Shane McClanahan earned his 10th win and regained the major league lead in strikeouts during his final outing before the All-Star Game, pitching the Tampa Bay Rays past the Boston Red Sox 4-1 on Wednesday night.

Taylor Walls homered for the Rays, who have won five straight against the rival Red Sox.

McClanahan (10-3) struck out six and allowed one run in 6 1/3 innings of three-hit ball. He increased his season total to 147 strikeouts.

"That is the All-Star starter, in my opinion," said rookie Josh Lowe, who scored from first base on a single for the Rays' final run. "No reason he doesn't deserve to get that nod. He's been incredible for us all year long."

Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash, who has been campaigning for his ace for weeks, was goaded into one more endorsement Wednesday night.

"I hope he starts the All-Star Game, how about that? That's the best I can give," Cash said with a laugh. "As I've said, I think that's the best first-half starting pitching performance that I've witnessed."

The 25-year-old lefty lowered his AL-best ERA to 1.71 and equaled his win total from his rookie season a year ago. He's certainly a leading candidate to start for the American League next Tuesday at Dodger Stadium.

"I'm just honored to go," McClanahan said. "It's an honor to be included in the conversation. Whether I get the ball or not, it's out of my control."

It was the seventh straight start in which McClanahan lasted at least six innings and gave up no more than one earned run. He threw 85 pitches.

Colin Poche worked the ninth for his sixth save.

Ji-Man Choi drove in the game's first run with a single off Boston starter Josh Winckowski in the third. Harold Ramirez made it 2-0 by dropping a single over the head of first baseman Bobby Dalbec.

Walls' fourth home run made it 3-0 in the fourth. Lowe scored from first on Yandy Diaz's two-out single in the seventh.

Xander Bogaerts scored Boston's run on a double-play grounder after leading off the fifth with a single.

Winckowski (3-4) gave up three runs and four hits in six innings, striking out five.

The loss dropped the Red Sox to 0-9-1 in 10 series against AL East opponents this season.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Red Sox: X-rays on 2B Trevor Story (hand) and LHP Matt Strahm (wrist) were negative. Both players were injured Tuesday night. The Red Sox will monitor their recoveries before determining whether to put either one on the injured list. Story didn't play and doesn't know when he can. But he felt mostly relief after learning X-rays did not reveal a fracture to his right hand. "Anytime you can dodge a bullet when the ball hits you kind of flush in the hand like that ... I'm just kind of glad it wasn't worse," said Story, who was hit by a pitch from Corey Kluber on Tuesday night. There was some swelling Wednesday and Story said it was "too early to tell" if he would have to go on the IL. ... LHP Chris Sale felt good after pitching five innings in his season debut Tuesday, and is likely to pitch Sunday at New York. ... C Kevin Plawecki was activated after spending two days on the COVID-19 injured list, and C Connor Wong was optioned to the minors.

Rays: LHP Josh Fleming will miss at least three weeks before having his strained oblique re-evaluated. ... 2B Brandon Lowe (lower back) played an entire game for Triple-A Durham and is scheduled to DH in one more rehab game before rejoining the Rays for the first time since May 15.

REMATCH

The McClanahan-Winckowski matchup was a rematch of a high school game played more than eight years ago and about 115 miles south of Tropicana Field.

McClanahan pitched for Cape Coral High School and Winckowski was on the mound for Fort Myers Cypress Lake on April 14, 2014.

CONGRATS!

Kluber reached 10 years of major league service, fully vesting him in the pension plan. The team congratulated him on the ballpark video board.

UP NEXT

RHP Drew Rasmussen (5-3, 3.11 ERA) will start Thursday night's series finale for Tampa Bay against RHP Kutter Crawford (2-2, 4.50).

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