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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- The Tampa Bay Devil Rays may have
found another starter.
The oft-injured Paul Wilson worked seven strong innings and Bobby Smith doubled home the go-ahead run in the eighth inning as
the Devil Rays beat the Kansas City Royals 2-1 Thursday night.
"I'm feeling very strong," said Wilson, who had his longest
outing in the majors since Sept. 20, 1996. "Health is priority No.
1 in their eyes and my eyes. They want to make sure I finish this
year healthy."
Wilson, who missed all of last season after undergoing elbow
surgery, allowed one run and five hits in his second start of the
season. The right-hander, acquired in a four-player deal with the
New York Mets on July 29, also missed parts of the 1997 and '98
seasons because of shoulder surgery.
"You'd have to be crazy not to be excited when you see how he
pitches and the stuff he has," Tampa Bay manager Larry Rothschild
said. "He's at a point in his career where he knows it's time to
put it together physically. We just need to keep him healthy."
Steve Cox, who went 3-for-3, opened the eighth with a walk from
Jeff Suppan (7-8). Pinch-runner Jason Tyner stole second with one
out and went to third on Fred McGriff's grounder. Smith, mired in a
1-for-27 slump, doubled to center field.
"I think he just made a mistake to Smith," Kansas City manager
Tony Muser said. "Got it up and out over the plate."
Tony Fiore (1-0) worked a scoreless eighth to get his first
major league win. Roberto Hernandez got the final three outs for
his 28th save in 34 opportunities. Fiore, who made his big league debut last Sunday, is in his
ninth professional season and has made 927 minor league
appearances.
"It's been a wild week," Fiore said. "It's been great, it
really has."
Suppan gave up two runs and seven hits in 7 2-3 innings. It was
just his second loss in seven decisions since the All-Star break.
"He's been great since the All-Star break," Kansas City's
Johnny Damon said. "Unfortunately, some nights the offense has to
sleep. We didn't show up tonight."
The Royals, whose three-game winning streak was snapped, had
scored 57 runs in their past eight games.
"It is very frustrating," Royals catcher Hector Ortiz said.
"We were trying to do everything we can to score runs for him, and
we couldn't do it. He worked as hard as he could to keep us in the
game, but we didn't perform good."
Tampa Bay has won 13 of the last 16 meetings between the teams.
Todd Dunwoody's sacrifice fly in the second inning gave the
Royals a 1-0 lead. The Devil Rays tied it in the sixth when Smith
hit into a double play with the bases loaded.
Tampa Bay got a runner to third base in the first, third and
seventh innings with two outs. McGriff struck out to end the first,
Greg Vaughn flied out in the third and Gerald Williams hit a
seventh-inning fly ball.
Kansas City's Mike Sweeney had his 16-game hitting streak
stopped after going 0-for-2. He also walked and was hit by a pitch.
The game took 2 hours, 30 minutes. Tampa Bay has played seven
straight games in under three hours.
"Good baseball games can be very boring," Muser said. "It was
a very good baseball game. You've got to give credit to both clubs.
They played well. No brawls. Country hardball."
Game notes Fiore plans to give the game ball to his parents in Chicago. ... Vaughn, who has been limited to DH duties since Aug. 7
by a right shoulder injury, has just eight hits in his past 61
at-bats. He will have the shoulder examined by Dr. James Andrews
before Friday's game. ... Damon was the DH, which allowed Dunwoody
to start in center. "I've been trying to get Dunwoody in the
lineup," Muser said. "We're going to take a look at a lot of
people." ... Damon has a hit in 24 of 25 games. ... Wilson threw
six shutout innings last Saturday at Baltimore.
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ALSO SEE
Baseball Scoreboard
Kansas City Clubhouse
Tampa Bay Clubhouse
RECAPS
Tampa Bay 2 Kansas City 1
Detroit 6 Baltimore 1
Texas 14 Cleveland 7
San Francisco 10 Pittsburgh 2
Milwaukee 8 Los Angeles 2
San Diego 11 Chicago Cubs 5
Cincinnati 4 Atlanta 3
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