Mark Buehrle off Blue Jays roster after major loss to Rays | CBC Sports - Action News
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Mark Buehrle off Blue Jays roster after major loss to Rays

Blue Jays pitcher Mark Buehrle has missed out on making history thanks to his part in a thumping by the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday.

"It wasn't meant to be," says pitcher after thumping by Tampa Bay

Joey Butler grand slam ends Mark Buehrle's season

9 years ago
Duration 0:53
The first inning grand slam broke the game wide open and ended Buehrle's bid for a 15th straight 200 innings pitched season

Mark Buehrle missed making history and found out he will be left off the Toronto Blue Jays' playoff roster.

Buehrle failed to become the fifth major leaguerto pitch 200 innings or more in 15 consecutive seasons, and the AL East champion Blue Jays missed out on home-field advantage throughout the playoffs as they lost to the Tampa Bay Rays 12-3 Sunday in their regular-season finale.

Starting for the second time in three days, Buehrle (15-8) needed two innings to reach the milestone, but he failed to get through the first.

"This game is crazy," Buehrle said. "I felt great and didn't get out the first inning. It wasn't meant to be."

David Price is scheduled to start Game 1 of the Blue Jays' AL Division series Thursday at home against AL West champion Texas. Toronto ended the regular season at 93-69, a 10-game improvement over last season.

It didn't come as a surprise that Buehrle will not be on the active roster for the Rangers series.

"They've already talked to me," Buehrle said. "It's tough. We've had four guys throwing (the ball well). They made the right decision."

Buerhle also said he has not decided if he will be retiring.

"I don't know what's going to happen," Buerhle said. "I'm going to go home and talk with my wife. We'll figure it out and let you guys know in a couple months."

Two errors led to Buehrle allowing eight unearned runs and five hits over a career-low two-thirds of an inning. He had gone 6 2-3 innings Friday night en route to his 15th win.

"You could argue he's been as valuable as any pitcher in baseball for the last 15 years," Rays manager Kevin Cash said. "He's so efficient, and you hear his teammates talk about him and what he's done."

Chris Colabello and Darwin Barney homered for the Blue Jays, who needed a win and a Kansas City loss to finish with the AL's best record.

Joey Butler homered twice and had six RBIs for Rays.

Tampa Bay's first run off Buehrle scored when first baseman Edwin Encarnacion dropped Steven Souza Jr's soft liner for the Blue Jays' second error in a span of five batters.

Tim Beckham drew a two-out bases-loaded walk and Butler hit a grand slam on an 85 mph offering the fastest of Buehrle's 45 pitches to make it 6-0. The slam came after a close call by plate umpire Alfonso Marquez went against Buehrle on a 2-2 pitch.

Manager John Gibbons took Buehrle out after Brandon Guyer's RBI single.

Mikie Mahtook completed the Rays' nine-run first with a two-run homer off Ryan Tepera. Butler had a two-run shot during a three-run fifth.

Colabello hit a solo drive in the fourth, and Barney had a two-run ninth-inning drive.

Matt Moore (3-4) gave up one run and four hits over six innings for the Rays, who went 80-82 under first-year manager Kevin Cash. Tampa Bay was 77-85 last year with current Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon.

The Rays finished with an MLB-low home attendance of 1,247,668 after drawing 15,815 on Sunday. Tampa Bay drew 1,446,464 last season.

MLB-low home attendance of 1,247,668 after drawing 15,815 on Sunday. Tampa Bay drew 1,446,464 last season.