Field Level Media
Jun 9, 2022
Tampa Bay ace Shane McClanahan fired eight strong innings to win his fifth consecutive start as the Rays defeated the visiting St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 on Thursday afternoon to sweep the three-game series in St. Petersburg, Fla.
After winning 4-2 on a 10th-inning walk-off homer Tuesday and in an 11-3 rout Wednesday, the Rays received an outstanding start from McClanahan (7-2) to notch the sweep and finish 4-2 on their six-game homestand.
The left-hander allowed an unearned run on two hits, while striking out nine and walking one. He increased his major league-leading strikeout total to 98.
Ji-Man Choi slugged a two-run homer and Kevin Kiermaier went 2-for-3 to account for the Rays' three hits.
Tampa Bay defeated St. Louis for the 10th time in the past 12 games dating back to July 2, 2011.
St. Louis pitcher Miles Mikolas (4-4) yielded two runs on three hits in a complete game. He struck out nine without a walk.
Paul Goldschmidt walked and scored in the sixth inning to move his on-base streak to 45 games -- the longest by a Cardinal since Matt Holliday reached in 47 games over the 2014 and 2015 seasons.
Mikolas and McClanahan were sharp their first time through the batting order, with only Albert Pujols managing a hit -- a pop-fly double that second baseman Vidal Brujan overran to lead off the second inning.
McClanahan cruised through the Cardinals the first time around by striking out five of the first nine outs.
Meanwhile, Mikolas retired all nine batters against him until leadoff hitter Kiermaier opened the fourth inning with a single to right. One batter later, Choi lashed Mikolas' 1-0 inside sinker out to right for a 2-0 lead. The homer was his fifth this season and extended his hitting streak to nine games.
In the sixth, after a two-out walk to Goldschmidt and a single by Nolan Arenado, McClanahan attempted to field Pujols' soft comebacker with his bare hand, muffing the ball. He then mishandled it with his glove in an attempt to pick it up and threw wildly past first baseman Choi to send home Goldschmidt.
Jason Adam relieved McClanahan in the ninth and immediately walked Arenado. But he struck out pinch hitter Nolan Gorman and got Tyler O'Neill to ground into a double play to Brujan to end the game for his second save.
--Field Level Media