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Every Little Hit Counts: Rays 2, Giants 1

May 3, 2026
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Good teams win close games. The Rays are proving so far this season that they truly are a good team.

Today was another example. Not because every win has to be clean, or because the offense is turning games into batting practice. No, this one was proof in a much more Rays’ way. Tampa Bay beat the San Francisco Giants 2-1 in 10 by collecting just enough soft contact, bunts, walks, defensive outs, and pitching to turn a game that could have slipped away early into a walk-off win.

Every little hit counts. Even the weird ones. Especially the weird ones.

That theme showed up immediately, and not in the Rays’ favor.

Rafael Devers doubled in the first inning on a ball that left the bat at just 59.1 mph, the kind of contact that makes pitchers stare into the middle distance and wonder what they did to upset the baseball gods. It was not crushed. It was just enough. One batter later, Casey Schmitt singled to center, Devers scored, and the Giants had a 1-0 lead early.

Rays starting pitcher Steven Matz, to his credit, did not let that strange little rally become something larger. Luis Arraez grounded into a double play to end the inning, and that mattered more than it seemed at the time. In a game where neither defense was going to create much margin for error, Matz keeping it at one run gave the Rays a chance to keep breathing.

The Rays had their own first-inning answer ready, or at least the beginning of one. Chandler Simpson struck out looking, but Junior Caminero singled and Jonathan Aranda followed with a ground-ball single of his own. Suddenly, Tampa Bay had two on with one out and a chance to erase the Giants’ lead right away.

Instead, Ryan Vilade struck out, and Jake Fraley lined out to right.

They needed more. That would become a familiar sentence throughout most of the game.

From there, the game moved into a middle-innings grind. Matz deserves plenty of credit for that. The Giants had found an early run, but Matz kept them from stacking anything on top of it and kept the game close enough for the Rays to eventually make their brand of baseball matter.

Tyler Mahle did his part on the other side, and then some. He gave the Rays very little room to operate. The Rays went quietly through the second, third, fourth, and fifth, with only a few flickers. Ben Williamson singled in the fourth, but Cedric Mullins popped out to end that. In the fifth, Tampa Bay went down in order. Mahle kept the Rays from ever getting into rhythm, and the 1-0 deficit started to feel larger as the innings passed by.

The sixth inning was the first real chance for the Rays to change the vibe. Aranda singled with one out, building on what would become a strong offensive day for him. Vilade reached when Willy Adames made a fielding error, putting two on. Matt Gage replaced Mahle, Jonny DeLuca came in to pinch hit, and the Rays had an opening.

DeLuca struck out. Williamson walked after the Giants lost an ABS challenge, loading the bases. Now the whole game was sitting there, waiting for one swing. Mullins hit a line drive to right, but it found a glove.

The Rays had already missed a first-inning opportunity, and now they had let another one pass but they kept on fighting.

In the seventh, the Giants threatened when Adames doubled with one out, but they could not bring him home. In the eighth, Hunter Bigge gave up a one-out double to Heliot Ramos, only to strike out Devers and Schmitt back-to-back. That sequence was crucial. The Giants had a chance to finally add the insurance run that would have made the Rays’ afternoon feel desperate. Bigge slammed that door shut.

Then, finally, the Rays started making the little things add up.

Ryan Walker entered for San Francisco in the bottom of the eighth, and Caminero walked. Aranda, once again, delivered, singling to center and sending Caminero to third. Aranda was the lineup’s pulse in this game, the guy who kept showing up when Tampa Bay needed a spark.

With runners on the corners and nobody out, Vilade dropped down a sacrifice bunt. Caminero scored head-first, beating the throw, Vilade reached, and the Rays had tied the game without a big swing. Just a bunt, some pressure, and a ball in the right place.

DeLuca followed with another sacrifice bunt, moving Aranda to third and Vilade to second. Now the Rays had the go-ahead run ninety feet away with one out. The small-ball machine was humming.

Then baseball proved it is truly a game of failure. Williamson lined a ball to third, and Matt Chapman turned it into an unassisted double play, catching Aranda off the bag to end the inning. He also caught Aranda in the back on a throw home that was not needed. Inning and rally over with the game tied 1-1.

The ninth passed without a breakthrough, just a Hunter Feduccia single for the Rays as the game went to extras and gave Ian Seymour a chance to author one of the most important quiet moments of the afternoon. With the automatic runner on second in the tenth, Seymour retired Jung Hoo Lee, Drew Gilbert, and Eric Haase without letting the Giants move ahead.

That gave the Rays exactly what they needed, with a chance to win, with Chandler Simpson starting at second base, with Caminero and Aranda due up to hit.

The Giants intentionally walked Caminero, choosing to face Aranda. It made sense in the matchup logic of the moment, but it also meant challenging the one Rays hitter who had been making hits all day.

Aranda made them pay as he floated a single into right, Simpson came home, and the Rays had their 2-1 walk-off victory. The 200th walk-off in franchise history.

The Rays had no extra base hits, but made the hits they had count as they finished the series sweep of the Giants.

The Rays’ homestand continues on Monday as they start a series against the Toronto Blue Jays. Nick Martinez is scheduled to start for the Rays with a 6:40 PM first pitch.



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