(St. Petersburg) Jordan Montgomery stood out against the Tampa Bay Rays, and even more so when he made a diving layup that helped the Texas Rangers win 4-0 on Tuesday in the first game of this first-round series.
“It feels good to do your job and help the team win,” Montgomery said after giving up six hits in seven innings to put the Rangers one win away from a sectional series appearance against the Baltimore Orioles.
The Rangers bounced back after a difficult weekend that deprived them of the American West section title and a bye in the first knockout round.
The Rays, who wore the Devil Rays-era uniform worn from 1998 to 2000, lost their sixth straight playoff game since winning Game 1 of their division series against the Boston Red Sox in 2021. They are making the playoffs for the fifth year. in a sequence.
Shooting from Montgomery (1-0) set the tone for this best-of-three series. The Rangers were also inspired by a defensive play by the 6-foot-2 athlete after Jose Siri’s play to first base with a runner at third base.
“I saw she was pretty high up, took two quick steps, lost track and went for it,” Montgomery said.
“It was electrifying, I was excited,” said rookie Evan Carter, who hit two doubles and walked two hits in his first playoff game.
“It wasn’t a soft landing, was it? “He’s a big man,” manager Bruce Bochy laughed. Great catch from him. We were in a critical situation. This shows how competitive he is. »
Bochy and the therapists went to the mound to make sure the Gunner wasn’t hurt.
“I think I was just as shocked as everyone in the stands,” Montgomery said. I had to catch it with the back of my hand. I had never done this before. I don’t think I’ve done that since I was 12. »
Corey Seager and Josh Jung drove in runs and the Rangers capitalized on four errors by the Rays, who struggled to hit in front of the 19,704 fans — about 5,300 under capacity — gathered at Tropicana Field.
“We didn’t hit, pitch or defend,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. When you play against a good team, they will take advantage, and [les Rangers] really did it. »
Montgomery, a 30-year-old lefty acquired from the St. Louis Cardinals at the trade deadline, has struck out 14 of the last 16 batters he has faced.
He encouraged pinch hitter Junior Caminero, the Rays’ best minor league player, to finish the night’s work with five strikeouts and no walks.
Aroldis Chapman was perfect in the eighth, then Jose Leclerc allowed a free pass in the ninth, and the Rangers recorded their first playoff shutout since the 2011 World Series.
“We are not going to change our approach,” Cash warned. This team has scored a lot of points this year. This is good batting practice. We were released today. I’m sure we’ll bounce back and hit well. »
Tyler Glasnow (0-1) gave Jung a sacrifice fly to second that pushed Nathaniel Lowe toward home plate. He made a bad throw with the bases loaded in the fifth that allowed the Rangers to score their second run.
The Rangers, who went 1-6 with runners in scoring position, made it 4-0 in the sixth with a little help from the Rays, who tend to be effective on defense. They haven’t made four errors in a playoff game since 2008.
Glasnow struck out the first two batters in the sixth and Seager walked Chris Devenski, called up in relief, with a single. The second point was the result of a bad throw by José Siri at third base.
Montgomery, who will be eligible for full free agency after the World Series, is 2-0 with a 0.67 ERA in his last four regular-season starts.
