Rays' Karns first AL pitcher to homer in 1-0 win since 1962

 

Nathan Karns powered the Tampa Bay Rays with his arm — and his bat. And he wasn't even feeling well.

Karns homered and pitched five innings, ruining the major-league debut of Philadelphia's Aaron Nola and leading the Rays to a 1-0 victory over the Phillies on Tuesday night.

"A unique win but we'll take as many as we can get," manager Kevin Cash said. "(Karns) did it all tonight."

Karns (5-5) allowed three hits, struck out four and walked two, marking the 14th game where the right-hander has allowed two earned runs or less. He led off the third inning with a homer to left.

It was just the sixth time in baseball history that an American League pitcher homered in a 1-0 game, the last coming on April 18, 1962, when Milt Pappas did it for Baltimore in a win over the Yankees.

"It was definitely a memory I won't ever forget," said Karns, who said his last homer came in 2006 while in high school. "I just swung away."

Karns bounced back from his last outing on July 9 when he allowed career-highs of seven runs and nine hits in an 8-3 loss at Kansas City to help the Rays win for just the third time in the past 13 games on the road. He won despite feeling fatigued and dehydrated on a warm, muggy night.

"I just couldn't catch my breath at all today," he said.

Nola (0-1) was impressive, surrendering one run and five hits with six strikeouts and one walk in six innings, but the Phillies managed just four hits while ending their four-game winning streak.

"He was poised, had good mound presence and didn't look scared," Phillies interim manager Pete Mackanin said. "Just couldn't muster any offense for him. He did everything right."

The 22-year-old right-hander was the seventh overall selection by the Phillies in the 2014 draft, making him the first Philadelphia player since Pat Combs in 1989 to appear in the big leagues a year after being drafted.

There was a rare buzz among the 28,703 fans at Citizens Bank Park that has been absent for most of this rebuilding season. Since announcing on Friday that Nola was being called up, the Phillies sold 8,500 tickets — including 4,000 on Tuesday alone. Fans cheered as soon as Nola emerged from the dugout during warmups, gave him a standing ovation when his name was announced and unleashed some chants of "AA-RON! NO-LA!" during the contest.

"It was pretty awesome to be out there, feel the energy of the fans and pitch at this level," Nola said. "It was amazing."

And Nola didn't disappoint those in attendance.

Featuring a fastball that reached as high as 94 mph, along with an 84 mph changeup and curveball, Nola breezed through the first two innings looking like a poised veteran.

Then, he grooved a fastball to Karns leading off the third, and the Rays pitcher drove it into the seats in left field for an unlikely homer that turned out to be the lone run of the game.

The homer was the first hit by a Rays pitcher this season, snapping an 0-for-14 skid, and their first in the last 23 at-bats dating to last July 23 when Alex Cobb doubled. It also was the first homer for Karns, who had been 0 for 5 in his career at the plate, and just the second by a Tampa Bay pitcher in club history.

Other than that, Nola was tough. Besides Karns, only two other batters reached second base.

"He knows how to pitch," Mackanin said.

The Phillies had their own trouble with Karns and five relievers. The quintet allowed one hit in four scoreless innings, capped by Brad Boxberger's 1-2-3 ninth that gave him 24 saves.

"The bullpen was outstanding," Cash said. "They've been pitching good all year and we really trust them."

Philadelphia had runners on first and second with two outs in the seventh, but Jake McGee struck out pinch-hitter Jeff Francoeur with a 99-mph fastball for the final out.

BASERUNNING BLUNDERS

The Phillies hurt themselves with two baserunning gaffes. Cody Asche made the first out at third base in the second inning when trying to advance on Domonic Brown's single. And Odubel Herrera failed to run out a groundball in the fifth, resulting in an inning-ending, 3-6-3 double play. Nola was forced out at second on the play after singling to center for his first career hit.

"He kind of quit running," Mackanin said. "That's not the way you play."

SLUMPING RAYS

Evan Longoria and James Loney both went 0 for 4 to extend their slumps. Longoria is 1 for his past 23 while Loney is 3 for 30.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Rays: RF Steven Souza Jr. was activated from the DL. He had been out since July 6 with a right finger laceration. OF Grady Sizemore was sent to Triple-A Durham to make room for Souza, who went 0 for 4 with four strikeouts.

Phillies: 3B Maikel Franco was held out of the lineup after aggravating his right elbow with a throw to first on Monday night. RHP Jerome Williams (hamstring) was activated from the DL and will start Friday against the Cubs in Chicago.

UP NEXT

The teams close the three-game series on Wednesday afternoon with Rays RHP Jake Odorizzi (5-5, 2.30 ERA) facing Phillies LHP Adam Morgan (1-2, 3.91). Tampa Bay has won 11 straight games against left-handed starters.