MLB

Thornton, Shoemaker go down with injuries before Jays' 2nd straight defeat to Rays

The Blue Jays lost starting pitchers Trent Thornton and Matt Shoemaker to injury while Josh Fleming tossed five innings of two-run ball to win his major league debut as the American League East-leading Tampa Bay Rays prevailed 5-4 on Sunday.

Reliever Ryan Borucki charged with loss as blown leads proving costly for Toronto

The Blue Jays' Trent Thornton delivers in the first inning against the Rays on Sunday. He exited the game after a scoreless frame with right elbow inflammation. A few hours earlier, fellow starter Matt Shoemaker went on the 10-day injured list with right shoulder inflammation. (Mike Carlson/Getty Images)

Josh Fleming pitched five innings of two-run ball to win his major league debut, and the American League East-leading Tampa Bay Rays beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 on Sunday.

Fleming is the 11th different starter in 29 games this season for the injury-filled Rays pitching staff. The lefty went 12-7 between double-A Montgomery and triple-A Durham last year.

"I'm kind of on cloud nine," Fleming said.

John Curtiss, the fourth Tampa Bay reliever, worked 1 2/3 perfect innings to get his first career save.

Toronto starter Trent Thornton left after a scoreless inning with right elbow inflammation. That came just few hours after another rotation member, Matt Shoemaker, went on the 10-day injured list due to right shoulder inflammation.

"After the first inning, he went downstairs and told me he was feeling something in his elbow," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said of Thornton. "So of course, when he says that, we have to take him out of the game."

Anthony Kay and Jacob Waguespack are two potential rotation options for Toronto.

The Rays took a 3-2 lead in the fifth on an RBI single from pinch hitter Jose Martinez, Austin Meadows' sacrifice fly and a run-scoring single by Brandon Lowe off Ryan Borucki (1-1).

Gurriel Jr., Hernandez go deep

Meadows had an RBI single and Ji-Man Choi hit a sacrifice fly to make it 5-2 in the seventh.

Teoscar Hernandez and Lourdes Gurriel Jr. homered for Toronto. Gurriel's two-run shot in the eighth made it 5-4, but Tampa Bay held on.

"They have a pretty good team," Hernandez said. "The pitching staff they have is pretty awesome and the position players always try to do something to do damage to the other team. They play really, really hard. They put the little things together to win ball games."

Toronto went ahead 2-0 in the fourth when Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit an opposite-field triple and scored on a single by Travis Shaw. Fleming was able to work out of a bases-loaded, one-out situation later in the inning.

"Very happy for him," Rays manager Kevin Cash said. "The poise that he showed in the big inning when they had a bunch of guys on and only one guy came in, pretty impressive."

Thornton was making his second start in four days after being out two weeks with the same elbow issue. He recorded two outs and gave up six runs Thursday against Philadelphia.

Cash was ejected in the sixth for arguing a check-swing call.

Trainer's room

Rays: Right-handed relief pitcher Nick Anderson (right forearm inflammation) went on the 10-day injured list, becoming the eighth Tampa Bay pitcher on the IL. "You always expect some injuries, they're going to occur," Cash said. "I think we all knew that they were going to be elevated this season in particular. But no doubt this is a little head scratching."

Gone again

Rays left-hander Sean Gilmartin was designated for assignment for the second time this season after allowing one run, three walks and one hit over one inning Friday night. Gilmartin is married to White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany.

Up next

Rays left-hander Blake Snell (2-0) will start Monday's series finale. He is 2-1 with a 1.36 earned-run average in seven starts against the Blue Jays since the start of the 2018 season. Toronto has not announced its starter.

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