Yankees: Left-hander Max Fried lost a no-hit bid in the Yankees’ 4-0 victory against the Rays on Sunday in Tampa, Florida just as the bottom of the eighth inning was about to start when the official scorer changed a sixth-inning call to a hit from an error. 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 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 on Fried’s fifth pitch of the inning. Fried allowed two hits in 7 2/3 innings, throwing 102 pitches. The Yankees had made three defensive gems to keep the Rays hitless and led 3-0. The 31-year-old Fried, 4-0 with a 1.42 ERA, signed an eight-year, $218 million contract with the Yankees during the offseason. Last May 11, Fried pitched seven hitless innings for the Braves against the host Mets and was removed after 109 pitches in a 4-1 win.

Braves: Matt Olson and Drake Baldwin hit two-run HRs, Grant Holmes allowed only one run and the Braves beat the visiting Twins 6-2 to complete a three-game sweep. Marcell Ozuna also homered off Joe Ryan (1-3), who allowed six runs and eight hits and one walk in five innings. Byron Buxton had two hits, including a home run off right-hander Enyel De Los Santos, for the Twins. The Braves hadn’t won back-to-back games before the sweep. The Braves’ first winning streak of the season came in Alex Verdugo’s first three starts as the team’s left fielder and leadoff hitter. Verdugo had four hits, including two doubles, and drove in the go-ahead run in Saturday night’s 4-3 win and had one hit on Sunday. Holmes (2-1) pitched 5 2/3 innings and allowed four hits with four walks and seven strikeouts.

Marlins: OF Griffin Conine was placed on the 60-day IL after dislocating his left shoulder during Saturday’s 11-10 road loss against the Phillies. The injury occurred in the sixth inning when Conine dove headfirst into second base on an RBI double, his team-leading seventh of the season. He immediately clutched his left arm and left the game with a trainer. Conine, 27, had emerged as a key contributor in the Marlins’ lineup, leading the team in slugging percentage (.438) and OPS (.790) over 71 plate appearances. His defensive prowess was also notable, as he was the only player in the majors with multiple five-star catches this season, based on data from MLB’s Statcast.

Dodgers: RHP Tyler Glasnow left a start against the host Rangers on Sunday with an apparent injury in the fifth inning of a scoreless game. Glasnow was visited by manager Dave Roberts and head athletic trainer Thomas Albert after striking out Dustin Harris for the second out of the fourth. Glasgow remained in the game and fanned Josh Jung for his sixth strikeout. He started the fifth with a four-seam fastball for a called strike to Jake Burger, and Roberts and Albert returned to the mound. The 31-year-old Glasnow made the All-Star team last season but didn’t pitch after Aug. 11 because of right elbow tendinitis.