Lowe, Zunino homer, Rays beat Twins to end 7-game win streak
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Josh Lowe and Mike Zunino homered for the first time this season, Corey Kluber gave up one hit in six innings and the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Minnesota 6-1 on Friday night, halting the Twins' seven-game win streak.
It was the first career homer for Lowe, who was facing some pressure after going homerless and batting .170 in 16 games as Tampa Bay's replacement for power-hitting Austin Meadows. Manager Kevin Cash asked Lowe before the game “not to make me look stupid hitting him fourth.”
“He said it in the dugout, some assurance there from skip,” Lowe said, grinning. “It was fun. I took it as a challenge.”
Zunino, too, was feeling some heat after hitting 33 homers last season and batting .083 so far this season. But he wasn't worried about Lowe.
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“I’ve been there. I’ve pressed. It’s natural to do even with many years under your belt, but there’s no question of the talent, no question of the resume with what he’s done in Triple-A," Zunino said. “It’s just finding your footing and building a little confidence. When a guy like him gets going, he's going to go on a tear and this will be an afterthought sooner rather than later.”
Lowe's homer came in a four-run first inning off Twins starter Dylan Bundy. Zunino's solo shot put the Rays up 6-0 in the third.
“The game wasn’t over just because we were four runs or five, six runs behind," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. "It just gave us a little bit of a challenge. It’s going to be uphill sledding at that point, but we couldn't get anything going offensively.”
Kluber (1-1) gave up one run on one hit and no walks in six innings, striking out six in his fourth start for the Rays.
The Rays jumped on Bundy (3-1) from the first pitch, which Brandon Lowe hit for a double. Wander Franco followed with an RBI double and after a single by Yandy Diaz. Lowe’s three-run homer made it 4-0.
“Any time you can get run support early — let alone four in the first four hitters — it's a huge lift, not just to the pitcher but to the entire team,” Kluber said. “You can go out there and be aggressive in the strike zone and attack the opposition.”
Bundy, who had given up one run in three previous starts, gave up six runs on seven hits in six innings, striking out seven.
“He came in as one of the hottest starters in baseball,” Cash said. “(I'm) really impressed with the way our offense went about it in the first three innings.”
It was the fifth win in six games for the Rays, who have given up two earned runs or fewer in all six of those games.
Carlos Correa drove in the Twins' run with a single, the only hit off Kluber. It came after Kluber hit Byron Buxton with a pitch leading off the fourth.
Correa had two of Minnesota's three hits.
Up next
RHP Chris Archer (0-0, 3.18) will pitch Saturday against the Rays, for whom he has made 182 of his 218 career starts. LHP Shane McClanahan (1-1, 2.45), tied for the AL lead with 31 strikeouts, will make his fifth start for Tampa Bay.