HOUSTON — Matt Moore allowed two hits in seven scoreless innings for his 11th win, and Ryan Roberts homered twice to give the Tampa Bay Rays a 12-0 win over the Houston Astros on Monday night.

Moore (11-3) won his third straight decision and Cesar Ramos pitched two perfect innings to complete the two-hitter and help the Rays win their third in a row.

Roberts made it 3-0 with a two-run homer in the third inning off Dallas Keuchel (4-5) and tacked on another run with a solo shot in the eighth inning. It was his second two home run game of the season and the third of his career.

Sean Rodriguez had a career-high four hits — two doubles — with three RBIs and three other Rays added three hits apiece on a night they tied a season-high in scoring and finished with 17 hits.

Chris Carter and Jake Elmore got Houston's only hits with singles as the last-place Astros dropped their fourth game in a row.

Moore, who moved into a tie for second in wins among AL pitchers, struck out nine and walked three to tie his win total from last season when he finished 11-11.

Keuchel yielded eight hits and five runs with five walks in 4 2-3 innings. Paul Clemens couldn't slow the Rays down either, allowing five hits and four runs over the next two innings.

Wil Myers walked to start the third before a double by Ben Zobrist. The Rays took a 1-0 lead on a sacrifice fly by James Loney with one out and Roberts extended the lead to 3-0.

Yunel Escobar drew a one-out walk in the fifth and Ryan Roberts singled with two outs. Jose Lobaton's groundball single scored Escobar to make it 4-0. Sam Fuld's RBI single left Tampa Bay up 5-0 and chased Keuchel.

Houston didn't get a hit until Elmore singled with two outs in the third. But Moore struck out Jose Altuve to end that inning.

He got into a bit of trouble in the fourth when Jason Castro walked with no outs before advancing to third on a single by Carter. He escaped the jam by striking out J.D. Martinez before Matt Dominguez grounded into a double play.

Houston would threaten again as Moore sat down the next nine batters he faced before being replaced by Ramos for the eighth inning.

Loney extended his hitting streak to 12 games with a one-out single in the seventh. The Rays then hit five consecutive singles, with the last four driving in a run each, to push the lead to 9-0. The Astros replaced Clemens with Hector Ambriz after the fourth hit in that stretch, but the trouble didn't end.

Ambriz allowed the fifth single before walking Zobrist to load the bases. Houston finally got out of the inning when Escobar, the 10th batter of the inning, grounded out.

NOTES: Tampa Bay 3B Evan Longoria was out of the lineup for the third straight game with plantar fasciitis in his right foot, but the Rays don't plan on placing him on the disabled list. He took ground balls before the game Monday. Manager Joe Maddon said he felt better on Monday and they hope he can play sometime in the four-game series in Houston. "It's still a day by day situation," he said. "We think that we might be able to get him back somehow, some way. We'll just wait and see. But overall, not so bad."... AL Cy Young winner David Price is scheduled return from his first-ever stint on disabled list and start for the Rays on Tuesday. He has missed 44 games with a left triceps strain. Maddon said he'll be more concerned with how Price feels on Tuesday than in the results. "If we could get six innings out of him that would be outstanding," Maddon said. "Primarily let's just wish him good health and the fact that we're beyond the problem. Because if he stays well and is able to pitch on a regular basis, he's going to put up good numbers."... The Astros expect 1B/DH Carlos Pena to be back with the team on Tuesday after he missed two games to be with his family in the Dominican Republic following the drowning death of his nephew. ... SS Carlos Correa, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2012 draft by Houston, was picked for the last spot on the World Team roster for the 2013 All-Star Futures game by winning a fan vote. He is hitting .323 for Class A Quad Cities.