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David DeJesus #7 of the Tampa Bay Rays celebrates on his way to home plate to score off of a two-run double by Tim Beckham #1 during the eighth inning of a game on April 25, 2015 at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida.Brian Blanco/Getty Images

Tim Beckham hit a tiebreaking double during a three-run eighth inning and the Tampa Bay Rays won their fourth straight game by beating the Toronto Blue Jays 4-2 on Saturday night.

James Loney got the Rays even at 2 with a pinch-hit RBI double before Beckham's hit off Miguel Castro gave Tampa Bay a 4-2 advantage.

Ernesto Frieri (1-1) struck out all three batters he faced for the win. Brad Boxberger pitched the ninth for his fifth save.

Brett Cecil (1-2) faced one batter, giving up a two-out single to David DeJesus.

Toronto rookie Daniel Norris allowed one run and five hits in seven innings on his 22nd birthday. The lefty struck out seven and walked three.

Russell Martin opened the seventh with an opposite-field homer to right off Steve Geltz that put the Blue Jays up 2-1.

Martin and outfielders Michael Saunders and Dalton Pompey were in the Toronto lineup, marking the first time in major league history that three Canadian position players started in the same game.

Blue Jays rookie Devon Travis went 2 for 4, extending his hitting streak to 11 games. He doubled in the first and scored on Josh Donaldson's single.

Tampa Bay tied it at 1 later in the first when Evan Longoria got the first of his four hits, a pop-fly double down the right-field line.

The four hits by Longoria tied his career high.

Erasmo Ramirez, who entered with a 21.32 ERA in three games, gave up one run and four hits over four innings for Tampa Bay.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Blue Jays: OF Jose Bautista (shoulder) missed his fourth straight game and is day to day.

Rays: Tampa Bay closer Jake McGee (back) threw a 21-pitch bullpen session and might pitch Tuesday for Class A Charlotte.

UP NEXT

Tampa Bay RHP Chris Archer (2-2) expects no carry-over Sunday when he faces the Blue Jays for the first time since April 16, when Longoria was hit by a pitch one inning after Archer plunked Edwin Encarnacion.

"It seemed more like a misunderstanding than anything," Archer said. "I'm not going to try and throw 99 (mph) and hit somebody. That's just dangerous."

LHP Mark Buehrle (3-0) starts for Toronto.

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