Rays lose 4-1, heading to Oakland for AL Wild Card Game

TORONTO (AP) — The Tampa Bay Rays are headed west for the AL Wild Card Game.

Tampa Bay managed just three hits and lost 4-1 to the Toronto Blue Jays on Saturday, setting up a trip to Oakland for the wild-card round.

"It's going to be challenging," Rays manager Kevin Cash said after the loss. "We're going to need Oakland to play like they haven't here for a while."

Matt Duffy homered in the seventh inning, but that was it for Tampa Bay. Duffy finished with two hits and Tommy Pham singled for the team's other hit.

The Rays (96-65) secured a postseason berth Friday and began the day tied with Oakland in the wild-card race. The A's shut out Seattle 1-0 on Saturday night to clinch home field for the wild-card matchup.

The Athletics won four of seven regular-season meetings with the Rays, giving them the head-to-head tiebreaker.

"We're a confident team regardless of where we are," Duffy said.

The Rays are 48-32 on the road with one game remaining.

Teoscar Hernandez hit his 25th homer for Toronto, and Trent Thornton (6-9) pitched five effective innings. Rowdy Tellez had two hits and drove in a run.

The Blue Jays jumped on Ryan Yarbrough (11-6) for three runs before he recorded his first out of the game.

Hernandez connected for his second career leadoff homer. Cavan Biggio then singled and scored on Randal Grichuk's triple. Tellez added an RBI single.

"The first inning it seemed like just a lot of pitches found the center of the plate," Cash said.

Yarbrough allowed three runs and five hits in five innings.

"I feel like I kind of cleaned it up a little bit as the game went along," Yarbrough said.

Thornton settled down nicely after a shaky first. The right-hander allowed one hit, struck out eight and walked four.

"Thornton set the tone after the first inning," Cash said. "I mean, they had a guy up and we didn't capitalize. That's kind of our chance right there."

Thornton's 149 strikeouts are the most for a Blue Jays rookie since Mark Eichhorn had 166 in 1986.

"He's really pitched well in his last nine starts for sure, and a great job again today," manager Charlie Montoyo said.

Ken Giles worked the ninth for his 23rd save in 24 opportunities.

After Duffy hit his first homer of the season off Sam Gaviglio, Richard Ureña restored Toronto's three-run cushion with an RBI double in the bottom half of the inning.

DUFFY DELIVERS

Duffy had gone 427 at-bats since his previous home run, the longest active streak in the majors and one he had been reminded of frequently by opposing videoboards.