Chirinos has tying single in 11th, has winning hit in 12th as Rays beat Jays 7-6

If the Tampa Bay Rays are going to make a push for another playoff berth, they’ll likely need help from newcomers like Desmond Jennings and Robinson Chirinos.

The rookies were major contributors Thursday, helping the defending AL East champions rally twice in extra innings to beat the Toronto Blue Jays 7-6.

Jennings’ solo homer in the 10th made it 4-all. Chirinos tied it again in the 11th with a two-out, pinch-hit single up the middle against Shawn Camp (1-2), then won it with another two-out single in the 12th.

A third rookie, right-hander Brandon Gomes (1-1), pitched one scoreless inning for his first major league win.

“Those guys are showing they definitely belong in the big leagues,” Rays designated hitter Johnny Damon said.

“It’s not like we have to wait for them to be good. I feel very confident in them,” manager Joe Maddon added. “Obviously, they lack experience. Obviously they need to be tested in even hotter moments than today. But I think they can achieve in those moments because their makeup is so good, combined with their skill level.”

Tampa Bay loaded the bases in the 12th on B.J. Upton’s one-out triple and a pair of intentional walks. One out later, Chirinos grounded a single off Camp past diving shortstop Yunel Escobar.

The Rays said Chirinos became the first rookie with separate tying and winning hits in extra innings of the same game since Nick Green did it for Atlanta against Boston on July 2, 2004.

Slumping slugger Evan Longoria, who entered the day on a 3-for-33 slide that dropped his batting average to .226, hit a three-run homer for Tampa Bay. Jose Bautista hit his major league-leading 33rd home run for Toronto, a solo shot off Wade Davis that made it 3-3 in the eighth.

“It was a tough game. We jumped out quick, got a couple of runs but didn’t have many opportunities for six straight (innings),” Blue Jays manager John Farrell said. Jose hit the home run to get the game back tied and … pump some life back into us.”

The Blue Jays took a brief lead in the 10th when Colby Rasmus delivered a RBI double for his biggest hit since being acquired from St. Louis in an eight-player trade on July 27. Reliever Jon Rauch blew a save chance in the bottom half when Jennings hit a leadoff homer.

Jose Molina’s two-run triple off Juan Cruz put Toronto ahead in the 11th. Matt Joyce’s RBI grounder pulled Tampa Bay within a run before Chirinos singled to extend the game once again.

In the 12th, Chirinos liked his chances.

“He was the one in trouble,” Chirinos said, describing the final at-bat against Camp. “He had to throw strikes. … You win and you see everybody smiling and happy, it’s just a great feeling.”

It was a difficult loss for the Blue Jays, who had a chance to win three consecutive series for the first time since mid-May.

“I think any time you lose a game late, those are tough to take,” Farrell said. “You work all day to get yourself into a position, you present yourself the position and it is not converted.”

Longoria homered off Blue Jays starter Brett Cecil to erase a 2-0 deficit in the fifth.

Davis, meanwhile, got off to a shaky start for the second straight outing. He gave up five first-inning runs at Oakland last week, then settled to not allow any more over the next five to give the Rays a chance to rally to beat the Athletics.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with no outs in the first when Rasmus doubled and Davis walked Escobar and Bautista. Adam Lind’s single, snapping a career-worst 0-for-22 streak, drove in one run and another scored when Edwin Encarnacion grounded into a double play.

Cecil limited the Rays to one hit — Casey Kotchman’s two-out single in the fourth — until Justin Ruggiano and Jennings singled in the fifth. Damon kept the inning going by hustling up the first base to avoid grounding into a double play, setting up Longoria’s first-pitch homer.

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