Fairbanks ready to get back on the bump after blown save?
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ST. PETERSBURG -- Pete Fairbanks glanced at the digital clock in the home clubhouse at Tropicana Field on Wednesday night. It was 9:44 p.m. The Rays¡¯ closer vowed not to beat himself up over the blown save that turned a second straight comeback victory by the Rays into a frustrating, 5-4 loss to the Angels at Tropicana Field.
But he wasn¡¯t quite there yet.
¡°I¡¯ll maybe give it ¡®til 10,¡± Fairbanks said. ¡°We¡¯ll give it 16 minutes of sulk, and then we¡¯ll get back on the bump and figure it out.¡±
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Fairbanks is searching for answers amid an uncharacteristically rough start to the season. It seemed like he had been righting the ship a bit lately, picking up three straight saves and making three consecutive appearances without allowing an earned run. Then it all came undone Wednesday night.
The hard-throwing right-hander gave up two runs and three hits, walked a pair of batters and couldn¡¯t help catcher Ren¨¦ Pinto as the Angels stole two bases against them in the ninth inning. He walked off the mound with a blown save, two losses and a 9.00 ERA.
¡°I thought it generally sucked. I didn't think it was a specific suck. I thought it was like an all-encompassing type of suck,¡± Fairbanks said. ¡°We're gonna try to rectify that, but for right now, I'm gonna be pretty pissed about it.¡±
The context of Wednesday¡¯s performance made it even more aggravating for the Rays. They had been 9-0 this season when leading after eight innings, and they were 8-1 when scoring at least four runs.
They entered the eighth trailing by a run. Isaac Paredes kept the inning alive with a two-out single to center field, then Amed Rosario -- who finished Tuesday¡¯s 13-inning marathon with a walk-off infield single -- unloaded on Hunter Strickland¡¯s first-pitch fastball and sent it a projected 398 feet to left-center field for a go-ahead, two-run homer.
That gave the Rays their first lead of the night, but it didn¡¯t last long.
¡°Rosie, that felt like back-to-back nights he was gonna come up really big for us,¡± Cash said. ¡°Huge home run in the moment, but we just came up short.¡±
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Three outs from securing the Rays¡¯ second straight dramatic comeback win, Fairbanks retired the first batter of the ninth then gave up a single to Nolan Schanuel, who was replaced by pinch-runner Jo Adell. Zach Neto walked, then Adell stole third on Pinto before Neto swiped second.
¡°When a guy gets on base, and it's a tight ballgame, we've got to find a way to limit their opportunities of advancing 90 feet,¡± Cash said.
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Anthony Rendon promptly swatted a single to left, which scored Adell and initially appeared to drive in Neto as the go-ahead run. But the Rays challenged the call at the plate, it was overturned, and Neto was ruled out to keep the game tied.
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With first base open, the Rays intentionally walked Mike Trout -- but the next batter made them pay as Taylor Ward smacked the game-winning single to right.
¡°Just not doing what I'm good at,¡± Fairbanks said. ¡°Then you just compound that, and that's when you get beat by the one that flips over the infield.¡±
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The Rays threw their support behind Fairbanks after the game, expressing confidence that their closer will return to elite form soon enough. With a 2.66 ERA and 201 strikeouts in 147 appearances from 2020-23, the 30-year-old has been among the game¡¯s most dominant late-inning arms when healthy the past few years.
¡°Pete showed every year for the last couple of years that he's got electric stuff and belongs in the back end,¡± said Rays starter Zack Littell, who struck out seven in 5 2/3 innings while throwing a career-high 107 pitches. ¡°I wouldn't expect to see that Pete very long.¡±
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Control is the main culprit, as Fairbanks has thrown 58.6% of his pitches for strikes -- down about 10% from the past two years. He¡¯s walked eight batters and given up eight runs (seven earned) in eight appearances this season.
¡°The stuff looked good,¡± Cash said. ¡°The command's not as crisp as when he's right. It's just not coming out and finding the zone as many times as it probably should.¡±
The Rays expect better out of their bullpen, too. The group was thought to be the strength of the team in Spring Training, and it now owns a Major League-worst 6.23 ERA after 19 games.
¡°Without a doubt this group is too good, too talented to stay at this inconsistent pace that we're at,¡± Cash said. ¡°I really believe in this group, and for good reason. They've got a track record of being really successful. It's just not happening right now.¡±