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Reds 7, Cubs 4

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

Reds 7, Cubs 4

CINCINNATI — Former Ray Jonny Gomes hit his first homer in nearly a month, completing a seven-run rally as the Reds snapped Carlos Zambrano's 10-start road winning streak. That streak matched the second-longest in Cubs history since 1919. He took a one-hitter into the sixth, then fell apart as Cincinnati sent 12 batters to the plate.


Nationals 4, Pirates 2

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

Nationals 4, Pirates 2

WASHINGTON — Danny Espinosa broke out of an 8-for-73 slump with a two-run homer in the seventh to lead the Nationals. Espinosa drove the first pitch thrown by Pirates reliever Jose Ascanio into the leftfield bullpen, scoring Mike Morse, who had singled off starter Paul Maholm. Espinosa's 22 RBIs leads all rookies.

Canada eyes Thrashers

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

ATLANTA — Thrashers president Don Waddell said Monday that the team is exploring "all options" for new owners as there are reports that for the first time those options include a group interested in moving the team to Winnipeg.

Co-owner Bruce Levenson, NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly and Waddell would not confirm a report by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Thrashers owners are in negotiations with True North Sports and Entertainment, which would relocate the team to Manitoba. Winnipeg lost the Jets (now the Phoenix Coyotes) in 1996 but has since built a new arena.

"We've never commented, and aren't going to start now, on who we're talking to or not talking to," Levenson told the Associated Press. A True North representative had no comment.

Levenson said last week that he was trying to find a buyer to keep the team in Atlanta, but he added, "Nobody has pushed forward with an offer."

He is part of the group that controls the Thrashers, the NBA's Hawks and operating rights to Atlanta's Philips Arena.

FEASTER EARNS NOD: The Flames dropped the interim tag and promoted Jay Feaster, who helped assemble the Lightning team that won the 2004 Stanley Cup, to general manager. Feaster was hired last summer as an assistant to Darryl Sutter, who resigned Dec. 28. Feaster also said Calgary and forward Curtis Glencross agreed to a $10.2 million, four-year deal.

Tampa Bay Rays: Sam Fuld earns big scrappy points

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By Marc Topkin, Times Staff Writer
Monday, May 16, 2011

Rays vs. Yankees

When/where: 6:40 tonight; Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg

TV/radio: Sun Sports, Bay News 9 Español; 620-AM, 680-AM (Spanish)

Starting pitchers

RAYS: RH James Shields (4-1, 2.08)

YANKS: RH Ivan Nova (3-3, 4.70)

Tickets: $17-$275 at Tropicana Field box office, Ticketmaster, raysbaseball.com, team store in Tampa, $3 surcharge within five hours of game.

Promotion: Rays/Navy Seals T-shirt to first 10,000 fans in Rays gear, or with military ID; gates open at 4:40.

Watch for …

Big Game James: Shields has been on a sizzling roll, going 3-0, 1.12 over his past five starts. He is 3-8, 4.91 overall against the Yankees but has improved with age, going 1-0, 1.42 in his past three home starts vs. them.

Super Nova: Nova, 24, is coming off a rough start vs. the Royals, allowing 8 runs (four earned) on 10 hits over three innings. He faced the Rays twice last season, with two no-decisions and a 6.97 ERA to show for it.

Key matchups

Rays vs. Nova

John Jaso 1-for-5

Matt Joyce 1-for-5

Ben Zobrist 1-for-6

Yankees vs. Shields

Robinson Cano 16-for-41, 3 HRs

Derek Jeter 17-for-50, HR

Alex Rodriguez 7-for-29, HR

On deck

Wednesday: at Blue Jays, 7:07, Sun Sports. Rays — Jeremy Hellickson (4-2, 2.98); Jays — Ricky Romero (3-4, 3.35)

Thursday: at Blue Jays, 7:07, Sun Sports. Rays — Wade Davis (4-3, 3.47); Jays — Jo-Jo Reyes (0-3, 4.75)

Legend of Sam Fuld note of the day

You know those two stitches Sam Fuld had to get in his bottom lip after the hard slide into second Sunday? No problem, he said, tongue in cheek. "I did it myself."

Comparison of the day

Asked by New York media to describe Sam Fuld's play, Rays manager Joe Maddon went back to the spark plug of the 2002 Angels championship team for an answer: "He's David Eckstein in leftfield."

Eckstein: 5-6 170 lbs Scrappy INF

Fuld: 5-10 180 lbs Scrappy OF

Rangers 4, White Sox 0

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

Rangers 4, White Sox 0

CHICAGO — Colby Lewis pitched a five-hitter for his first career shutout, lifting the Rangers. Endy Chavez added three hits and three runs for Texas, which has won four of its past five games. Chavez was hitless in nine at-bats since he was promoted from Triple-A Round Rock on Saturday. Lewis pitched his third career complete game and lasted at least 71/3 innings for the fourth consecutive start. The 6-foot-4 right-hander improved to 3-1 with a 1.67 ERA during the impressive stretch.

Red Sox 8, Orioles 7

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

Red Sox 8, Orioles 7

BOSTON — Adrian Gonzalez hit a two-run double off the leftfield wall with one out in the ninth to cap a Red Sox rally from 6-0. Jacoby Ellsbury and Dustin Pedroia drew one-out walks with Boston down 7-6 in the ninth. Gonzalez got the winning hit on the first pitch he saw from Kevin Gregg.

Tampa Bay Rays bail out David Price in 6-5 win over New York Yankees

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By Rick Stroud and Marc Topkin, Times Staff Writers
Monday, May 16, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG — The Rays are used to being carried late into ball games by the left arm of David Price, so it was only fitting they rallied when their ace was in a hole Monday against the Yankees.

Price had his second-shortest outing this season and left the game after only five innings trailing 5-1, thanks to a three-run home run by hot-hitting Yankees CF Curtis Granderson.

But the Rays' 6-5 win over the Yankees became a complete team effort. Tampa Bay picked up Price with five runs to take the lead in the sixth thanks to homers by Sam Fuld and B.J. Upton.

Meanwhile, three relievers — Juan Cruz, Joel Peralta and Kyle Farnsworth — retired the last 12 Yankees and allowed only one baserunner after Price was knocked out of the game.

"It's not very often that he doesn't go at least into the seventh," Fuld said of Price. "That's crucial to know that we can pick him up on those rare occasions he doesn't go seven strong or eight or nine (innings). We need to be able to do that."

It was only the second time in his past 17 starts that Price pitched fewer than six innings. Speaking of anomalies, Granderson became the first left-handed batter to homer off Price in nearly two years (since the Phillies' Chase Utley, June 23, 2009) when he blasted a 3-and-2 pitch into the rightfield seats for his 14th of the season.

"He's hot right now," Price said of Granderson. "It's a tough lineup. They hit fastballs and I didn't feel like I had my best stuff today, but my teammates picked me up, and that's what it's about."

Cruz allowed a leadoff single by Robinson Cano in the sixth, and that was it. Peralta worked a perfect seventh and eighth, then Farnsworth retired New York in order in the ninth for his eighth save.

"They pitched lights out for us," Price said. "That was what we needed."

SONNY'S DAY: The Rays plan to give RHP Andy Sonnanstine, unimpressive thus far in replacing injured RHP Jeff Niemann, a third start, on Friday at Florida. "As of right now, Sonny is in that spot," manager Joe Maddon said.

Sonnanstine has pitched well at Sun Life Stadium (2-0, 1.90) and, with a career .318 average, is among the best hitting pitchers in the AL. The other options would be bringing back RHP Alex Cobb (4-0, 1.31 at Triple-A Durham) or taking a first look at LHP Alex Torres (2-3, 2.21).

SORI STORY: Former Rays closer Rafael Soriano said it felt good to be back at Tropicana Field, but he won't be able to pitch due to a sore elbow that has his immediate future in question.

"I'm not going to play, but I had a lot of good moments here," Soriano said. "I'm happy to see good friends that I have, and we'll see what happens."

Soriano complained of stiffness in his right elbow Friday against the Red Sox. After throwing a bullpen session Monday, he reported no improvement.

J.P. DUTY: LHP J.P. Howell's return to the Rays will be delayed a day until Friday, as rain in Syracuse washed out Monday's final rehab appearance.

Howell — after a drive to New York City's JFK Airport and a flight to Tampa — is now scheduled to pitch 11/3 innings tonight for Class A Port Charlotte, then meet the Rays in south Florida for Friday's game at the Marlins.

Howell was hoping to return to the Rays by Thursday, marking the one-year anniversary of his shoulder surgery. Maddon said they don't want to alter the rehab schedule.

"It's part of the plan," he said. "When you get this close to the finish line, stay with the plan and we'll work it from there."

MISCELLANY: It was the Rays' first three-homer game of the season, and seventh come-from-behind win. … In addition to needing two stitches in his lip after Sunday's hard slide, Fuld broke the crown on a tooth.

First-place Tampa Bay Rays rally with five in sixth to beat slumping New York Yankees 6-5

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By Marc Topkin, Times Staff Writer
Monday, May 16, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG — His Rays down 5-1 halfway through Monday's game with the Yankees, and admittedly a bit staggered by it, manager Joe Maddon saw opportunity.

He turned to bench coach Dave Martinez and told him they would snap their history-threatening streak of not scoring more than five runs in a home game — second longest at 22 games to the 1908 Brooklyn Superbas, who went 26 — and end up with a victory.

"At one point, I said we're going to win this game 6-5,'' Maddon said, "and mess up the Superbas in the process.''

Maddon nailed it exactly right as the Rays rallied behind home runs from Sam Fuld (yes, Sam Fuld) and B.J. Upton and dazzling work from the bullpen. Patsy Donovan, Tim Jordan, Tommy Sheehan and the other members of that 1908 squad that was a forerunner to the Dodgers would have never seen it coming as the Rays rallied for five runs in the sixth inning alone.

Neither did the Yankees, who collapsed to their sixth straight loss, their longest skid since 2007.

"We're going through a really rough stretch right now," manager Joe Girardi said. "It seems like when things start to go your way, they turn around a little bit. This is where you are tested as a team. And you have to fight through it."

The Rays, who improved to 24-17 and opened a three-game AL East lead, felt pretty good about how they acquitted themselves.

"You've got to teach yourself a lesson now and then, and I think tonight we taught ourselves a lesson," Maddon said. "You get down by four runs, you have not been scoring well. But that is major-league baseball at its finest right there. If you keep on plugging, you've got the kind of people that could turn this thing around, and they did tonight."

Tropicana Field — alive Monday with a loud crowd of 25,024 — had not provided much of a homefield advantage, as the Rays haven't been scoring or winning much (11-12) under the tilted roof. That, too, was part of the satisfaction as they staged their biggest comeback of the season.

"I think it does say something as much as we scuffled here and to be able to come back against those guys," Upton said.

The night didn't look promising, not with ace David Price knocked out after five — and allowing his first homer to a lefty (Curtis Granderson) in nearly two years. But the Rays put into practice their theory of never giving up, and it paid off.

The bullpen stopped the Yankees, with Juan Cruz allowing just a single to start the sixth, then Joel Peralta and former Yankee Kyle Farns­worth teaming to get the final nine outs in order.

"That's almost unheard of vs. the Yankees," Maddon said.

And the offense, limited to a Johnny Damon homer over five innings, kicked in in the sixth.

After John Jaso doubled, Fuld — whose 8-for-71 skid was primarily the result of hitting too many balls in the air — hit one on a line that went just over the rightfield wall.

It was his third career homer and second this season, not much different than the ball he tucked around Boston's Pesky Pole. "He picked a good spot,'' Maddon said.

"With my size I never know," Fuld said. "But that one felt pretty good."

Singles by Evan Longoria and Matt Joyce and a couple of wild pitches by A.J. Burnett made it 5-4 with a man on, and then Upton mashed a curveball over the leftfield wall.

The Rays were ahead to stay. And the Superbas? As Maddon said, "In our dust."


Rockies 7, Giants 4

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

Rockies 7, Giants 4

DENVER — Carlos Gonzalez capped a five-run sixth with a three-run homer off an unusually wild Tim Lincecum, and the Rockies rallied. Seth Smith also homered off Lincecum, who set up the big inning with a throwing error on a potential double-play comebacker.

Indians 19, Royals 1

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Times wires
Monday, May 16, 2011

Indians 19, Royals 1

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Michael Brantley's three-run homer and Travis Hafner's three-run double keyed the Indians' 10-run fourth. Vin Mazzaro gave up a Royals-record 14 runs.

Marlins 2, Mets 1, 11 innings

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Times wires
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Marlins 2, Mets 1

11 innings

NEW YORK — Marlins reliever Burke Badenhop got his second career hit with two outs in the 11th, scoring Mike Stanton.

Padres 8, Diamondbacks 4

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Times wires
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Padres 8, D'backs 4

PHOENIX — Ryan Ludwick had a home run and three RBIs, and Clayton Richard pitched into the sixth to end a four-game losing streak for the Padres. Mike Adams got the final five outs for his first save to give San Diego its fourth win in five games. Arizona has lost seven of 10.

Mariners 5, Twins 2

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Times wires
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Mariners 5, Twins 2

SEATTLE — Michael Pineda went to a three-ball count on just two of the 26 batters he faced, and the Mariners ended a six-game losing streak. Pineda (70 strikes in 99 pitches) entered with the best percentage of strikes, 70.3, in the AL and best percentage of first-pitch strikes, 73.7. He had 18 first-pitch strikes. Adam Kennedy and Carlos Peguero hit consecutive home runs in the sixth for Seattle.

Agent: Da'Quan Bowers' recovery going well, no setbacks anticipated

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By Stephen F. Holder, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Da'Quan Bowers' slide to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the second round of the NFL Draft wasn't the outcome the player hoped for, but Bowers is steadily working toward a return from knee surgery that he hopes will ultimately allow him to become the player many thought he could be.

Bowers' agent, Joe Flanagan, in an interview, addressed a number of issues regarding Bowers' recovery from knee surgery and the procedure's short- and long-term effects. He emphasized, among other things, that Bowers expects to be ready for training camp and there have been no setbacks. He also called into question suggestions that Bowers will encounter serious knee problems down the line.

Because draft picks cannot consult with their new teams on medical care, Bowers is working out at Clemson University under the care of the training staff there, along with other former Clemson players now in the NFL.

Flanagan said he's aware of some of the rumors and assertions made before and since the draft about his client -- they range from suggestions that certain teams never considered him to the possibility that he'll never recover -- but Flanagan said there is nothing to suggest any of it is true.

"I do know what people have said," Flanagan said. "But given the procedure in January, he's way ahead of schedule."

Bowers' rehab plan calls for him to be conservative, but Flanagan said Bowers is doing a great deal of strength training to further stabilize the right knee while doing a lot of basic physical training and conditioning. He said the ultimate timeline for Bowers' return will be determined by the Bucs, but Flangan said there is no reason for concern about the recovery interrupting his rookie season.

"I've always been told that training camp is not going to be an issue," Flanagan said. "But that's Mark Dominik's decision at this point. I do know that Da'Quan is champing at the bit. If anything, we're having to hold him back (from doing too much). He feels great."

There have been reports that Bowers was considered by some teams a "one-contract player" because his knee would not support a long career. Flanagan countered by offering the input from renowned orthopedic surgeon Dr. James Andrews, one of the physicians overseeing Bowers' rehab.

"Dr. Andrews said if there were going to be problems (down the road), they'd show up pretty quick," Flanagan said. "He hasn't had any swelling, soreness or pain. He hasn't had to back off at all. He didn't have a good workout on the field (at his pro day) but the fact that he did the workout at all was impressive."

So, given all this, why wasn't Bowers -- a projected top-10 pick before the surgery -- drafted earlier? Flanagan said there are several reasons, including the fact that many decision-makers were afraid to be wrong about a high draft pick, despite the undeniable talent. Along those same lines, Flanagan said some teams' doctors were reluctant to sign off on Bowers for fear that any future problems would jeapordize their jobs with their teams.

"Privately, tons of clubs have said if they could have gotten their medical staffs to okay it, they would have loved to have done it," Flanagan said.

As for the fears associated with Bowers, Flanagan takes heart from the outcomes of some other players who entered the league with medical concerns.

"Willis McGahee wasn't supposed to last," he said. "Thurman Thomas wasn't supposed to play more than a year. It worked out all right for those guys."

Former Florida Gators RB Mike Blakely will return to USF for official visit this weekend

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By Greg Auman, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The USF Bulls' courtship of former Florida Gators running back Mike Blakely is progressing on course, with an informal visit Monday to meet with coach Skip Holtz leading to an official campus visit this weekend, Manatee coach Joe Kinnan said Tuesday morning.

Blakely, a four-star recruit from Manatee, enrolled at Florida in January but is transferring after just one semester, and USF is the first school he's visited. Manatee assistant Rod Frazier said Monday that North Carolina and Central Florida are also options, and Kinnan said Tuesday that Southern Cal is trying to bring Blakely out to California for a visit, something he considered doing in high school before choosing Florida.

Blakely would have to sit out the upcoming season as a transfer, but would still have all four years of eligibility starting with the 2012 season. Kinnan said he and Frazier hope to sit down with Blakely on Wednesday to help him narrow his choices and schedule visits, making it a priority that he make his decision in time to take classes at his new school in the second half of the summer semester. That generally means late June for colleges.

Kinnan said he's fielded calls from numerous schools across the country expressing interest in Blakely, but he didn't want to name any others until he knows Blakely is considering them as well. Blakely was rated as the No. 6 running back in the country by Rivals.com (No. 10 by Scout) and the No. 13 overall prospect in the state last year according to Rivals.

— Just an update on another transfer from Florida: Chris Dunkley, the receiver from Pahokee, started summer classes at USF on Monday, Pahokee coach Blaze Thompson confirmed. Dunkley, a five-star recruit who redshirted his first season at Florida, will sit out the 2011 season and have three years of eligibility with the Bulls.


Coach on Tampa Bay Lightning's Pavel Kubina: 'The update is not very good'

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By Damian Cristodero, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Tampa Bay Lightning coach Guy Boucher provided a quick, though not promising update on the status of defenseman Pavel Kubina, who did not make the trip with the team to Boston for Games 1 and 2 of the Eastern Conference final. And if Boucher's dour assessment is correct, there certainly are questions of whether we will see Kubina again in the post season.

"He's not with us. He's not even here, so the update is not very good," Boucher said. "Every day there seems to be a little progression, it kind of slips back a bit."

Kubina was hurt on April 29 in Game 1 of the Easter semifinal with the Capitals. Kubina took an elbow to the back of the head from Washington's Jason Chimera, and then Kubina's head bounced off the glass. He has not skated since, as far as has been revealed and is believed suffering from concussion-like symptoms, though Tampa bay continues to call it simply an upper-body injury.

"We had to adapt because he was doing very well for us," Boucher said of Kubina who had two goals, three points and was plus-2 in eight games while averaging 15:17 of ice time.

In his absence, Eric Brewer has stepped up his ice time and is averaging a team-high 26:03 (4:29 more than the regular season). Victor Hedman is next at 21:58 (58 seconds) and Mattias Ohlund is getting 20:39 (1:56 more). Marc-Andre Bergeron also has gotten more power-play time.

There is no timetable for Kubina, either.

"It's the kind of injury you never know," Boucher said. "You wake up the next day and everything is great or just keeps going the same way, so it's very hard to monitor what's going on with him. He's got size. he's got some offensive abilities on our second power play,. He made a big difference on it."

Other stuff from the morning skate: Only an optional this morning for the Lightning with eight skaters and both goalies taking part. ... Much more interesting was the Bruins skate in which concussed center Patric Bergeron participated and looked good. Boston coach Claude Julien did not say whether Bergeron would play in tonight's Game 2, but he did say to watch warm-ups. "If he's in, you're going to see him in warm-ups tonight," Julien said. Getting back Bergeron seems as if it would be a blessing for the Bruins as he leads the team with 12 points on two goals and 10 assists and wins 64 percent of his faceoffs. Without Bergeron in Game 1, Tampa Bay won 61 percent of draws. ... Bruins tough guy Milan Lucic did not skate after taking a puck off the foot during Monday's practice. But Julien said "there's no issue at all." in other words, Lucic will play. ... Thought this quote from Bruins defenseman Tomas Kaberle was pretty interesting. Kaberle has been under all kinds of pressure and scrutiny because of his lack of offense and his bad giveaway to Teddy Purcell that led to a goal in Game 1. But Kaberle, who is used to the media pressure from when he played in Toronto, said he welcomes the scrutiny. "Everybody would rather there be a lot of pressure than no pressure," Kaberle said. "Nobody would like it if you're in Florida and there's less pressure. This is the Stanley Cup playoffs. You have to be under the heat every day." Not sure if that was a shot at the Lightning, Panthers or both. ... Julien said he believes the Bruins' physical style "slipped a little bit," in the second and third periods of Game 1, and he expects his players to better finish their checks in Game 2. ... Just a reminder about tickets. Games 3, 4 and 6 at the St. Pete Times Forum are sold out, but there are team tickets that might go unused. If so, they will be released on the days of games, so check with the Times Forum box office and Ticketmaster.

Former Florida Gators receiver Chris Dunkley officially joins USF Bulls

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By Greg Auman, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

We've been making it incrementally more official for days, but USF coach Skip Holtz sent out a statement on Tuesday afternoon confirming that former Florida Gators receiver Chris Dunkley has joined the Bulls on scholarship as a transfer.

"We're really excited to have Chris join the program," Holtz said. "He's very talented, has a lot of ability and we think he'll be a positive addition at USF."

Dunkley, a five-star recruit out of Pahokee in 2009 who redshirted in his only season at Florida, will sit out the 2011 season as required and will then have three years of eligibility with the Bulls. He started taking classes Monday as the summer semester opened at USF.

If you want to get excited about his potential at USF, just consider the schools he considered before signing with Florida: Alabama, Georgia, Miami, West Virginia and Michigan, according to his Gators bio page.

Dr. Remote

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By Tom Jones, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Minor-league baseball: Noon on MLB Network. The Durham Bulls, the Rays' Triple-A affiliate, host the Louisville Bats, the Reds' affiliate.

Heat at Bulls: 8:30 p.m. on TNT. Is anyone outside of South Florida rooting for the Heat in this series?

Inside NASCAR: 9 p.m. on Showtime. A look back at last weekend's Sprint Cup race at Dover, won by Matt Kenseth, and ahead to Saturday's all-star race at Charlotte.

Tampa Bay Rays up next: at Toronto Blue Jays

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By Marc Topkin, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

. UP NEXT

at Blue Jays

Tonight-Thursday

What's new: The Jays have been on a roll, winning six straight going into play Tuesday. Since last facing the Rays on May 5, the Jays have activated 2B Aaron Hill and INF Jayson Nix from the DL but lost 1B/DH Adam Lind (lower back) and called up OF Eric Thames. A bigger deal is that OF Jose Bautista, who missed the last Rays series with a stiff neck, is back and as hot as ever, leading the AL in hitting (.370), homers (16), runs (35), total bases (101), OBP (.516) and OPS (1.365). Also, the bullpen has been better.

Key stat: The Jays are a major-league best 11-2 in the first game of series.

Connections: Jays RHP Jesse Litsch is a Dixie Hollins High grad and former Rays batboy, RHP Shawn Camp and Bautista are former Rays players, 3B coach Brian Butterfield a former Eckerd College assistant.

Series history: Rays lead 114-113; Jays lead 66-49 at the Rogers Centre.

Marc Topkin, Times staff writer

Braves 3, Astros 1, 11 innings

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Times wires
Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Braves 3, Astros 1

11 innings

ATLANTA — Brian McCann tied it with a pinch-hit, two-out homer in the ninth, then hit a two-run shot in the 11th to lead the Braves. Atlanta was down to its final strike in the ninth when McCann drove Mark Melancon's 1-and-2 pitch the opposite way, the ball just clearing the wall in left-center.

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