Curt Casali caps Rays' rally in win over Blue Jays
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- After the first walkoff hit of his career, Curt Casali had to give credit to the man in the on-deck circle.
"I definitely realized that Logan Forsythe was on deck," Casali said Saturday night after his single drove in the winning run for the Tampa bay Bay Rays in a 4-3 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. "I figured if I was in their shoes, I'd want to pitch to me as well."
Casali's single off Brett Cecil (0-5) drove in Brad Miller, who led off the inning by beating out a pinch-hit single. After Miller outraced first baseman Justin Smoak to the bag, Kevin Kiermaier followed with a double before Casali's hit.
Forsythe went 3 for 3 with a walk and tied the game in the seventh with a home run off Toronto starter J.A. Happ, his fourth of the season.
Xavier Cadeno (2-0) got the win after retiring two Blue Jays in the ninth.
Jose Bautista's two-run home run off Chris Archer gave the Blue Jays a 2-0 lead in the third. It was Bautista's fifth homer of the season.
Forsythe's two-out single got the Rays on the board in the third and Evan Longoria tied it 2-2 by hitting Happ's first pitch of the sixth inning for his fourth home run.
Kevin Pillar's first homer regained a 3-2 lead for the Blue Jays in the seventh.
Archer gave up one hit -- Bautista's homer -- in six innings, walking four and striking out four. He retired the last 11 batters he faced.
"After I gave up that homer, something inside of me ignited and I just said I'm going to attack, going to pound the zone," Archer said. "And I felt much more like myself after the homer than early. I think I may have been nibbling a little too much."
Happ, who has a 1.87 ERA in 15 starts dating to August, pitched 6 2/3 innings, giving up six hits and three runs while striking out seven.
"I thought he was great," Toronto manager John Gibbons said. "He had great stuff tonight and he pitched like he's been doing all year. He deserved to win a game like that."
The Blue Jays had only three hits. They have 10 hits, including six home runs, in the first two games of the series.
UNINTENTIONAL BUNT
Miller, who was pinch-hitting for Tim Beckham, considered bunting when he noticed Smoak playing him deep. "Once I hit it, I knew I had kind of capped it a little, but I was just putting my head down and running, and I was able to just beat him," Miller said. "It got us going and then the next two guys did their job."
GOOD SWITCH
Moving Michael Saunders into the leadoff spot and moving Pillar out of it has paid off for both. Saunders is hitting .333 in 10 games as a leadoff hitter and Pillar, who batted .188 in 12 games as a leadoff man, has hit .364 in 12 games since being dropped in the order.
NUMBERS
Archer's four strikeouts set a franchise record of 43 for April, exceeding David Price's 41 in 2014. ... Forsythe has been on base in 12 of his last 17 plate appearances and is hitting .388 in his last 11 games. ... Pillar's homer was his first in 121 at-bats. He had his fourth multi-hit game in in his last seven.
TRAINER'S ROOM
Rays: RHP Brad Boxberger (adductor surgery) threw a bullpen session. After one more session in two or three days, he expects to throw live batting practice. ... RHP Alex Cobb, who threw 25 pitches in a bullpen session, is still months from pitching in his recovery from Tommy John surgery on May 14, 2015.
UP NEXT
RHP Marcus Stroman, who beat the Rays on opening day four weeks ago, will pitch the series finale for Toronto against RHP Jake Odorizzi, who has allowed one earned run or fewer in 20 of his 33 starts at Tropicana Field.