Moore finally loses as Tigers rout Rays 10-1

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By NOAH TRISTER

By NOAH TRISTER

AP Baseball Writer

DETROIT — Matt Moore’s first loss of the season was an ugly one.

The Tampa Bay left-hander got only six outs against the Detroit Tigers — while allowing six runs, seven hits and six walks — and the Rays went on to lose 10-1 on Tuesday night. Prince Fielder homered and drove in four runs for the Tigers.

Fielder also hit a two-run single that capped Detroit’s four-run second inning.

“In the second inning, I just lost my release point. That’s happened before, and I’ve got a couple tricks that I can use to get it back, but nothing worked today,” Moore said. “I wasn’t throwing anything close enough to the strike zone to make them swing at anything.”

Moore (8-1) was pitching on three days’ rest after his previous start in Cleveland was limited to one inning because of rain.

Omar Infante homered and had three RBIs for Detroit, which won for the second time in seven games. It was Tampa Bay’s second loss in nine.

Anibal Sanchez (6-5) allowed a run and four hits in seven innings. He struck out nine with one walk.

Fielder and Jhonny Peralta had three hits each for the Tigers.

The Rays got a run in the second to open the scoring, but Moore immediately allowed a single to Peralta and an RBI double to Matt Tuiasosopo in the bottom half. Infante made it 2-1 with a sacrifice fly, and after two-out walks to Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera, Fielder singled with the bases loaded.

“It was a great night,” Tuiasosopo said. “He has some great secondary pitches — a great changeup and curveball — so we really wanted to just get after his fastball and not miss that when he threw it.”

The third inning wasn’t any better for Moore. After a leadoff double by Peralta, he walked two straight hitters and then allowed an RBI single by Avisail Garcia. Moore was finally pulled after he walked Infante to force in a run and make it 6-1.

“I thought Matt had one of his best fastballs of the season — it was at 95 (mph) — but he didn’t have any command of his secondary pitches,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. “That’s obviously a great offense, but most of what happened tonight was self-inflicted.”

Alex Torres came on with the bases loaded and nobody out, but he prevented any further damage by striking out Cabrera and Fielder to end the inning.

Moore had allowed only 15 runs all season coming into the game.

Sanchez, meanwhile, has also been impressive this year — although he doesn’t have Moore’s flashy won-loss record. Sanchez struck out 17 batters against Atlanta in April, and he had a no-hitter broken up in the ninth inning against Minnesota on May 24.

After that 130-pitch outing, Sanchez was knocked around a bit in a loss at Pittsburgh last week. He had an extra day of rest before facing the Rays and looked sharp from the start.

Evan Longoria led off the second with a triple to right-center and scored on a sacrifice fly by Desmond Jennings, but Tampa Bay’s offense didn’t threaten much after that.

Infante’s solo homer made it 7-1 in the fifth. The following inning, Cabrera went from first to third on a wild pitch when catcher Jose Molina was slow to come up with the ball back by the screen. Molina had his left arm checked after the play but stayed in the game.

Fielder drove in Cabrera with a sacrifice fly, and his 12th homer of the season — a solo shot in the eighth — made it 9-1.

NOTES: Tampa Bay announced after the game it had agreed to a minor league deal with C Jesus Flores. … Hunter’s hitting streak ended at 11 games.

Detroit RHP Doug Fister (5-2) faces Tampa Bay RHP Alex Cobb (6-2) on Wednesday night.