Tag Archive | "game"

Blue Jays use long ball to defeat Yankees, Jose…

TORONTO – Blue Jays youth was well served Thursday.

Drew Hutchison, 21, showed composure well beyond his years in scattering five hits over six innings to help Toronto defeat the New York Yankees 4-1.

In just his sixth career start, Hutchison (3-1) dug himself out of a few holes as Toronto (21-18) recorded its 11th come-from-behind victory this season. The young right-hander, who skipped triple-A ball completely, has allowed just two runs in his last 12 innings.

“He’s wired in such a way that he keeps things in its proper context and perspective, and goes out and continues to execute pitches,” said Jays manager John Farrell.

Jose Bautista and J.P. Arencibia contributed two-run homers and 24-year-old Yan Gomes, starting at third base for the Jays in place of the suspended Brett Lawrie, made major league history by becoming the first Brazilian-born player to see action.

The Jays swept the two-game series thanks to the long ball. They homered four times in an 8-1 win Wednesday night, snapping a seven-game losing streak against AL East opposition

Thursday’s loss, before 31,266, was the fourth in five games for the Yankees (20-18).

Hutchison walked four and struck out three.

“I think I’ve thrown the ball pretty well, I battled, definitely like tonight. Got in some situations, battled through it,” he said by way of self-assessment this season.

“But four walks for the type of pitcher I am is kind of unacceptable for the kind of pitcher I am and something I need to address and fix,” he added.

He seemed to be in trouble in the fourth, walking the first two batters. But a double play and strikeout of Andruw Jones erased the problem.

“When he needed to make pitches, he made pitches,” said Arencibia.

Hutchison also dug a hole in the fifth, but the Yankees could not take advantage of men on first and second after back-to-back singles with one out. Bautista helped the cause with a acrobatic diving lunge to snare a sharp line drive from Derek Jeter on the first bounce and restrict the Yankees star to a single.

“The kid’s aggressive,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said of Hutchison. “He’s got some deception to his fastball. He’s got some movement. He’s a young kid that’s not afraid to throw strikes.

“He got out of some jams. We haven’t swung the bats particularly well but he got out of some jams and that’s why he got the win.”

Jason Frasor, Darren Oliver and Casey Janssen, with his third save in as many tries, finished it out for Toronto.

Bautista’s third-inning homer was his fifth homer in his last seven games and 10th overall this season.

The recent run has allowed the slugger “to just take a little bit of a deep breath and relax a little bit and let his true abilities come out,” according to Farrell.

Gomes, who moved to the U.S. with his family when he was 12, struck out swinging in his first at-bat but singled to centre in the fourth to open his major league account. He also singled in the sixth before giving way to Omar Vizquel in the eighth.

“It’s been an amazing day,” said Gomes.

“It’s been an absolute honour to represent Brazil in being the first one. I know it’s a big thing. I’m very proud.”

After entering the game, the 45-year-old Vizquel promptly showed off his skills with an acrobatic grab in the air of a sharp Robinson Cano shot.

After the game, Vizquel stole the show again in the locker-room when he presented Gomes with the balls from his first at-bat and first hit.

The pitching matchup was one of young right-handers in Hutchinson and 25-year-old Phil Hughes for the Yankees.

Hughes (3-5) gave up seven hits, striking out five and walking two before exiting in the sixth with one out and two men, trailing 2-1.

The Yankees opened the scoring when Cano doubled home Curtis Granderson in the first. Granderson walked with one out.

Bautista put the Jays ahead 2-1 in the third when he sent a 3-2 pitch over the left fence, driving in Yunel Escobar who had singled to open the inning.

Arencibia increased the lead to 4-1 in the seventh with his fifth homer of the season, knocking in Bautista who got on base with a broken bat single.

Hughes has now given up at least one home run in each of his eight starts this season.

“It’s something I’ve got to cut back on,” said the Yankee starter. “I’ve got to keep the ball down, I think a lot of it has to do with cutters or fastballs up out over the plate.

“It’s something that needs to change.”

If you like reading our blog, remember to bookmark it.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays use long ball to sweep Yankees

Blue Jays youth was well served Thursday.

Drew Hutchinson, 21, showed composure well beyond his years in scattering five hits over six innings to help Toronto defeat the New York Yankees 4-1.

In just his sixth career start, Hutchison (3-1) dug himself out of a few holes as Toronto (21-18) recorded its 11th come-from-behind victory this season. The young right-hander, who skipped triple-A ball completely, has allowed just two runs in his last 12 innings.

“He’s wired in such a way that he keeps things in its proper context and perspective, and goes out and continues to execute pitches,” said Jays manager John Farrell.

Jose Bautista and J.P. Arencibia contributed two-run homers and 24-year-old Yan Gomes, starting at third base for the Jays in place of the suspended Brett Lawrie, made major league history by becoming the first Brazilian-born player to see action.

The Jays swept the two-game series thanks to the long ball. They homered four times in an 8-1 win Wednesday night, snapping a seven-game losing streak against AL East opposition.

Thursday’s loss, before 31,266, was the fourth in five games for the Yankees (20-18) Hutchison walked four and struck out three.

“I think I’ve thrown the ball pretty well, I battled, definitely like tonight. Got in some situations, battled through it,” he said by way of self-assessment this season.

“But four walks for the type of pitcher I am is kind of unacceptable for the kind of pitcher I am and something I need to address and fix,” he added.

He seemed to be in trouble in the fourth, walking the first two batters. But a double play and strikeout of Andruw Jones erased the problem.

“When he needed to make pitches, he made pitches,” said Arencibia.

Bautista helps cause

Hutchison also dug a hole in the fifth, but the Yankees could not take advantage of men on first and second after back-to-back singles with one out. Bautista helped the cause with a acrobatic diving lunge to snare a sharp line drive from Derek Jeter on the first bounce and restrict the Yankees star to a single.

“The kid’s aggressive,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said of Hutchison. “He’s got some deception to his fastball. He’s got some movement. He’s a young kid that’s not afraid to throw strikes.

“He got out of some jams. We haven’t swung the bats particularly well but he got out of some jams and that’s why he got the win.”

Jason Frasor, Darren Oliver and Casey Janssen, with his third save in as many tries, finished it out for Toronto.

Bautista’s third-inning homer was his fifth homer in his last seven games and 10th overall this season.

The recent run has allowed the slugger “to just take a little bit of a deep breath and relax a little bit and let his true abilities come out,” according to Farrell.

Gomes, who moved to the U.S. with his family when he was 12, struck out swinging in his first at-bat but singled to centre in the fourth to open his major league account. He also singled in the sixth before giving way to Omar Vizquel in the eighth.

“It’s been an amazing day,” said Gomes.

“It’s been an absolute honour to represent Brazil in being the first one. I know it’s a big thing. I’m very proud.”

After entering the game, the 45-year-old Vizquel promptly showed off his skills with an acrobatic grab in the air of a sharp Robinson Cano shot.

Vizquel steals show

After the game, Vizquel stole the show again in the locker-room when he presented Gomes with the balls from his first at-bat and first hit.

The pitching matchup was one of young right-handers in Hutchinson and 25-year-old Phil Hughes for the Yankees.

Hughes (3-5) gave up seven hits, striking out five and walking two before exiting in the sixth with one out and two men, trailing 2-1.

The Yankees opened the scoring when Cano doubled home Curtis Granderson in the first. Granderson walked with one out.

Bautista put the Jays ahead 2-1 in the third when he sent a 3-2 pitch over the left fence, driving in Yunel Escobar who had singled to open the inning.

Arencibia increased the lead to 4-1 in the seventh with his fifth homer of the season, knocking in Bautista who got on base with a broken bat single.

Hughes has now given up at least one home run in each of his eight starts this season.

“It’s something I’ve got to cut back on,” said the Yankee starter. “I’ve got to keep the ball down, I think a lot of it has to do with cutters or fastballs up out over the plate.

“It’s something that needs to change.”

There is the quick update of the day.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays use long ball to sweep Yankees

Blue Jays youth was well served Thursday.

Drew Hutchinson, 21, showed composure well beyond his years in scattering five hits over six innings to help Toronto defeat the New York Yankees 4-1.

In just his sixth career start, Hutchison (3-1) dug himself out of a few holes as Toronto (21-18) recorded its 11th come-from-behind victory this season. The young right-hander, who skipped triple-A ball completely, has allowed just two runs in his last 12 innings.

“He’s wired in such a way that he keeps things in its proper context and perspective, and goes out and continues to execute pitches,” said Jays manager John Farrell.

Jose Bautista and J.P. Arencibia contributed two-run homers and 24-year-old Yan Gomes, starting at third base for the Jays in place of the suspended Brett Lawrie, made major league history by becoming the first Brazilian-born player to see action.

The Jays swept the two-game series thanks to the long ball. They homered four times in an 8-1 win Wednesday night, snapping a seven-game losing streak against AL East opposition.

Thursday’s loss, before 31,266, was the fourth in five games for the Yankees (20-18) Hutchison walked four and struck out three.

“I think I’ve thrown the ball pretty well, I battled, definitely like tonight. Got in some situations, battled through it,” he said by way of self-assessment this season.

“But four walks for the type of pitcher I am is kind of unacceptable for the kind of pitcher I am and something I need to address and fix,” he added.

He seemed to be in trouble in the fourth, walking the first two batters. But a double play and strikeout of Andruw Jones erased the problem.

“When he needed to make pitches, he made pitches,” said Arencibia.

Bautista helps cause

Hutchison also dug a hole in the fifth, but the Yankees could not take advantage of men on first and second after back-to-back singles with one out. Bautista helped the cause with a acrobatic diving lunge to snare a sharp line drive from Derek Jeter on the first bounce and restrict the Yankees star to a single.

“The kid’s aggressive,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said of Hutchison. “He’s got some deception to his fastball. He’s got some movement. He’s a young kid that’s not afraid to throw strikes.

“He got out of some jams. We haven’t swung the bats particularly well but he got out of some jams and that’s why he got the win.”

Jason Frasor, Darren Oliver and Casey Janssen, with his third save in as many tries, finished it out for Toronto.

Bautista’s third-inning homer was his fifth homer in his last seven games and 10th overall this season.

The recent run has allowed the slugger “to just take a little bit of a deep breath and relax a little bit and let his true abilities come out,” according to Farrell.

Gomes, who moved to the U.S. with his family when he was 12, struck out swinging in his first at-bat but singled to centre in the fourth to open his major league account. He also singled in the sixth before giving way to Omar Vizquel in the eighth.

“It’s been an amazing day,” said Gomes.

“It’s been an absolute honour to represent Brazil in being the first one. I know it’s a big thing. I’m very proud.”

After entering the game, the 45-year-old Vizquel promptly showed off his skills with an acrobatic grab in the air of a sharp Robinson Cano shot.

Vizquel steals show

After the game, Vizquel stole the show again in the locker-room when he presented Gomes with the balls from his first at-bat and first hit.

The pitching matchup was one of young right-handers in Hutchinson and 25-year-old Phil Hughes for the Yankees.

Hughes (3-5) gave up seven hits, striking out five and walking two before exiting in the sixth with one out and two men, trailing 2-1.

The Yankees opened the scoring when Cano doubled home Curtis Granderson in the first. Granderson walked with one out.

Bautista put the Jays ahead 2-1 in the third when he sent a 3-2 pitch over the left fence, driving in Yunel Escobar who had singled to open the inning.

Arencibia increased the lead to 4-1 in the seventh with his fifth homer of the season, knocking in Bautista who got on base with a broken bat single.

Hughes has now given up at least one home run in each of his eight starts this season.

“It’s something I’ve got to cut back on,” said the Yankee starter. “I’ve got to keep the ball down, I think a lot of it has to do with cutters or fastballs up out over the plate.

“It’s something that needs to change.”

Not a lot else going on in the MLB world today.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays 4, Yankees 1

TORONTO — Jose Bautista and J.P. Arencibia each hit a two-run homer Thursday as the Toronto Blue Jays completed a two-game sweep of the New York Yankees with a 4-1 victory before 31,266 at Rogers Centre. Toronto right-hander Drew Hutchison (3-1) held the Yankees to five hits and one run over six innings. He allowed four walks and struck out three in his sixth major league start. Casey Janssen pitched the ninth for his third save. Yankees starter Phil Hughes (3-5) went 5 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits and two runs, both coming on Bautista’s homer in the third inning. Hughes walked two and struck out five. Both teams begin interleague play Friday, with the Yankees (20-18) home to the Cincinnati Reds and the Blue Jays (21-18) home to the New York Mets. Hughes left the game in the sixth after Ben Francisco’s double and Yan Gomes’ single put runners at the corners. He was replaced by right-hander Cory Wade, and Toronto did him a favor when Rajai Davis bunted back to Wade, who retired Francisco at the plate. Kelly Johnson popped out to end the threat. Jason Frasor replaced Hutchison in the seventh and set the Yankees down in order. With two outs in the home seventh, the Blue Jays extended their lead when Wade gave up the fifth homer of the season by Arencibia. The blast also scored Bautista, who had singled with one out. Left-hander Darren Oliver took over in the eighth for Toronto, and Omar Vizquel entered the game as a defensive replacement at third base. Vizquel made a nice on Robinson Cano’s liner to lead off the inning. Curtis Granderson walked with one out in the first and scored on Robinson Cano’s double to put the Yankees up 1-0. The Blue Jays jumped into a 2-1 lead in the third after Yunel Escobar led off with his second hit of the game and Bautista followed with his 10th homer of the season on a 3-2 pitch. It came one pitch after he had yanked a foul to the 500 level. Hughes has allowed at least one home run in each of his eight starts this year. Hutchison flirted with danger in the fourth when he walked the first two batters, giving him four walks on the game. But he worked out of it with a double-play grounder and a fly to left. Hughes escaped a jam in the home fourth after Gomes singled for his first major league hit with one out and took third on a double by Davis. But the inning ended on a pop up and a soft liner, both to second. NOTES: Blue Jays third baseman Brett Lawrie dropped the appeal of his four-game suspension and started serving it Thursday. He threw his helmet and it hit plate umpire Bill Miller on the bounce after a called third strike in the ninth inning of Tuesday’s 4-3 loss to Tampa Bay. … Gomes started at third base after being called up from Class AAA Las Vegas after first baseman Adam Lind was optioned to Las Vegas before the game. … Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez was rested, missing just his second start of the season.

Thanks for visiting my blog =).

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays 4, Yankees 1

TORONTO — Jose Bautista and J.P. Arencibia each hit a two-run homer Thursday as the Toronto Blue Jays completed a two-game sweep of the New York Yankees with a 4-1 victory before 31,266 at Rogers Centre. Toronto right-hander Drew Hutchison (3-1) held the Yankees to five hits and one run over six innings. He allowed four walks and struck out three in his sixth major league start. Casey Janssen pitched the ninth for his third save. Yankees starter Phil Hughes (3-5) went 5 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits and two runs, both coming on Bautista’s homer in the third inning. Hughes walked two and struck out five. Both teams begin interleague play Friday, with the Yankees (20-18) home to the Cincinnati Reds and the Blue Jays (21-18) home to the New York Mets. Hughes left the game in the sixth after Ben Francisco’s double and Yan Gomes’ single put runners at the corners. He was replaced by right-hander Cory Wade, and Toronto did him a favor when Rajai Davis bunted back to Wade, who retired Francisco at the plate. Kelly Johnson popped out to end the threat. Jason Frasor replaced Hutchison in the seventh and set the Yankees down in order. With two outs in the home seventh, the Blue Jays extended their lead when Wade gave up the fifth homer of the season by Arencibia. The blast also scored Bautista, who had singled with one out. Left-hander Darren Oliver took over in the eighth for Toronto, and Omar Vizquel entered the game as a defensive replacement at third base. Vizquel made a nice on Robinson Cano’s liner to lead off the inning. Curtis Granderson walked with one out in the first and scored on Robinson Cano’s double to put the Yankees up 1-0. The Blue Jays jumped into a 2-1 lead in the third after Yunel Escobar led off with his second hit of the game and Bautista followed with his 10th homer of the season on a 3-2 pitch. It came one pitch after he had yanked a foul to the 500 level. Hughes has allowed at least one home run in each of his eight starts this year. Hutchison flirted with danger in the fourth when he walked the first two batters, giving him four walks on the game. But he worked out of it with a double-play grounder and a fly to left. Hughes escaped a jam in the home fourth after Gomes singled for his first major league hit with one out and took third on a double by Davis. But the inning ended on a pop up and a soft liner, both to second. NOTES: Blue Jays third baseman Brett Lawrie dropped the appeal of his four-game suspension and started serving it Thursday. He threw his helmet and it hit plate umpire Bill Miller on the bounce after a called third strike in the ninth inning of Tuesday’s 4-3 loss to Tampa Bay. … Gomes started at third base after being called up from Class AAA Las Vegas after first baseman Adam Lind was optioned to Las Vegas before the game. … Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez was rested, missing just his second start of the season.

That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Game 33: Jays send Drabek to face Twins

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BALTIMORE — Moments before he made history with his final swing in an incredible four-homer performance, Josh Hamilton stepped to the plate in the eighth inning with a surprising sense of calm.

The Texas Rangers slugger had never before hit more than two home runs in a game, and he already had three. So as he took his place in the batter’s box against Baltimore right-hander Darren O’Day, Hamilton already had a feeling of accomplishment.

“I just went up like it was any other at-bat because if I don’t hit one,” Hamilton reasoned, “I’ve still had a really good night.”

It turned out to be unforgettable.

Hamilton became the 16th player to hit four home runs in a game, launching a quartet of two-run drives against three different pitchers to carry the Rangers to a 10-3 victory Tuesday.

Hamilton homered off Jake Arrieta in the first and third innings, added another off Zach Phillips in the seventh and topped it off with a one-for-the-books shot against O’Day. During the last at-bat, Hamilton took a mighty hack and missed, lined a foul into right-field seats and then sent an 0-2 pitch over the centre-field wall.

“Obviously it’s, other than being in the World Series, the highlight of my big-league career,” Hamilton said. “I was saying after I hit two I’ve never hit three in a game before, and what a blessing that was. Then to hit four is just an awesome feeling, to see how excited my teammates got.

“It reminds you of when you’re in Little League and a little kid, and just the excitement and why we play the game. Things like that. You never know what can happen. It was just an absolute blessing.”

Hamilton also doubled in the fifth inning. His 18 total bases is a new single-game American League record, and his eight RBIs are a career high.

“Amazing,” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. “Josh came out tonight, and he wasn’t going to be denied.”

The last player to hit four home runs in a game was Carlos Delgado on Sept. 25, 2003, for Toronto against Tampa Bay. Two of the 16 players to hit four homers in a game did it before 1900.

“History was witnessed tonight,” Washington said.

“It’s like anything else — you do something good or something incredible happens, it takes a little bit for it to sink in,” Hamilton said. “I think when I get away from everybody and I have some time to myself, I think it might then.”

Hamilton is the sixth AL player to perform the feat. The last to hit four homers in a game against the Orioles was Rocky Colavito in 1959, at old Memorial Stadium.

“He’s the best athlete in baseball,” teammate Nelson Cruz said of Hamilton. “If anybody can do it, he can do it.”

Elvis Andrus got on base ahead of Hamilton in each instance, said, “He kept hitting bombs and bombs. It feels really good because I don’t have to run that hard to score.”

Hamilton, who is in the final year of his contract and could become a free agent after this season, leads the AL with 14 homers and 36 RBIs, and his 5-for-5 effort raised his batting average to .406.

He also set the Texas single-game club record with five extra-base hits, breaking the mark of four held by eight players. Hamilton has homered in five of his last six at-bats, counting his final trip to the plate Monday night.

Hamilton’s record-setting night is the latest accomplishment in a career that almost never was.

He went from first round draft pick in 1999 by Tampa Bay to out of baseball all together because of drug and alcohol addiction.

He recovered and returned to the majors in 2007 with Cincinnati, and was traded to the Texas, where he has become a star — the AL MVP in 2010 — while still battling his addiction. He had a relapse before this season, but is off to a torrid start.

“Understanding that what I’m doing and what God’s allowed me to do coming back from everything I went through and allowing me to play the game at the level I play it, it’s pretty amazing to think about,” Hamilton said.

Adrian Beltre also homered for the Rangers. Coming off a 14-3 win in the series opener, Texas has won two straight for the first time since April 24-25 and are 20-10, their best-ever record after 30 games.

Dating back to last season, Texas has won seven in a row over Baltimore by a combined 70-18 score.

Rangers starter Neftali Feliz (2-1) gave up one run on four hits and had a career-high eight strikeouts. Converted to starter after notching 72 saves over the previous two seasons, Feliz had a 2-0 lead to protect before throwing his first pitch and maintained the advantage — just like when he was closer.

The Orioles entered the series with the best record in the majors after a 5-1 trip through Yankee Stadium and Fenway Park, but they have looked more like a team with 14 straight losing seasons in these two games against the two-time defending AL champions.

Arrieta (2-3) allowed six runs and nine hits in 6 1-3 innings. He yielded a career-high three homers, matching the total he surrendered in his first six starts this season.

His most notable flaw was his inability to keep Hamilton from hitting the ball out of the park.

“It was the first time I’ve ever seen anything like that. Very special hitter,” Arrieta said on Hamilton. “He didn’t miss tonight.”

J.J. Hardy and Nick Markakis hit consecutive solo homers for Baltimore in the eighth, long after the outcome had been decided.

The Rangers jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning when Andrus drew a one-out walk and Hamilton hit Arrieta’s next pitch over the centre-field wall.

It was more of the same in the third, and then some. After Andrus reached on a chopper off the plate, Hamilton lined an opposite-field drive into the left-field seats. Beltre followed with this sixth home run, the fourth time in 30 games that Texas has homered in successive at-bats.

Andrus singled in the seventh before Hamilton sent a drive over the centre-field wall against Phillips, who was recalled from Triple-A Norfolk before the game.

After that, the only suspense was whether Hamilton would get another at-bat. He did, and made it count.

NOTES: Andrus has reached base in 26 straight games. He is 16 for 33 on the road trip. … Despite Baltimore’s surprising start, the game drew a meagre crowd of 11,263. … Baltimore’s Chris Davis singled in the eighth to snap an 0-for-14 skid.

What do you guys think about this.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Toronto Blue Jays defeat Minnesota Twins 6-2…

Mark Zwolinski

Sports Reporter

MINNEAPOLIS—Henderson Alvarez has a pitch that every pitching coach will tell him to “keep in his back pocket.”

It’s not a 98-mile-per-hour fastball, or a forkball with a dirty break.

It’s not even a pitch that consistently induces a strikeout.

It’s a sinker, a pug-nosed pitch among princes like the blazing fastball or nasty breaking ball. Alvarez, though, appears to have total command of it, and he showed it in Toronto’s 6-2 win over the Minnesota Twins on Thursday night before 31,438 fans at Target Field.

“It’s the pitch I used most of the night,” said Alvarez, who improved to 3-2 after a seven-inning, seven-hit outing that dropped his ERA from 2.83 to 2.61.

That pitch helps make Alvarez look like he’s been around the big leagues much longer than his 17 career starts. He had baserunners in six of his seven innings, but coaxed three double plays out of a hapless Twins lineup. The sinker — and the double play he can get off it — has become his weapon of choice.

“I used the sinker a lot, especially with runners on base, and I got the (double play),” he said. “I’m confident in my infielders that they can make the plays behind me.”

Toronto, which made a splashy announcement before the game about the signing of Vladimir Guerrero, has now downed the Twins 12 times in their last 16 meetings dating back to 2010. They’ve outscored Minnesota 109-50 over that span.

The offence provided a two-run cushion for Alvarez in the top of the first inning, and whacked 10 hits overall. Another three runs in the third allowed Alvarez to simply pound the strike zone and force Twins hitters into pitcher’s counts for much of the night.

Alvarez extended his consecutive scoreless innings streak to a career-high 17 before the Twins struck for a run in the third.

Edwin Encarnacion picked up two more RBIs to lead the Jays with 28 while Brett Lawrie added two in his first two at bats and is now third on the club with 17.

Encarnacion, Lawrie and Kelly Johnson have carried the Jays so far this season while bigger names continue in uncharacteristic slumps.

At some point, Toronto will need Jose Bautista and Adam Lind — both of whom went hitless Thursday and are currently batting below .200 — to join the show offensively. If Guerrero can return to form, he will almost certainly bat fourth in Lind’s old spot.

Thanks to the secondary support, though, Toronto has remained above .500 and stayed within spitting distance of the first-place Rays.

Johnson and Yunel Escobar switched spots in the lineup May 2 and the move provided another source of runs for the inconsistent offence. Escobar dropped to the No. 2 spot and has been on a tear ever since. He went 4-for-4 Thursday and scored three runs.

Escobar also demonstrated the Jays’ aggressive approach on the basepaths when he scored all the way from second while the Twins were making a tough out at second.

“When we can move up on the bases like that it’s because we drilled it and schooled it (in spring training),” manager John Farrell said.

If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays-Twins Preview

After mowing down a potent lineup to earn his first career shutout, Toronto Blue Jays starter Henderson Alvarez may have a good chance for another gem against the major league-worst Minnesota Twins.

Alvarez looks to help the Blue Jays continue their recent domination of the Twins as the teams open a four-game set Thursday night at Target Field.

Five days after throwing six-plus innings of one-run ball in a 7-2 win over Seattle, Alvarez (2-2, 2.83 ERA) proved even more impressive in Friday’s 4-0 road victory over the Los Angeles Angels. The 22-year-old right-hander went the distance, allowing six hits and a walk and throwing 71 of his 97 pitches for strikes.

“He’s got confidence,” Blue Jays manager John Farrell said. “Even if he’s got two men on base, he’s always a pitch away from slowing down any damage with a ground ball. We saw his overall composure last year in the 10 starts he made for us, and it continues right now.”

Averaging just 2.6 strikeouts per nine innings, Alvarez must succeed by pitching to contact and relying on the defense behind him.

“I’ve always been a guy like that,” Alvarez told the Blue Jays’ official website. “I’m not going to make a lot of pitches, I’m going to be a guy that makes those guys swing the bat. There are going to be days when they’re probably going to hit me, but I’m fine with that as long as I stay aggressive and make those guys swing the bat. That’s my game plan.”

Toronto (17-14), which outscored Minnesota 44-14 while taking five of six meetings last season, has won 25 of the last 32 matchups in this series including four in a row and 12 of 14 in the Twin Cities.

The Blue Jays bounced back from a three-game skid and salvaged a two-game split with Oakland with a 5-2 victory Wednesday. Edwin Encarnacion, Adam Lind and J.P. Arencibia all homered as Toronto improved to 3-3 on its 10-game road trip.

“One thing that this team repeatedly does, it puts behind them some adversity and they go out and put together another good game,” Farrell said.

The Twins (8-22) are coming off their 13th loss in 16 games, falling 6-2 to the Angels on Wednesday.

Minnesota, which ranks last in the AL with 102 runs, moved starter Francisco Liriano to the bullpen and optioned struggling third baseman Danny Valencia to Triple-A Rochester in an attempt to shake up the club.

“We need to make some changes,” manager Ron Gardenhire said. “We need some hits. We need some new life in here, the whole package.”

Minnesota tries to regroup behind Jason Marquis (2-1, 5.40), who suffered his first loss of the season in Saturday’s 7-0 defeat at Seattle. The right-hander managed to limit the damage after issuing a career high-tying six walks, giving up two runs over six innings.

Marquis hasn’t faced the Blue Jays since June 14, 2008, when he threw seven-plus innings of one-run ball for the Chicago Cubs in a 6-2 victory in Toronto.

Encarnacion is 8 for 16 with a pair of homers off Marquis.

If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Morrow fans 10, Blue Jays beat A's

OAKLAND, Calif. — Adam Lind hit a two-run homer after being demoted from the cleanup spot before the game, and J.P. Arencibia and Edwin Encarnacion each hit a solo drive to help the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Oakland Athletics 5-2 on Wednesday.

Brandon Morrow (4-1) struck out a season-high 10 in six innings and won his fourth straight start, outpitching Tyson Ross in a matchup of former college stars from nearby California who were 2006 teammates. The Blue Jays right-hander went 23 2-3 innings without allowing a run before Jonny Gomes hit an RBI single in the fifth.

Arencibia homered leading off the seventh, this time coming through with a key hit in a close game. Manager John Farrell lifted him for pinch-hitter Omar Vizquel with the go-ahead run on third in the ninth inning of Tuesday night’s 7-3 loss — so delivering this time had to be a nice boost.

Encarnacion started the eighth with his 10th homer, ending an 0-for-21 funk and helping Toronto snap a three-game skid on the heels of a four-game winning streak. Colby Rasmus had an RBI single in the sixth that chased Ross (1-3).

Oakland didn’t generate much offence against Morrow and was awaiting word on the status of cleanup hitter Yoenis Cespedes, who was scratched about an hour before Tuesday’s game after injuring the top of his left hand in batting practice. Cespedes was undergoing X-rays and manager Bob Melvin expected to know more by the end of the day.

Five of Morrow’s Ks came on called third strikes and he owns a sparkling 0.67 ERA during the four-start winning streak, allowing two earned runs over 27 2-3 innings.

The Blue Jays bounced back after losing the opener of the quick two-game series on Brandon Inge’s game-ending grand slam against Francisco Cordero, who was demoted from his closer job before Wednesday’s game. Handed the ninth-inning duties by manager John Farrell, Casey Janssen finished with a 1-2-3 ninth for his first save in two tries this year.

Farrell also dropped Lind to the eighth hole in the batting order to try to generate some offence. Lind — who came in hitless in seven at-bats, with just two hits in his last 29 at-bats and mired in a 5-for-37 funk overall — singled in the second and put his team ahead with a two-run drive into the right-field bleachers.

Ross was done after 5 2-3 innings, tagged for three runs and five hits. He struck out three and walked three as Oakland’s three-game winning streak ended.

A’s catcher Kurt Suzuki had a scheduled day off, but the timing was good considering he got hit in the left hand and then also the thumb Tuesday night.

“It’s a little sore, but when aren’t you sore?” Suzuki said.

NOTES: The A’s dropped to 5-2 in May. … Oakland’s Jemile Weeks and Cliff Pennington pulled off a double steal in the first. … A’s opening-day starter Brandon McCarthy, skipped in the rotation because of a sore right shoulder, is set to throw a bullpen session Thursday to determine if he can start Saturday vs. Detroit. “We’ll take it step by step,” pitching coach Curt Young said. … Toronto returns for a four-game set here Aug. 2-5. That will give Blue Jays INF and former Giants SS Omar Vizquel more time to catch up with pals from San Francisco. He is retiring at the end of the season and relishing each road trip these days. … Melvin on facing Detroit: “They’re loaded. They’re one of the elite teams in the American League.”… Someone chanted “Barry Zito!” in the eighth inning. The $126 million Giants LHP won the 2002 AL Cy Young Award while with the A’s.

© Copyright (c) Postmedia News

If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Lind hits two-run homer, Arencibia, Encarnacion…

OAKLAND, CALIF. Toronto Blue Jays manager John Farrell shuffled things around before the game and it apparently served as a little bit of much-needed fuel for his lineup.

Adam Lind hit a two-run homer after being demoted from the cleanup spot to eighth in the order, and J.P. Arencibia and Edwin Encarnacion each hit solo drives to lead Toronto past the Oakland Athletics 5-2 on Wednesday.

“Adam responded well to the move in the lineup,” Farrell said. “It was just nice to score some runs.”

Brandon Morrow (4-1) struck out a season-high 10 in six innings and won his fourth straight start, outpitching Tyson Ross in a matchup of former college stars from nearby California who were 2006 teammates. The Blue Jays right-hander went 23 2/3 innings without allowing a run before Jonny Gomes hit an RBI single in the fifth.

Arencibia homered leading off the seventh, this time coming through with a key hit in a close game. Farrell lifted him for pinch-hitter Omar Vizquel with the go-ahead run on third in the ninth inning of Tuesday night’s 7-3 loss — so delivering this time had to be a nice boost.

Encarnacion started the eighth with his 10th homer, ending an 0-for-21 funk and helping Toronto snap a three-game skid on the heels of a four-game winning streak. Colby Rasmus had an RBI single in the sixth that chased Ross (1-3).

Oakland didn’t generate much offence against Morrow, but received good news after the game that cleanup hitter Yoenis Cespedes has only a strain on the top of his left hand and not a break.

He was scratched about an hour before Tuesday’s game after injuring the hand in batting practice. He might try to hit Thursday before the opener of a four-game series with the Detroit Tigers to determine his availability.

“I am very happy to know it is not a significant injury,” Cespedes said.

Five of Morrow’s Ks came on called third strikes and he owns a sparkling 0.67 ERA during the four-start winning streak, allowing two earned runs over 27 2/3 innings.

He wasn’t happy with four walks — half of his eight total coming into this start. He had walked only one batter over his previous three outings.

“I wasn’t as sharp as I have been. I walked too many guys and it hurt me in the fifth. I didn’t have a good slider today and that probably affected things. My stuff was still good,” he said. “It’s always fun to come here. I always have family and friends who show up. I got a few texts from my coaches at Cal and then there are friends who show up unannounced.”

The Blue Jays bounced back after losing the opener of the two-game series on Brandon Inge’s game-ending grand slam against Francisco Cordero, who was demoted from his closer job before Wednesday’s game. Handed the ninth-inning duties by Farrell, Casey Janssen finished with a 1-2-3 ninth for his first save in two tries this year.

“I tried to treat it like any other inning. My heart was going hard but that’s a good thing,” Janssen said. “I wanted to attack the zone and make them earn everything. I’ve done it before. By no means am I a veteran of the ninth, but I do have experience. You love pitching in those situations. I’ve felt I really haven’t contributed much this year and now I have the opportunity to make more of an impact.”

Farrell also dropped Lind to the eighth hole in the batting order to try to generate some offence. Lind — who came in hitless in seven at-bats, with just two hits in his past 29 at-bats and mired in a 5-for-37 funk overall — singled in the second and put his team ahead with a two-run drive into the right-field bleachers.

Ross was done after 5 2/3 innings, tagged for three runs and five hits. He struck out three and walked three as Oakland’s three-game winning streak ended.

“I was a little shaky in the first but found that rhythm and settled in a little bit,” Ross said.

A’s catcher Kurt Suzuki had a scheduled day off, but the timing was good considering he got hit in the left hand and then also the thumb Tuesday night.

“It’s a little sore, but when aren’t you sore?” Suzuki said.

NOTES: The A’s dropped to 5-2 in May. … Oakland’s Jemile Weeks and Cliff Pennington pulled off a double steal in the first. … A’s opening-day starter Brandon McCarthy, skipped in the rotation because of a sore right shoulder, is set to throw a bullpen session Thursday to determine if he can start Saturday against Detroit. “We’ll take it step by step,” pitching coach Curt Young said. … Toronto returns for a four-game set here Aug. 2-5. That will give Blue Jays INF and former Giants SS Omar Vizquel more time to catch up with pals from San Francisco. He is retiring at the end of the season and relishing each road trip these days. … Melvin on facing Detroit: “They’re loaded. They’re one of the elite teams in the American League.” … Someone chanted “Barry Zito!” in the eighth inning. The $126-million Giants LHP won the 2002 AL Cy Young Award while with the A’s.

The Associated Press

What do you guys think about this.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays back Morrow with 3 HRs, beat A's 5-2

Adam Lind hit a two-run homer after being demoted from the cleanup spot before the game, and J.P. Arencibia and Edwin Encarnacion each hit a solo drive to help the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Oakland Athletics 5-2 on Wednesday.

Brandon Morrow (4-1) struck out a season-high 10 in six innings and won his fourth straight start, outpitching Tyson Ross in a matchup of former college stars from nearby California who were 2006 teammates. The Blue Jays right-hander went 23 2-3 innings without allowing a run before Jonny Gomes hit an RBI single in the fifth.

Arencibia homered leading off the seventh, this time coming through with a key hit in a close game. Manager John Farrell lifted him for pinch-hitter Omar Vizquel with the go-ahead run on third in the ninth inning of Tuesday night’s 7-3 loss _ so delivering this time had to be a nice boost.

Encarnacion started the eighth with his 10th homer, ending an 0-for-21 funk and helping Toronto snap a three-game skid on the heels of a four-game winning streak. Colby Rasmus had an RBI single in the sixth that chased Ross (1-3).

Oakland didn’t generate much offense against Morrow and was awaiting word on the status of cleanup hitter Yoenis Cespedes, who was scratched about an hour before Tuesday’s game after injuring the top of his left hand in batting practice. Cespedes was undergoing X-rays and manager Bob Melvin expected to know more by the end of the day.

Five of Morrow’s Ks came on called third strikes and he owns a sparkling 0.67 ERA during the four-start winning streak, allowing two earned runs over 27 2-3 innings.

The Blue Jays bounced back after losing the opener of the quick two-game series on Brandon Inge’s game-ending grand slam against Francisco Cordero, who was demoted from his closer job before Wednesday’s game. Handed the ninth-inning duties by manager John Farrell, Casey Janssen finished with a 1-2-3 ninth for his first save in two tries this year.

Farrell also dropped Lind to the eighth hole in the batting order to try to generate some offense. Lind _ who came in hitless in seven at-bats, with just two hits in his last 29 at-bats and mired in a 5-for-37 funk overall _ singled in the second and put his team ahead with a two-run drive into the right-field bleachers.

Ross was done after 5 2-3 innings, tagged for three runs and five hits. He struck out three and walked three as Oakland’s three-game winning streak ended.

A’s catcher Kurt Suzuki had a scheduled day off, but the timing was good considering he got hit in the left hand and then also the thumb Tuesday night.

“It’s a little sore, but when aren’t you sore?” Suzuki said.

NOTES: The A’s dropped to 5-2 in May. … Oakland’s Jemile Weeks and Cliff Pennington pulled off a double steal in the first. … A’s opening-day starter Brandon McCarthy, skipped in the rotation because of a sore right shoulder, is set to throw a bullpen session Thursday to determine if he can start Saturday vs. Detroit. “We’ll take it step by step,” pitching coach Curt Young said. … Toronto returns for a four-game set here Aug. 2-5. That will give Blue Jays INF and former Giants SS Omar Vizquel more time to catch up with pals from San Francisco. He is retiring at the end of the season and relishing each road trip these days. … Melvin on facing Detroit: “They’re loaded. They’re one of the elite teams in the American League.”… Someone chanted “Barry Zito!” in the eighth inning. The $126 million Giants LHP won the 2002 AL Cy Young Award while with the A’s.

There is the quick update of the day.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays-Athletics Preview

The Toronto Blue Jays’ Brandon Morrow has been sensational of late, overpowering opponents with his dominating fastball.

Morrow, however, could have his work cut out against the surging Oakland Athletics, who after taking the first of two in thrilling fashion, look to further their momentum Wednesday afternoon.

After scoring just two runs over the first eight innings Tuesday, Oakland (16-14) used a ninth-inning rally to defeat visiting Toronto 7-3. Cliff Pennington singled home Michael Taylor to tie the game at 3 before recently signed Brandon Inge hit a walk-off grand slam as the Athletics improved to 5-1 in May.

“I’m so happy here right now,” said Inge, who was playing in just his seventh game – and first at home – with Oakland since being cut by the Detroit Tigers. “I fit in. It’s a new start for me. I welcomed it. I know we have a young ballclub, but they can play. I’m honored to be a part of this ballclub and trying to help them win. That’s what feels the best.”

While the A’s were in high spirits following Tuesday’s result, those celebrations could be short lived with facing Morrow (3-1, 2.38 ERA).

Morrow has won three consecutive starts and is riding a scoreless streak of 19 2-3 innings after throwing a three-hitter during Thursday’s 5-0 win at the Los Angeles Angels. He needed just 102 pitches to record his second career shutout.

“It was just really fastball command the whole time,” said Morrow, who threw just two curve balls and no changeups. “I pretty much put it anywhere I wanted every time. … I felt like I could have hit that down-and-away strike with my eyes closed. I probably could have thrown all fastballs the way I was locating.”

After producing mixed results over his first three outings, it’s safe to say the hard-throwing right-hander has found his groove.

“I feel like I have a little bit better life to (my fastball), maybe not velocity but better life, especially down in the zone, than I did the first couple of starts,” he told the team’s official website. “Really starting to get into a rhythm mechanically.”

Morrow has gone 3-0 with a 3.99 ERA over five career starts against the A’s while limiting them to a .187 average. He hasn’t faced them since Aug. 17, 2010.

Oakland catcher Kurt Suzuki is 2 for 12 with a homer lifetime against Morrow, and Pennington is 2 for 11.

The A’s, originally scheduled to give the ball to Brandon McCarthy in this game, instead turn to Tyson Ross (1-2, 8.55) after McCarthy felt soreness in his throwing shoulder.

Ross went 1-0 with a 2.13 ERA over his first two starts but has been hit hard in each of his last two. Six days after allowing a career-worst nine runs over four-plus innings of a 10-1 loss at Baltimore, Ross gave up seven in just 3 1-3 frames of Friday’s 7-2 loss at Tampa Bay.

“It all revolved around his fastball,” manager Bob Melvin told the A’s official website. “Suzuki called for some pitches and they weren’t getting there. He’s got to be more consistent than that.”

The 25-year-old right-hander could benefit from being back home, where he’s 2-2 with a 2.96 ERA over five career starts. Ross, who has never started against the Blue Jays (16-14), was college teammates with Morrow at California in 2006.

Oakland could be without Yoenis Cespedes again after he sat out Tuesday with an injured left hand suffered in batting practice before the game. The slugging center fielder is batting .245 with five homers and a team-best 21 RBIs.

What do you guys think about this.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off

Blue Jays visit Athletics for quick set

Written by

The Sports Network TSN

Toronto Blue Jays drop Seattle Mariners 7-2 to…

Mark Zwolinski

Sports Reporter

The Jays closed out a weekend series with two wins over the Seattle Mariners, and now await their biggest game of the season so far Monday when Yu Darvish and the Texas Rangers come to town.

“Just another ball game,” said Jays catcher Jeff Mathis, whose two-run home run capped a five-run eighth Sunday in Toronto’s 7-2 victory.

With ESPN jumping across the border to broadcast the game, Darvish’s debut is shaping up to be anything but just another day at the ballpark.

The Jays, meanwhile, need to get down to the business at hand, which is making adjustments to an offence that has counted on Edwin Encarnacion’s monster month while hiding subpar efforts from Jose Bautista and other players. There is no panic with Bautista. He is batting .190 with three homers and 10 RBIs, well below his own lofty standards, but the numbers are not unlike the start of the 2010 season when he struggled in April before hitting a league-leading 54 home runs.

Starting pitcher Henderson Alvarez finally got a win Sunday — and some much-deserved run support — and registered his first victory at home in 15 career starts.

Toronto has received at least five innings from its starting pitchers in every game so far this month, an effort which could easily have translated into a better record than 12-10.

Several Jays have wrestled recently with their overall approach at the plate, but Encarnacion and Mathis are benefiting from recent adjustments. The DH is now keeping both hands on the bat in his follow through of his swing, Mathis similarly tweaked his plate approach in spring, opening his shoulder slightly to take a more direct and quick path to the ball.

Encarnacion belted his second homer in as many games Sunday and easily leads the club with seven homers and 20 RBIs. Mathis smoked a two-run homer in the eighth, an inning which got the Jays fired up after Encarnacion was hit by a pitch by fireballing right-hander Steve Delabar.

“It’s part of the game, he tried to go inside … I can’t say it was on purpose,” said the soft-spoken Encarnacion.

Whether it was or not, the Jays reacted. Brett Lawrie doubled with the bases loaded and Mathis followed with that homer, which energized the team and the home crowd.

“We responded the right way,” said Jays manager John Farrell.

In the five-run eighth Bautista and Encarnacion pulled off a double steal to help set the table for Lawrie. Pinch-hitter Rajai Davis later drew a throw to third, then bounced up and came home with the third run of the inning when a throw hit him and deflected down the left field line.

Davis came out of the game afterwards and went for X-rays on his wrist. The results came back negative, but the speedy outfielder will be re-evaluated Monday.

This young Jays club showed in that big eighth inning that they are an aggressive bunch who remain full of belief in themselves. The team is still waiting for Bautista to come around, but at the moment, no one getting too worried about it.

“I wouldn’t call it worried, his bat speed is unbelievable,” Jays GM Alex Anthopoulos said. “Jose is a smart player. He’ll come out of it, it’s a matter of time. He’ll be fine, I just can’t say when.”

If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top.

Posted in blue-jays-newsComments Off