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Walkoff Monster Mash Flips Script On Rays: Rays 4, Red Sox 5

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David Butler II-Imagn Images

A promising night turns bitter as Rafaela’s homer caps shocking comeback.

At Fenway Park, it seemed the Rays were headed to a victory built on steady pitching, timely hitting, and capitalizing on their opponent’s mistakes. And for much of the night, it was exactly that, until suddenly it wasn’t.

Tampa Bay wasted no time in the top of the first, jumping on Red Sox starter Hunter Dobbins thanks to a leadoff walk by Yandy Díaz, followed by singles from Jake Mangum and Junior Caminero. Caminero’s RBI single quickly put the Rays ahead, and though the inning ended without further damage, it felt like the beginning of a comfortable Rays night in Boston.

Early trouble mounted for Boston in the second when Dobbins abruptly exited with knee pain after recording just five outs, forcing Jorge Alcala into emergency relief. Despite Danny Jansen greeting Alcala with a two-out double, the Rays couldn’t expand their lead. In the bottom half, the Red Sox responded swiftly, tying the game on a sharp RBI single from Ceddanne Rafaela as an opening act to his late-game headlining heroics.

Then came the third inning. It was an inning so disastrous defensively for the Red Sox that it looked pulled straight from a local 9U youth baseball game. Jonathan Aranda got things going for the Rays with a double, and Jake Mangum quickly joined him on base with another single. Alcala, briefly finding composure, coaxed pop-ups from Caminero and Josh Lowe. But just as Boston appeared ready to escape, the routine turned into chaos.

After Taylor Walls drew a walk to load the bases, José Caballero hit a seemingly inning-ending grounder toward Abraham Toro at first base. Toro couldn’t field it, allowing Aranda to trot home, giving the Rays a gift-wrapped 2-1 lead. Jorge Alcala’s night promptly ended there, replaced by Brennan Bernardino. Things spiraled further out of control when catcher Carlos Narváez committed two critical passed balls, along with a walk to Chandler Simpson, allowing Mangum and Walls to both score. Suddenly, what had been a tight game now stood at 4-1 Rays, a lead built entirely from Boston’s defensive generosity.

With newly announced All-Star Drew Rasmussen replaced after two innings of solid work, Joe Boyle initially maintained control for the Rays in relief, though the Red Sox began chipping away in the fourth. After Boyle put two men on via a walk and a single, Marcelo Mayer ripped an RBI double to bring home Wilyer Abreu, shrinking Tampa Bay’s lead to two. Abraham Toro followed with a productive RBI groundout, pulling Boston within striking distance at 4-3.

From there, the game settled into a tense pitching duel, with each bullpen exchanging zeroes through the middle innings. The Rays threatened briefly in the sixth, putting Chandler Simpson at third with two outs, but couldn’t capitalize, letting Boston stay dangerously close.

Despite Tampa Bay’s inability to add insurance runs, the late innings still seemed manageable. Garrett Cleavinger silenced Boston’s bats in the eighth, striking out pinch-hitter Rob Refsnyder and Trevor Story in swift succession. Heading to the ninth, Tampa Bay held a slim but seemingly secure 4-3 edge, especially considering they were placing the game into the hands of closer Pete Fairbanks.

Fairbanks quickly recorded the first out on a Marcelo Mayer groundout, moving the Rays just two outs from victory. But pinch-hitter Roman Anthony drew a disciplined walk, bringing the winning run to the plate in the form of Ceddanne Rafaela looking to add more RBIs to his performance of the night.

Baseball can provide beautiful drama, and tonight Rafaela provided it emphatically, unless you were rooting for the Rays. Wearing Boston’s Green Monster-inspired City Connect uniforms, he unloaded on a hanging Fairbanks slider, sending it sailing high over the Monster itself. It was the swing that abruptly ended Tampa Bay’s carefully controlled evening, flipping a 4-3 Rays lead into a crushing 5-4 Red Sox walk-off victory.

What felt like a routine Rays win for eight and a half innings suddenly dissolved into disbelief as Rafaela rounded the bases. In the game with no clock, it is never over until all the outs are recorded.

The Rays get another chance at the Red Sox on Saturday with Shane Baz scheduled to take the mound opposite Garrett Crochet.

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