder also had an assist and saved a run with a diving catch in the third inning in a stellar offensive and defensive showing for the Blue Jays (87-69), who hit four home runs.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. homered twice and Bo Bichette went deep, while Trevor Richards (2-1) pitched one-hit ball over two scoreless frames.

Isaac Paredes was 2-for-4 with his 30th homer, a walk and three RBIs. Harold Ramirez went 3-for-5 and scored as the Rays (95-62) closed out their regular-season home schedule with a 53-28 record.

Batting .328 during a career season, All-Star Yandy Diaz went 1-for-2 with a run but left with right hamstring tightness. He initially pulled up following an infield single leading off the first.

In the first, Diaz and Ramirez singled to set the table. Then Paredes and Junior Caminero rapped run-scoring singles -- the latter's representing his first career RBI in his second game -- though Toronto starter Yusei Kikuchi fanned the side.

Disaster struck in the second for Rays starter Taj Bradley (5-8), who went a career-high seven innings, starting with a two-out walk to Alejandro Kirk.

The next three batters produced hits, including Whit Merrifield with a two-run single, before Springer launched a deep drive just left of center.

The ball hit the wall beyond center fielder Manuel Margot's reach and caromed oddly along the warning track back toward right-center. Springer raced around and slid home head-first for his 21st homer and a 5-2 lead.

In the fourth, the Rays cut it to 5-3 on Taylor Walls' RBI single and threatened for more with two outs. But catcher Kirk took a pitch and threw behind Osleivis Basabe, who replaced Diaz, and picked off the young infielder.

Guerrero, who has been battling knee inflammation, made it 6-3 in the sixth when he ripped Bradley's 95 mph fastball 427 feet to center.

In the seventh, Paredes crushed a 427-foot, two-run homer to left-center off Yimi Garcia to make it a one-run game. The infielder boosted his RBI total to 95.

Daulton Varsho (double, triple) added an insurance three-bagger, his third, to score Matt Chapman in the eighth.

In the final frame, Bichette hit his 20th deep ball and Guerrero smoked his 26th.

--Field Level Media