Max Fried dominates as Yankees one-hit Rays to take series opener

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Max Fried is a complicated pitcher.

He does not often overwhelm with velocity.

He does not miss an elite number of bats.

Everything moves, a weapon for every quadrant of the strike zone, resulting in a more subtle form of domination.

But the results are simple: When he pitches, his team wins.

The Yankees improved to 7-for-7 in Fried starts Friday, when the lefty one-hit the Rays over seven brilliant innings in a 3-0, series-opening victory in front of 45,189 in The Bronx.

Max Fried (54) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium, Friday, May 2, 2025. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Aaron Boone’s group (19-13) used its stopper and ace to bounce back from a disappointing series in Baltimore and started a six-game homestand with a crisp, well-pitched and well-defended effort.



Fresh off being named the American League Pitcher of the Month for April, Fried began his May with the same kind of artful excellence.

He did not allow a hit until there was one out in the fifth (when a well-struck single from Jose Caballero dashed hope of history), and he only let one Ray into scoring position: Junior Caminero, who reached on a fielder’s choice in the first inning, advanced on a passed ball and was stranded at second when Fried struck out Jonathan Aranda.

Yankees pitcher Max Fried (54) walks back to the dugout after ending the seventh inning on Friday, May 2, 2025. Robert Sabo for NY Post

That was as close as the Rays came to a rally against a pitcher who threw seven different pitches that ranged from a 71.8 mph curveball to a 97.4 mph four-seamer.

Tampa Bay had no answers and never looked comfortable as Fried, who walked two and hit one, lowered his ERA to 1.01.

Yankees first base Paul Goldschmidt (48) hits a three-run home run during the fifth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium, Friday, May 2, 2025, in Bronx, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

On what became a good night for Brian Cashman’s offseason, the Yankees only scored through a three-run home run from Paul Goldschmidt in the fifth inning.

The offense consistently mounted threats — taking nine at-bats with runners in scoring position and coming up empty eight times — and could not cash in until Goldschmidt lifted a short-porch shot off lefty Mason Montgomery with two outs and runners on second and third.

The righty swinger has three home runs this season — all off southpaws, against whom he is an astounding 18-for-30 (.600).

Paul Goldschmidt (48) is all smiles after he scores on his three-run home run during the fifth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium, Friday, May 2, 2025, in Bronx, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

That swing was the only one needed because Devin Williams (an encouraging, clean eighth inning) and Luke Weaver (third save) handled the late innings without allowing a hit, and the first seven innings featured nearly spotless pitching and fielding.

Fried helped his own cause by catching Caballero napping at first in the second inning, his third pick-off of the season already. But he had help:

  • A quick turn from third baseman Oswaldo Cabrera and second baseman Jorbit Vivas created a third-inning double play off the bat of Chandler Simpson, perhaps MLB’s fastest player.
  • Cabrera made a sliding play to retire Yandy Diaz an inning later, earning a point and nod from Fried.
  • In the fifth, Cabrera came through again by charging a chopper hit by Curtis Mead, fielding cleanly on a tough short hop and throwing Mead out, never breaking stride and running right into the home dugout after the third out of the frame.
  • It was Vivas (nicely catching a pop-up down the right-field line) and Goldschmidt (bowled over by a 105.5 mph grounder, but getting up and beating Diaz to the bag) impressing in the sixth.
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