Resilient Rays show mettle, stun A's with comeback win

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OAKLAND -- The Rays took a while to prove that they possess a quick-strike offense in Tuesday's game against the A's at the Coliseum, but that offense struck at absolutely the right time.

The first career pinch-hit home run from Mike Zunino tied the contest in the ninth before the Rays tacked on five more runs in the 10th to beat Oakland, 10-7, taking the first two games of this three-game set.

"We were all pumped up, it was very clutch," said manager Kevin Cash of Zunino's game-tying homer. "It was a big, big win. Come from behind, early deficit, the guys just stayed at it."

Despite hitting for the cycle as a team one batter into the third inning, the Rays trailed, 5-3, as starter Ryan Yarbrough struggled in his season debut. The left-hander, making his first appearance since last season due to left groin tightness, surrendered six hits and five earned runs in 2 1/3 innings, including a grand slam to Oakland's Kevin Smith.

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After falling behind early, the Rays' stingy bullpen corps took over, with Ryan Thompson, Jeffrey Springs, Matt Wisler and Andrew Kittredge combining for 6 2/3 innings of two-hit relief work, keeping the Rays in the game until Zunino's ninth-inning heroics.

"Just a great team win, and very appreciative of all the effort from the bullpen," Cash added.

One thing this Rays team has shown throughout the season's first month is that it's a resilient bunch, with a lineup of potent hitters capable of getting big hits when necessary and picking up the pitching staff in the process.

On Tuesday, that meant putting together a five-run burst in the 10th to distance itself from the A's and wrap a bow on one of the strongest full-team wins of the young season.

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"We've grinded through some series and some games," said Cash. "It's been like that all season long, but it feels good when you're able to come out on top."

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