ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Ezequiel Carrera won't know until Monday if his homer was a standard one or of the inside-the-park variety.

The Toronto Blue Jays outfielder hit a drive to right field off Tampa Bay's Jake Odorizzi in the Rays' 6-1 victory Saturday that replays showed reached the stands. However, there was no home run call made on the field by the umpires, so Carrera raced around the bases safely as Tampa Bay outfielders Kevin Kiermaier and Steven Souza Jr. reacted like it was gone as the ball bounced back onto the field.

"That can be a tough read out there," Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said. "I'm sure if he doesn't score, we'll look at it [on a review] anyway, and they would overturn it."

What is certain is that Ezequiel Carrera homered in his team's loss to the Rays on Saturday. But he won't know until Monday whether it was an inside-the-park HR or of the regular variety. Kim Klement/USA TODAY Sports

The postgame play-by-play from Major League Baseball listed the homer as inside-the-park, but official scorer Bill Mathews, through the use of video replay, ruled the ball left the park.

The Rays said the Elias Sports Bureau will make an official determination on Monday.

"To be honest, I hit the ball and then I saw the signal from the umpire, and he said the ball was in play," Carrera said through a translator. "So, I just kept running. I didn't know if the ball was out or not."

Souza said he was certain.

"It hit the seat and came back," he said. "There was no part of me that didn't think that ball was out. I was standing at the wall and watched it cross over. Everybody else might have thought that. A review would have clearly shown it."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.