SPORTSTICKER AL RECAP ST. PETERSBURG, Florida (Ticker) -- Jose Canseco hit his major league-leading 17th home run and Wade Boggs had two hits in his return from the disabled list as the Tampa Bay Devil Rays held off the Anaheim Angels, 10-9. Boggs moved past Frank Robinson into 25th place on the all-time hit list when he led off the second inning with a single. He also singled with one out in the fifth and is 55 hits away from the coveted 3,000 plateau. "From here on out I'm going to pass a lot of great players," Boggs said. "I'm just in awe to pass someone like Frank Robinson. It's like Mt. Everest, people have climbed it before and I just want to be one of those guys that put my flag in it." The Devil Rays took the lead for good with two runs in the fifth, beginning with a run-scoring bloop single by Kevin Stocker that scored Boggs. Miguel Cairo gave the Devil Rays a 9-7 advantage when he scored while Stocker was caught in a rundown after a pickoff attempt by Mike Magnante (1-1). Canseco moved ahead of Seattle's Ken Griffey Jr. for the home run lead and pulled Tampa Bay within 6-4 when he sent Ken Hill's first pitch of the third inning over the center-field fence for his fifth homer in as many games. Canseco added an RBI double in the eighth to give the Devil Rays a 10-8 lead. "We have the feeling that we can go and get 10 runs any night, but it takes all of us to pull together," Canseco said. Rick White (4-0) struck out one in 1 2/3 scoreless innings for the win and Roberto Hernandez picked up his major league-leading 15th save in 16 opportunities despite allowing a run and two hits in the ninth inning. Hernandez retired Larry Sheets on a flyout to deep center for the final out after an RBI single by Orlando Palmeiro. Magnante was reached for two runs and four hits in two innings in relief of Hill. "They just kept pecking away, they got it done and we didn't," said Anaheim manager Terry Collins. Mo Vaughn hit a three-run homer as the Angels scored six unearned runs against starter Tony Saunders in the second inning. "You don't win many games when you give up that many unearned runs, but I'm not going to criticize our defense because we've played great defensively," said Tampa Bay manager Larry Rothschild. "If you respond and come back right away, you get the feeling that you can come back and win the game." "We had our opportunities. You go up there four times to drive in runs and only come up once, that's not what I'm looking for," said Vaughn who also singled in the seventh inning, but left four runners on base in his other three at-bats. After Saunders retired the first two batters in the second, Troy Glaus reached first when shortstop Stocker threw high after fielding his ground ball. Charlie O'Brien had a base hit and Larry Sheets delivered an RBI single to right, pulling the Angels within 2-1. Darin Erstad's run-scoring single tied the game at 2-2 and Boggs threw wildy after fielding Randy Velarde's grounder, allowing Sheets to score. Vaughn then sent a 1-1 pitch over the center-field fence for his ninth homer and a 6-2 lead. Tampa Bay cut the deficit to 6-3 in the bottom of the second on an RBI single by Stocker. Quinton McCracken had an RBI double in the fourth to chase Magnante. Dave Martinez greeted Magnante with a two-run double off right fielder Todd Greene's glove to give the Devil Rays a 7-6 edge. Greene led off the fifth with a double and scored one out later on Steve Decker's double to tie the game, 7-7. John Flaherty had a two-run single in the first for Tampa Bay.  