MLB Misery Index: Last-place Tampa Bay Rays entering AL East danger zone

As the calendar flips to May, Major League Baseball's 2024 season is coming into focus.

The American League East looks like it will be a two-horse race between the New York Yankees and Baltimore Orioles, while the Tampa Bay Rays find themselves in last place. Hoping to reach the postseason for the sixth consecutive season and winners of 99 games last season, the Rays have lost eight of their last 10, unable to score runs consistently.

While the Rays' struggles are something of a surprise, the Colorado Rockies lost 103 games last year and were expected to be among the worst teams in baseball again. At 7-24 entering Friday, coming off a gut-wrenching sweep at the hands of their NL basement rivals, the Rockies have been as bad as advertised.

This week's MLB Misery Index takes a look at those Rays and Rockies:

Rays outfielder Richie Palacios reacts after striking out against the White Sox.
Rays outfielder Richie Palacios reacts after striking out against the White Sox.

Tampa Bay Rays: Can't buy a hit

After fizzling out down the stretch in 2023, Tampa Bay is digging itself into quite a hole in the division that is shaping up as an Orioles-Yankees battle for the next five months.

Things have gotten so bad that they were swept by the MLB-worst Chicago White Sox during their current 2-8 stretch.

The Rays' offense (.653 OPS) ranks among baseball's worst, with Randy Arozarena and Yandy Diaz both struggling mightily in the first month of the season. Coming off an All-Star year, Arozarena's .455 OPS is the third-worst in the majors. Diaz, who finished sixth in AL MVP voting in 2023, has a lowly .578 mark.

“You’ve got to find ways to put a ball in the gap, knock it out of the ballpark, got to get some walks,” manager Kevin Cash said, per MLB.com. “These guys, they're wearing it right now. They feel it. And they're frustrated by it. We've just got to stay at it.”

It's still early in the year and the Rays themselves blew a 6.5-game lead from May to July last season, but they may be falling too far behind to catch up to two of baseball's best teams. Of course a wild-card spot is all Tampa Bay really needs, but a surprisingly-strong AL Central could make that a tougher task than in years past.

A bright spot for the Rays has been right-hander Ryan Pepiot, acquired in the Tyler Glasnow trade. The 26-year-old has been terrific through six starts with a 3.12 ERA and 0.87 WHIP and seems to be developing into a No. 2-ish starter.

Colorado Rockies: Losing in various countries

Colorado officially took the mantel of the NL's worst record this week, getting swept by the now-second-worst Miami Marlins. That series in Miami included two walk-off losses, the first of which featured the Rockies blowing a 5-0 lead in the ninth inning of the eventual 7-6 defeat in 10 innings. Manager Bud Black held a team meeting after Thursday's walk-off loss, per MLB.com.

The Marlins series capped off a brutal stretch that saw Colorado play games in Denver, Mexico City and Miami in a span of six days. The Rockies gave up 20 runs in two games against the Houston Astros in the international showcase.

The Rockies' overall 5.92 ERA is the worst in baseball and the starters' 6.46 mark is a full run higher than any other team. Colorado has trailed in all 31 games it has played this season.

Having made just two major-league signings in the offseason (Jacob Stallings and Dakota Hudson), the Rockies don't really have desirable assets they can sell off before the July 30 trade deadline.

Contributing: Field Level Media

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB Misery Index: Tampa Bay Rays enter AL East danger zone

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