Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.You Oughta Know ...
That the Rays left their magic in 2008.
Fading Tampa Bay wasted a dazzling major league debut by Wade Davis, who allowed one run and struck out nine over seven innings, in a crushing 5-3 loss to the Tigers.
Davis' pitching helped the Rays carry a 3-1 lead into the ninth inning, but then the bullpen came unraveled. Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon used five relievers in the ninth, three of whom -- Grant Balfour, J.P. Howell and Russ Springer -- failed to record an out in succession.
Springer surrendered a grand slam to Detroit's Brandon Inge that turned a two-run lead into a two-run deficit.
"It's difficult, because if you lose games late like that, that's more difficult to take," Maddon said.The Rays now sit a full seven games behind wild-card-leading Boston in the standings with 26 games to play, making them an extreme longshot to return to the postseason.
From the Trainer's Room ...
Bad news for two teams desperately trying to hang on in the playoff race. Chipper Jones missed Atlanta's 4-2 loss to the Reds Sunday with a sore abdomen. He's hoping to return to the lineup on Tuesday, but with Jones' injury history, you can never be sure.
Meanwhile, the Rangers will be without Josh Hamilton indefinitely. The Texas slugger missed the entirety of this weekend's series in Baltimore with a pinched nerve in his back and is expected to have a cortisone injection in the area in the coming days.
Numbers Game ...
Hanley Ramirez hit his 100th career home run Sunday, becoming the fourth-fastest shortstop to reach that threshold in major league history by hitting it in his 595th game. Only Alex Rodriguez, Nomar Garciaparra and Ernie Banks reached the century mark faster.
"I didn't even know it was my 100th home run,'' Ramirez said, not in the mood to dwell on his accomplishment after Florida's 5-4 loss. "After the game, they gave me the ball and told me it was my 100th home run.''In Their Own Words ...
"That was fun. Especially the way our season is going now, it's always good to have some fun." -- Prince Fielder, whose 37th home run of the season gave the Brewers a walk-off 2-1 win over the Giants in 12 innings. Milwaukee also turned a 5-4-3 triple play in the game.
Advance Scouting ...
Two of the hottest team in baseball hook up for a Labor Day matinee, and one of them has plenty on the line. The Rockies -- winners of five of their last six and leaders in the NL wild-card race -- host the Reds (3:10 PM ET), who have won 12 of 14. Per FanHouse's Jeff Fletcher, this is Cincinnati's best 14-game stretch since 1998, when it won 13 of 14.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-07-2009 @ 9:47AM
Frank and Angela said...
The Phillies need a new closer. HELP!
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9-07-2009 @ 2:22PM
buxfan8 said...
I feel so bad for Wade Davis he pitched a great game you got to wonder in his mind what his thoughts were when Maddon didn't let him come back out in the 8th the Maddon pitching shuffle is ridiculous if he had his way he would pitch every batter with a different pitcher I wonder when it will dawn on him if he keeps doing his match up thing he will reverse all the so called statistics he says he goes by. Ever since he colored his hair black its like he not only lost the white hair he lost his mind too.
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9-07-2009 @ 5:36PM
tonytiger18 said...
Maddon is an overated manager; last year was a fluke.
The Rays are a decent team, but basicly, a one year flash in the pan.
All of the Ray players had career years at the same time last year.Only Langoria is distinguishing himself this year.
They were fortunate to beat the Bosox last year and the Phillies undressed them.
Their management are not thinking long term by getting rid of Kazmir, big mistake that will haunt them.
The O's will jump ahead of them next year.
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9-09-2009 @ 1:00AM
honey do said...
the rays didn't deserve to be there last year and are showing their true colors this year. all of baseball was disappointed when they got past Boston as they didn't even show up for philly. Not that any of the 15-20,000 fans that 'pack' the stands noticed.
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