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MLB : ATS Matchup
Saturday 10/3/2015Line$ LineOU LineScore
TORONTO  ESTRADA )
 
TAMPA BAY  ARCHER )
-1.5  +140

+1.5  -160
-105

-105

7ov
 
3
Final
4

TORONTO (93 - 67) at TAMPA BAY (78 - 82)
View Previous GameView Next Game
Saturday, 10/3/2015 6:10 PM
MARCO ESTRADA (R) vs. CHRIS ARCHER (R)
Board OpeningLatest
 LineTotalLineTotal
915TORONTO+110Ov 7.5,+105+110Ov 7,-130
916TAMPA BAY-120Un 7.5,-125-120Un 7,+110
ADVANCED TEAM STATS
TORONTO - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games93-67+12.777-735.50.2680.3370.4570.7944.10.2480.2990.4020.701
Road Games40-39+0.146-275.50.2600.3250.4310.7554.60.2690.3220.4300.752
vs Right-handed Starters72-51+14.858-555.50.2670.3360.4550.7914.00.2440.2980.3930.691
Past 7 Games5-2+35-16.70.3200.3860.5530.9395.00.2240.2750.4250.700
Dome Games3-4-0.83-33.70.2220.2550.4030.6584.90.2830.3370.4390.776
Night Games56-41+5.747-455.40.2620.3310.4470.7784.00.2460.2980.3980.696
Division42-32+4.633-355.30.2640.3290.4470.7764.40.2470.3060.4130.719
TORONTO - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games5.50.2680.33716054421461304172290.45784356211388810391618614360
Road Games5.50.2600.325792780723134111060.4314052666144550690457629
Righty Starters5.50.2670.33612341891120229121780.455641433888668121126511547
TORONTO - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.451.137466.31981794025512845321-26342063%
Road Games3.901.201235.7109102202308122713-15181064.3%

TAMPA BAY - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games78-82-7.672-763.90.2520.3080.4050.7124.00.2400.3000.3850.685
Home Games39-40-7.640-333.70.2480.3030.3960.7004.00.2380.2950.3790.674
vs Right-handed Starters49-59-12.151-513.70.2470.3020.3890.6914.10.2350.3000.3890.689
Past 7 Games3-4-13-24.70.2540.2890.4080.6975.00.2950.3580.5270.885
Dome Games40-41-7.840-353.70.2450.3000.3910.6924.00.2370.2940.3760.670
Night Games58-54+3.452-534.10.2540.3110.4110.7224.00.2410.3020.3890.691
Division34-40-5.827-423.90.2480.3070.4020.7094.00.2270.2920.3870.679
TAMPA BAY - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games3.90.2520.30816054171366276321620.40559743312958710691509511688
Home Games3.70.2480.30379256863612813760.3962782056555050068455346
Righty Starters3.70.2470.302108362989618522960.3893702878795671099637161
TAMPA BAY - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.911.256531.72462314757019349827-37602570.6%
Home Games3.741.180267120111234368126316-14321076.2%
SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
TORONTO - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
9/19/2015DICKEY(R)BOSTONMILEY(L)6-7L-1659 unO8801390
9/20/2015BUEHRLE(L)BOSTONHILL(L)3-4L-1859 ovU9631091
9/21/2015PRICE(L)NY YANKEESWARREN(R)4-2W-2258 unU8101561
9/22/2015ESTRADA(R)NY YANKEESSEVERINO(R)4-6L-1058.5 unO78112100
9/23/2015STROMAN(R)NY YANKEESNOVA(R)4-0W-1808.5 ovU890661
9/25/2015DICKEY(R)TAMPA BAYODORIZZI(R)5-3W-1608 evP10110530
9/26/2015PRICE(L)TAMPA BAYARCHER(R)10-8W-1857 unO1283940
9/27/2015BUEHRLE(L)TAMPA BAYANDRIESE(R)5-4W-1659 unP1071630
9/28/2015ESTRADA(R)@ BALTIMORETILLMAN(R)4-3W1009 evU1060420
9/30/2015STROMAN(R)@ BALTIMOREGONZALEZ(R)15-2W-1558 evO18130764
9/30/2015DICKEY(R)@ BALTIMOREGAUSMAN(R)1-8L1108 unO5401140
10/1/2015HUTCHISON(R)@ BALTIMOREWILSON(R)4-6L1707.5 evO9708120
10/2/2015BUEHRLE(L)@ TAMPA BAYRAMIREZ(R)8-4W-1258 ovO1790640
10/3/2015ESTRADA(R)@ TAMPA BAYARCHER(R) 
10/4/2015 @ TAMPA BAYMOORE(L) 

TAMPA BAY - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
9/19/2015RAMIREZ(R)BALTIMORECHEN(L)1-2L+1007.5 unU6501060
9/20/2015ODORIZZI(R)BALTIMOREGAUSMAN(R)7-6W+1057 unO14102980
9/21/2015ARCHER(R)@ BOSTONRODRIGUEZ(L)7-8L-1208 unO111111091
9/22/2015MOORE(L)@ BOSTONOWENS(L)5-2W1059 unU840861
9/23/2015SMYLY(L)@ BOSTONPORCELLO(R)6-2W1058.5 unU141017111
9/24/2015RAMIREZ(R)@ BOSTONMILEY(L)4-2W1158.5 unU1150520
9/25/2015ODORIZZI(R)@ TORONTODICKEY(R)3-5L1508 evP53010110
9/26/2015ARCHER(R)@ TORONTOPRICE(L)8-10L1757 unO9401283
9/27/2015ANDRIESE(R)@ TORONTOBUEHRLE(L)4-5L1559 unP6301071
9/29/2015MOORE(L)MIAMICONLEY(L)4-2W-1507.5 evU661961
9/30/2015SMYLY(L)MIAMICOSART(R)6-4W-1757.5 unO1070970
10/1/2015ODORIZZI(R)MIAMIFERNANDEZ(R)4-1W+1006.5 ovU16112460
10/2/2015RAMIREZ(R)TORONTOBUEHRLE(L)4-8L+1158 ovO6401790
10/3/2015ARCHER(R)TORONTOESTRADA(R) 
10/4/2015MOORE(L)TORONTO  
KEY GAME INFORMATION
TORONTO: TORONTO (AP) - The upcoming season for the Toronto Blue Jays seems destined to be defined by the one young pitcher who'll miss it and the two even younger guys who'll try to replace him.
Toronto's plans for ending baseball's longest active playoff drought took a serious hit when Marcus Stroman suffered a season-ending knee injury in spring training.
The second-year right-hander tore a ligament when his knee buckled as he backed off a bunt during a pregame fielding drill. He's out for the year after undergoing surgery.
''It's tough,'' Stroman said. ''I just feel like I let my team down. I've worked harder than I ever had this offseason.''
The injury changed Toronto's thinking about 22-year-old right-hander Aaron Sanchez, who might have been closing games rather than starting them if Stroman was still healthy, and 21-year-old lefty Daniel Norris, the van-dwelling surfer dude.
The two pitchers now look likely to get their shot in Toronto's rotation, slotting in behind 200-inning workhorses R.A Dickey and Mark Buehrle, and 24-year-old right-hander Drew Hutchison.
How successful they are could well determine what happens to the Blue Jays, out of the postseason since winning their second straight World Series in 1993 and the only team that hasn't reached the playoffs this century.
''We may have to rely on a young guy who may not be proven,'' manager John Gibbons said. ''Stro was a baby, too, but a special guy.''
Sanchez has already shown signs that he could also be special. He excelled out of the bullpen in 24 games last season, posting three saves and a 1.09 ERA in 33 innings, striking out 27 while walking nine and holding opponents to a .128 average.
With the increased demands of a starting role lying ahead, the hard-throwing Sanchez has spent this spring refining his slider.
''With the way he throws, it could turn into a big strikeout pitch for him,'' Gibbons said.
The Blue Jays are also high on Norris, currently better known for spending his winters searching for prime surfing spots while living out of a 1978 Volkswagen camper van nicknamed ''Shaggy.''
''He's a different bird,'' Gibbons said. ''Anytime you live in a van, I wouldn't say that's normal.''
Norris had an abnormal 2014 season, rising from Class A to the majors after going 12-2 with a 2.53 ERA at three minor league stops. He underwent elbow surgery last October to remove bone spurs, and expects to be better this year than the pitcher who made five appearances for the Blue Jays in September.
''He's a student of the game,'' Gibbons said. ''He's a very smart kid and he's grounded. He's got the most important thing: He's got a great arm.''
After Jose Reyes and the Blue Jays went 83-79, here's what else to watch as they try to move up:
MIGHTY MIGUEL: Sanchez and Norris aren't the only impressive young arms expected to break camp with the Blue Jays. Right-hander Miguel Castro, 20, didn't allow a run in his first five spring appearances, striking out eight and walking none while allowing three hits over nine innings. A hard thrower who stands an imposing 6-foot-5, Castro has put himself in position to jump from Class A, where he went 8-3 with a 2.68 ERA last season, all the way to the majors. ''He looks like a seasoned vet out there, under control, very relaxed,'' Gibbons said.
NEW GUYS, NEW FOCUS: Toronto strengthened its lineup over the winter by signing free agent catcher Russell Martin to a five-year, $82 million contract and acquiring All-Star third baseman Josh Donaldson from Oakland. Slugger Jose Bautista has praised the newcomers for making a difference in the clubhouse with their winning pedigree and intense focus. ''We need something along those lines here every now and then,'' Bautista said. ''It's good to have guys to whom winning matters.''
BLOCKING THE PLATE: Adding Martin gave the Blue Jays a logjam at catcher, where incumbent Dioner Navarro is signed through 2015 and Josh Thole is Dickey's knuckleball specialist. Martin has worked hard this spring to prove he can handle Dickey's floater, which could mean Thole is ticketed for Triple-A. Or, Toronto may yet trade the switch-hitting Navarro to open room at DH for Edwin Encarnacion, who has been slowed this spring by a balky back and may not be able to handle regular duty at first base.
TAMPA BAY: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) - A year after being a trendy preseason pick to contend for the World Series, the Tampa Bay Rays are back in a familiar role as underdogs.
''That's good. ... We like that,'' three-time All-Star third baseman Evan Longoria said, noting the team has a history of flourishing most when little is expected from outside the organization.
''I just think it's going to be a really good year,'' the club's career home run and RBIs leader said. ''We've got a young team, a bunch of guys eager to learn and get out there and win games. I'm really looking forward to that.''
Former manager Joe Maddon - and his often unconventional way of doing things - is gone.
So is Andrew Friedman, the young executive who was architect of the teams that made the playoffs four of the past seven seasons.
The roster has a much different look, too, with 10 key players from a year ago either traded or released this winter.
''The end result is a club that we have optimism about, a club that we're excited about, that we think can compete for a playoff spot. And, that's what we want,'' team president of baseball operations Matt Silverman said.
''Every year, we want to come into camp believing our team can play meaningful games in September and have a chance to go to the playoffs, and even beyond,'' Silverman added. ''We have that - and at the same time, we've reloaded our minor league system, added some players who impact us this year, might impact us in the future, and we're better off because of that.''
Shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera, catcher Rene Rivera, outfielder Steven Souza Jr., and pitchers Kevin Jepsen, Ernesto Frieri and Burch Smith are offseason acquisitions who could figure in the team's success - or failure.
Smith and two other young starters - Matt Andriese and Nathan Karns - figure to begin the season in the rotation because of injuries to Alex Cobb, Drew Smyly, and Matt Moore.
The hope is the rest of the projected rotation, Chris Archer and Jake Odorizzi, can help the Rays stay afloat until they can get back to full strength.
''If you've got starting pitching, you've got a leg up on going into the season,'' rookie manager Kevin Cash said. ''We're very fortunate with the pitchers we have - starters and relievers.''
Cobb, sidelined by a forearm strain during spring training, believes the team will thrive as underdogs.
''We're not going to get bullied. A lot of people are picking us at the bottom, and we're going to embrace that and have each other's backs,'' the right-hander said.
''Any time anybody calls you out in your profession and makes you feel like you're not as good as you know you are, there's always something to prove,'' Cobb said. ''I don't feel like we need to have extra motivation. It's just going to be that much sweeter when we go out there and perform well.''
A look at the keys to the Rays' season:
WHO WILL LEAD?: Pitching and defense were staples during six consecutive winning seasons that produced four playoff berths and one trip to the World Series. The Rays slipped to 77-85 a year ago, their first losing record since 2007. They're banking on Cash, who has no previous managerial experience, being the right fit to restore winning ways. At 37, he's the youngest current manager or head coach in the four major professional sports.
BETTER LONGO: Longoria played in every game in 2014 for the first time in his career, however he hit a disappointing .253 with 22 homers and 91 RBIs. He's moving into the cleanup spot after batting third most of his career, and knows he has to be more consistent if the Rays - last in the AL in runs scored a year ago - are going to have a chance to be better offensively.
BEHIND THE PLATE: Catcher Ryan Hanigan was traded and backup Jose Molina was released this winter. The three-team deal that sent Wil Myers to San Diego and brought Souza to Tampa Bay from Washington, also landed Rivera from the Padres.
The Rays believe he's an upgrade defensively, as well as offensively.
Rivera posted career highs with a .252 batting average, 11 homers and 44 RBI's in 103 games last season. Still, the 31-year-old catcher stresses his job is to provide solid direction behind the plate.
''I want to help my pitching staff first. I think that's what the game is all about. If you pitch well, you're going to win some games,'' Rivera said. ''If I get a hit here, a hit there and help us win some games, that's even better.''
PREVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER AL PREVIEW (TORONTO-TAMPA BAY) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Blue Jays-Rays Preview* ========================

By JON PALMIERI STATS Editor

Toronto (92-67) at Tampa Bay (78-81), 6:10 p.m. EDT

The Toronto Blue Jays will be facing some very good pitchers once the playoffs get underway.

They'll get an early start on that Saturday night when they oppose Tampa Bay Rays ace Chris Archer.

With home-field advantage still undetermined, the AL East champion Blue Jays look to take a step closer to that and get the best of Archer for the second time in a week.

Having already clinched their first division title since 1993, Toronto's focus this weekend will be on earning home-field advantage throughout the postseason. The Blue Jays (93-67) will open the division series Thursday at home and hope to start against the wild-card winner by finishing with the league's best record.

They are tied with Kansas City in that race but own the tiebreaker because of a better head-to-head record.

Faced with a three-run deficit in Friday's series opener, the Blue Jays did what they do best - pummel the opposition with offense.

They answered Tampa Bay's four-run fifth with four of their own in the sixth, and Edwin Encarnacion and Russell Martin homered an inning later as Toronto won 8-4 to avoid its first three-game skid since early July.

Troy Tulowitzki had a pair of hits and a run scored in his first action since Sept. 12 after missing three weeks with a cracked scapula and bruised muscles in his upper back. Toronto improved to 31-8 with him in the lineup.

"It's awesome," Tulowitzki said. "To be back out there on the field is always special."

He is expected to get Saturday off and then play in Sunday's regular-season finale.

"He looked good to me," manager John Gibbons said.

The Blue Jays set a franchise record with their 48th victory since the All-Star break.

Marco Estrada (13-8, 3.15 ERA) aims to push that number to 49 in his final tune-up before the postseason.

Estrada, who didn't even begin the season in the rotation, has likely secured a start in the playoffs after he was one of the team's most consistent pitchers down the stretch. He is 6-2 with a 2.63 ERA and 0.92 WHIP in his last 12 starts, allowing three runs or fewer 11 times.

The right-hander was very good again Monday at Baltimore, yielding three runs and four hits over 7 1-3 innings before Toronto rallied for a 4-3 victory. He retired 18 of the next 19 after serving up a three-run homer in the second.

Estrada has dominated the Rays this season, tossing 21 scoreless innings in two starts and two relief appearances while allowing seven hits and one walk with 18 strikeouts.

Tampa Bay (78-82) will finish with a losing record for the second consecutive season after four straight years of at least 90 wins.

Archer (12-13, 3.26) needs a victory to avoid a losing record as he tries to erase the memory of a very disappointing birthday.

The right-hander is 0-3 with a 6.58 ERA in five starts since his last win Aug. 31. He has nowhere to go but up after he was roughed up for a career high-tying nine runs and 10 hits over 3 2-3 innings in a 10-8 loss at Toronto last Saturday on his 27th birthday.

"It wasn't my day by any means," said Archer, who walked five for the second straight start.

Before Saturday's performance, Archer had gone 3-1 with a 0.93 ERA in his first four starts this season against the Blue Jays.

He's limited Encarnacion to 4 for 34 lifetime though three of those hits left the park.


Last Updated: 5/6/2024 5:38:11 PM EST.


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