Tampa Bay finishes off first half with win over Pirates


Tampa Bay is 49-32 at the halfway point of the season, making some MLB history.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — What a first half the Tampa Bay Rays enjoyed as the majors’ surprise team of the season. Their goal now? To make the second half just as stunningly good.

Backup catcher Shawn Riggans homered among his three hits and drove in two runs and the first-place Rays completed a remarkable first-half turnaround, beating the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-3 Sunday behind Andy Sonnanstine’s seven effective innings.

Tampa Bay regained first place in the AL East for the first time since June 3 when the Boston Red Sox lost at Houston 3-2. The Red Sox and Rays open a three-game series at Tropicana Field to night.

The Rays are 49-32, the most victories midway through a season by a team that had the majors’ worst record the season before, according to Stats, Inc. They went 5-1 on a road trip to Florida and Pittsburgh and finished 12-6 in interleague play.

All this by a team that has never had a winning season or won more than 70 games since joining the AL as an expansion team in 1998.

“We went 5-1 on the trip and I felt we let one slip away,” said closer Troy Percival, who pitched the ninth inning for his 18th save in 20 opportunities. “You get to that point, you’ve got a team that’s doing something special.”

The Rays’ .605 winning percentage has been bettered at midseason by a team that was the worst overall the previous season only by the 1903 New York Giants (.643, 45-25).

“This is great, but it’s only the first half,” said Riggans, who has 15 RBIs in 73 at-bats. “Nobody remembers the first half, everybody remembers the second half and the last day of the season. We’ve got a lot of work ahead of us. Interleague play is done now.”

All the qualities that led to Tampa Bay’s strong first half were visible: effective starting pitching, power from a fast-improving offense and timely hitting.

Sonnanstine (9-3) limited Pittsburgh to two runs, one earned, and is 6-0 after a Rays loss. Tampa Bay was a 4-3, 13-inning loser on Jason Bay’s game-ending home run Saturday night.

Riggans and Willy Aybar hit solo home runs, the only runs allowed by Pirates starter Tom Gorzelanny in six innings, and Riggans’ run-scoring single capped a go-ahead two-run eighth inning.

Interleague play hurt the Pirates again. They are 38-43 at the break, a three-game improvement from their 35-46 of last season, but were 5-9 against the AL. They are a major league-worst 62-103 in interleague play.