Halladay gets 13th win as Toronto beats Tampa Bay

Published: Friday, Aug. 14 2009 10:24 p.m. MDT

Tampa Bay Rays' Carl Crawford is caught stealing second by Toronto Blue Jays' Aaron Hill, left.

Steve Nesius, Associated Press

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ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Roy Halladay got the run support he needed to earn his first win of the season against Tampa Bay.

Halladay gave up two runs over eight innings for his 13th win and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Rays 5-2 on Friday night.

"You're always determined to beat teams, but I think you always are conscious of controlling what you can control," Halladay said. "They pitched well against us early on and it has made it tough."

Halladay (13-5) was 0-2 in three previous starts against Tampa Bay this season. The right-hander allowed eight hits and struck out six in pitching at least eight innings for the fifth time in his last six starts.

"My goals are to keep things simple and keep your approach simple as you pitch, and I think that allows you to get deep in the game," Halladay said.

The Rays still have won six of the last nine games when Halladay started against them. Halladay is 12-9 overall in 32 games, including 29 starts, overall against Tampa Bay.

The Blue Jays got homers from Lyle Overbay and Adam Lind. Jason Frasor pitched the ninth to record his sixth save.

Carl Crawford had four hits, including two doubles, for the Rays, who have lost five consecutive games. James Shields (7-9) gave up five runs and eight hits in eight innings.

"This is when we have to stick together," Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. "And stay with it."

Overbay put the Blue Jays up 2-0 in the first with a two-run homer. In nine games since being moved into the fourth spot of the lineup, Overbay has three homers and seven RBIs.

Toronto went ahead 4-0 in the second on an RBI double by Joe Inglett and Marco Scutaro's sacrifice fly. Lind hit a third-inning solo shot that made it 5-0.

"I think the first three innings was actually garbage from my point," Shields said. "I feel like I let the team down early, especially against a guy like Halladay."

Crawford doubled and later scored on Evan Longoria's sacrifice fly in the sixth. Gregg Zaun hit a solo homer during the eighth.

Tampa Bay had two runners on in both the third and fourth, but failed to score. Halladay got a double-play grounder from Jason Bartlett to end the third, and retired three in a row — including strikeouts by Carlos Pena and Pat Burrell — with runners on first and third in the fourth.

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