Max Fried lost a no-hit bid in the eighth inning when the official scorer changed an earlier decision to a hit, and the Yankees went on to beat the Tampa Bay Rays 4-0 Sunday in Tampa.

Rookie Chandler Simpson hit a grounder into the hole between first and second with one out in the sixth and reached when the ball bounced off the glove of first baseman Paul Goldschmidt.

Official scorer Bill Mathews at first called the play an error,

Fried, the former Har- vard-Westlake standout, was hitless through seven innings and was about to throw his first pitch of the eighth when Mathews announced he changed the decision to an error. Mathews said he looked at several video replays and determined Simpson would have beaten any throw to first.

Jake Mangum then led off the eighth with a clean single to center. Fried (4-0) allowed two hits in 7 2/3 innings as the Yankees won for the fifth time in six games.

Trent Grisham, Cody Bellinger and Austin Wells hit solo homers.

Padres 3, Astros 2: Fernando Tatís Jr. hit a tiebreaking solo home run and scored all of San Diego’s runs as the Padres avoided being swept with a win at Houston.

Tatís sent the first pitch he saw from Tayler Scott (1-2) 427 feet to straightaway center for a 3-2 lead in the seventh.

Tatís scored from second on a Mauricio Dubón error in the first, and he led off the third inning with a triple before scoring on a single by Gavin Sheets.

The Astros tied it with two runs in the fifth on an RBI single by Dubón and a Yordan Alvarez sacrifice fly.

Dylan Cease yielded two runs on six hits with six strikeouts in five innings for the Padres.

Framber Valdez surrendered two runs on seven hits in six innings for the Astros.

Diamondbacks 3, Cubs 2 (11): Josh Naylor’s third hit of the game drove in automatic runner Geraldo Perdomo in the 11th and Arizona beat Chicago at Wrigley Field.

Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly allowed one run and two over 5 2/3 innings. He left with right leg cramping after retiring 16 in a row.

Reds 24, Orioles 2: Noelvi Marte hit his first career grand slam, off Baltimore infielder Jorge Mateo, and had seven RBIs, Austin Wynn drove in a career-high six and visiting Cincinnati embarrassed the Orioles.

Marte finished with five hits including his homer off Mateo, who entered during the eighth inning of the blowout to spare Baltimore’s bullpen. Wynn added a three-run homer off catcher Gary Sanchez in the ninth for the Reds’ 25th hit.

Austin Hays went 4 for 6 against his former team.

Elly De La Cruz hit a solo shot off Baltimore starter Charlie Morton (0-5), who allowed seven runs over 2 1/3 innings in his shortest outing since September 2023.

Mets 7, Cardinals 4: Brandon Nimmo robbed Jordan Walker of a home run in the sixth inning and singled home the tiebreaking run in the seventh as host New York completed its first four-game sweep of St. Louis in 39 years.

Francisco Lindor col- lected three hits, including a leadoff homer, for the Mets.

Juan Soto had three RBIs, including a two-run double to cap a three-run eighth that made it 7-3. as New York improved to 9-1 at home.

Brewers 14, Athletics 1: Rhys Hoskins went 3 for 5 with a homer, four RBIs and one of Milwaukee’s franchise-record nine steals and Logan Henderson recorded nine strikeouts in his MLB debut as the Brewers trounced the visiting Athletics.

Brice Turang scored three runs and stole three bases. Christian Yelich also scored three runs.

Henderson (1-0) allowed just three hits and one run in six innings.

Athletics starter Jeffrey Springs (3-2) left in the fourth inning with soreness in his right hamstring.

Braves 6, Twins 2: Matt Olson and Drake Baldwin hit two-run homers, Grant Holmes allowed only one run and Atlanta completed a three-game home sweep over Minnesota.

Marcell Ozuna also homered off Joe Ryan (1-3), who allowed six runs and eight hits in five innings.

Holmes (2-1) pitched 5 2/3 innings and allowed four hits with four walks and seven strikeouts.

Marlins 7, Phillies 5 (10): Javier Sanoja hit his first major league home run and had five RBIs as Miami rallied to win at Philadelphia.

Sanoja hit a 1-1 sweeper from Phillies reliever Orion Kerkering into the left field seats for a three-run homer to give the Marlins a 5-4 lead in the eighth inning.

Kyle Stowers drove in the go-ahead run on a sacrifice fly in the 10th.

Bryce Harper had a two- run double for Philadelphia.

Mariners 8, Blue Jays 3: Cal Raleigh and Rowdy Tellez each hit two-run homers and visiting Seattle defeated Toronto.

Raleigh has nine home runs, tying him with the Athletics’ Tyler Soderstrom for the major league lead.

Luis Castillo (2-2) allowed 10 hits in five innings but won for the first time in three starts. He allowed three runs and struck out five.

Blue Jays left-hander Easton Lucas (2-2) allowed six runs in 1 2/3 innings, before right-hander Paxton Schultz came on for his major league debut and struck out eight in 4 1/3 shutout innings.

Royals 4, Tigers 3 (10): Bobby Witt Jr. hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the 10th inning, and Kansas City edged host Detroit to stop a six-game losing streak.

Tigers ace Tarik Skubal allowed two runs and seven hits in five innings, while Royals starter Michael Wacha gave up two runs and seven hits in 5 1/3 innings.

Guardians 5, Pirates 4 (10): Steven Kwan and Kyle Manzardo hit two-run homers and Manzardo added a sacrifice fly in the 10th to rally Cleveland past Pittsburgh for a three-game road sweep.

The Pirates (8-15) rallied for three runs in the ninth off Emmanuel Clase (3-0), who was going for his third straight save in the series.

Clase surrendered a two-run double to Adam Frazier before Ke’Bryan Hayes tied it with an RBI single.

White Sox 8, Red Sox 4: Andrew Vaughn hit a two- run homer, Edgar Quero added a go-ahead, two-run single in the seventh and Chicago snapped a six-game losing streak with a victory over Boston, ending its worst road start in team history.

Matt Thaiss added a two-run shot for the White Sox, who lost their first eight road games.

Wilyer Abreu hit a three-run homer for the Red Sox, who had their four-game win streak halted.

Coming off the worst start by a Red Sox pitcher in nearly 63 years when he gave up 12 runs in just 2 1/3 innings at Tampa Bay on Monday, Tanner Houck allowed Thaiss’ homer in the first inning before putting up zeros over the next five.