ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Blake Snell was frustrated with his performance, but at least his toe came through OK.
The Tampa Bay ace lasted one out into the fourth inning in his return from a broken right fourth toe as the Rays lost 10-2 to the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday.
"It's fine," Snell said of his toe. "Happy to get back out there. It was a game where I felt just different. I felt good but it was weird. I spiked some fastballs and I never do that."
The reigning AL Cy Young Award winner, who hurt the toe attempting to move a decorative display in his bathroom on April 14, allowed three runs, five hits and two walks and struck out three during a 65-pitch outing.
"Probably the only good thing to come out of this game was that Blake got to 65 pitches, so he should be pretty close to full-go his next time," Rays manager Kevin Cash said. "From a health standpoint he was a 100-percent fine."
The left-hander (2-2) had given up one run and nine hits over 19 innings in three starts before the injury.
Adalberto Mondesi hit a three-run homer and drove in four runs, Billy Hamilton had two hits and two RBI and Jakob Junis gave up one run and four hits in five innings for the Royals, who stopped a five-game losing streak.
Junis (2-2) bruised his right hand on Yandy Diaz's drive that resulted in an inning-ending double-play in the fifth.
His hand was swollen but tests showed no fracture.
"Just a little nerve in there that's pinching," Junis said.
Snell, signed to a $50 million, five-year contract on March 21, said Tuesday that he still had some discomfort in the toe when he walks, but not when throwing off a mound.
The Rays decided that Snell was ready to return despite throwing just an 18-pitch bullpen session Saturday and eight pitches off a mound Monday.
Snell was replaced by Ryan Yarbrough with a runner on third and one out in the fourth.
"I knew they were a selective team but they were aggressive to start and then went back to selective," Snell said. "I threw a lot of good pitches that, they just almost looked like they knew what was coming."
Kansas City greeted Yarbrough with consecutive bunt singles, including Cam Gallagher's that drove in a run, and Hamilton's RBI double that made it 4-1.
Hamilton had a run-scoring triple and Mondesi hit his third homer, off Yarbrough, to put the Royals ahead 8-1 in the sixth.
"Smallball worked good for us with guys running all over the place, plus the power," Royals manager Ned Yost said.
Yarbrough, who set a team rookie record last year with 16 wins, including 14 in relief, was optioned to Triple-A Durham after allowing seven runs and eight hits over 4 1/3 innings.
Hamilton is 3 for 37 overall against the Rays.
Mondesi added an eighth-inning RBI single.
Tampa Bay went up 1-0 on Joey Wendle's RBI double in the first before the Royals tied it during the second when third baseman Daniel Robertson was charged with an error for an errant throw on a slow roller by Hamilton.
Both Hamilton (first base) and Terrance Gore (third base) were tagged out during rundowns on the same play to end the second with Whit Merrifieldbatting.
"None of it was by design," Yost said. "It was just a total mess-up."
Merrifield homered leading off the third.