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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.

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Blue Jays Sign Outfielder Vladimir Guerrero to…


By
Eben Novy-Williams
-

Fri May 11 18:18:41 GMT 2012

The Toronto Blue Jays, who are tied
for third lowest in the American League with a club batting
average of .238, signed nine-time All-Star Vladimir Guerrero to
a minor-league contract.

Guerrero, 37, will report to the Major League Baseball
team’s extended spring training camp in Dunedin, Florida, the
Blue Jays announced today in a statement on their website. Terms
of the deal weren’t disclosed.

In a 16-year career with the Montreal Expos, Los Angeles
Angels, Texas Rangers and Baltimore Orioles, Guerrero has a .318
average with 449 home runs, 1,496 runs batted in, 181 stolen
bases and 477 doubles. He has topped 25 home runs and 100 RBIs
in the same season 10 times, most recently in 2010.

The AL Most Valuable Player in 2004, Guerrero hit .290 with
13 home runs and 63 runs batted in over 145 games last season
with the Orioles.

The Blue Jays (18-14) are tied with the Minnesota Twins for
third-lowest team batting average in the league. The team’s 45
doubles are the fewest in baseball.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Eben Novy-Williams in New York at
enovywilliam@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Michael Sillup at
msillup@bloomberg.net

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Guerrero gets minor-league deal with Jays

The Toronto Blue Jays announced May 10, 2012, they had signed Vladimir Guerrero, shown with the Texas Rangers Oct. 18, 2010, to a minor league contract. UPI/John Angelillo 

License photo

MINNEAPOLIS, May 11 (UPI) — Nine-time all-star Vladimir Guerrero, 37, long considered one of baseball’s most feared hitters, is now in the Toronto Blue Jays’ organization.

The Toronto club announced Thursday in Minneapolis, where the Jays have a series with the Minnesota Twins, that Guerrero was signed to a minor-league contract.

The Jays haven’t said exactly how they plan to use Guerrero once he is called up.

“He has power off the bench … which is something we are lacking,” Toronto slugger Jose Bautista told the Toronto Star. “I think he’s a great addition to this or any other team in the league. I’m surprised it took as long as it did for someone to sign him.”

Guerrero had a one-year contract with Baltimore last season and then became a free agent. He hit .290 with 13 home runs and 63 RBI in 145 games with the Orioles.

The outfielder-designated hitter has a .318 batting average with 449 homers and 1,496 RBI in 16 seasons in the major leagues, mostly with Montreal and the Los Angeles Angels. He also played for Texas.

Guerrero won the American League Most Valuable Player award with the Angels in 2004.

He is to report to the Blue Jays’ extended spring training in Dunedin, Fla.

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Jays looking to maintain hold on slumping Angels

While Albert Pujols’ slump may be most glaring, the rest of the Los Angeles Angels haven’t done much to pick up the slack for their struggling superstar.

After getting shut out in consecutive games, the Angels and Pujols will try to end their woes while denying the Toronto Blue Jays a season-high fifth straight win Saturday night (9:05 p.m. ET).

Pujols’ batting average dropped to .194 – easily a career low through a season’s first 27 games – after he went 0 for 4 in Friday’s 4-0 defeat to Toronto. The three-time NL MVP, 5 for 54 with one RBI over his last 14 games, has no home runs and five RBIs.

His 33-game, 137-at bat homerless drought in regular-season play is the longest in his career.

“I’m fine. I mean, this is baseball. It’s a long year,” Pujols said. “I’ve been in this situation before, so I need to have faith and stay strong, knowing this bad time will pass. If it’s meant to be like this the whole year, I’ll deal with it. But I’m a great hitter and I know I can hit.”

The Angels (10-17), batting .239 as a team, have already been shut out six times and have scored three runs or fewer in 15 games.

A matchup with Kyle Drabek (2-2, 2.40 ERA) might not help them get back on track. The 24-year-old right-hander has yielded two runs or fewer in each of his five starts this season.

However, he’s lost his last two outings while receiving one total run of support. His 4-1 loss to Texas on Monday is the only defeat over the last seven games for the Blue Jays (16-11).

Toronto has outscored opponents 43-18 during its 6-1 stretch, and has homered in eight consecutive contests. Jose Bautista hit his fifth of the season and second of the Blue Jays’ four-game winning streak on Friday, but he’s still batting only .177 in 2012.

“I’m trying to have good at-bats, but I’m not seeing too many pitches over the heart of the plate,” Bautista said. “A lot of bad breaks have been going my way, and I just hope the tide turns soon.”

C.J. Wilson (3-2, 2.70) will get the ball for the Angels on Saturday.

The left-hander lasted a season-high 7 1-3 innings in a 4-3 win over Minnesota on Monday, allowing all three runs but keeping the Twins scoreless until the eighth.

“The first seven innings were about as well as I’ve pitched all year,” Wilson said.

Wilson didn’t pitch well the last time he faced Toronto, getting tagged for seven runs and seven hits over 3 2-3 innings of a 7-3 defeat for Texas on July 31. He’s 0-2 with a 4.86 ERA in three career starts against the Blue Jays.

Drabek did not get a decision in his only start against the Angels on April 8, 2011, allowing two runs over six innings of a 3-2 Blue Jays victory in Anaheim.

Drabek has never faced Pujols, but Torii Hunter and Howie Kendrick are each 3 for 4 in their career against him. Blue Jays slugger Adam Lind is 4 for 7 off Wilson.

Toronto is seeking its first five-game winning streak since July 8-15.

The last four games at Angel Stadium have featured a complete-game shutout, including Jered Weaver’s no-hitter for the home team Wednesday.

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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.”

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Jumpy Blue Jays face 5 losses in a row

While the Seattle Mariners continue to surge, the Toronto Blue Jays remain in a rut.

After rallying to win the series opener in extra innings, the visiting Mariners look to extend their winning streak to five games Saturday and hand the Blue Jays a fifth straight defeat.

Seattle, which has not won a series at Toronto since 2008, could face a major challenge Saturday against Blue Jays starter and former Mariner Brandon Morrow (1-1, 3.71 ERA).

Morrow, who spent his first three seasons in Seattle mostly working out of the bullpen, went 2-0 with a 2.77 ERA as a starter against the Mariners in 2011.

The right-hander allowed 10 runs in 13 innings over his two previous starts before throwing 6 2-3 innings of a 4-1 win at Kansas City on Monday, allowing the only run on a solo homer.

Now, Morrow will try to help the Blue Jays (10-10) end their longest skid of the season.

After being held to three runs while being swept in three games at Baltimore, Toronto came alive at the plate Friday but the bullpen blew its fifth save in nine chances.

“We’re all a little bit down,” said third baseman Brett Lawrie, who committed a key error in the ninth that led to the tying run.

Eric Thames homered and had three hits while Edwin Encarnacion hit his fifth home run as the Blue Jays lost for just the second time in their last 10 home meetings with the Mariners.

Toronto slugger Jose Bautista’s average dropped to .183 after an 0-for-4 night Friday. The two-time defending major league home run champ hit 97 in the past two seasons but has only three in 71 at-bats thus far in 2012.

However, he’s 7 for 12 (.583) with three homers against scheduled Seattle starter Kevin Millwood (0-1, 7.04).

A week ago, Seattle (11-10) was in the midst of a four-game skid in which it totaled eight runs and was on the wrong end of last Saturday’s perfect game thrown by Chicago’s Philip Humber. However, since losing 7-4 to the White Sox on Sunday, the Mariners have totaled 21 runs during a three-game sweep at Detroit and won 9-5 in 10 innings at Toronto on Friday.

“The perfect game might have been the best thing that happened to us” said Canadian-born outfielder Michael Saunders, who homered twice and drove in five runs in the series opener.

Seattle was no-hit for five innings by Toronto’s Ricky Romero and trailed 5-3 in the ninth, but Saunders opened that inning with a solo shot and John Jaso tied the game with an RBI single. Saunders delivered the knock out blow with his 10th-inning grand slam.

A usually light-hitting fourth year outfielder, Saunders hit .189 (7 for 37) with two RBIs in his first 12 games of the season but is batting .364 (8 for 22) with nine RBIs in his last six.

“I still have a long way to go but I’m seeing results and I’m feeling a lot more comfortable in the box,” Saunders said.

Mariners’ starter Millwood allowed one run, four hits and struck out seven in six innings of a 4-3 win at Texas in his season debut April 11, but has yielded 12 runs and 17 hits in 9.1 innings over his last two outings.

Millwood, who gave up five runs in 5 1/3 innings of a 7-4 loss to Chicago on Sunday, is 2-7 with a 5.17 ERA in 12 career starts against the Blue Jays.

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Mariners-Blue Jays Preview

While the Seattle Mariners continue to surge, the Toronto Blue Jays remain in a rut.

After rallying to win the series opener in extra innings, the visiting Mariners look to extend their winning streak to five games Saturday and hand the Blue Jays a fifth straight defeat.

A week ago, Seattle (11-10) was in the midst of a four-game skid in which it totaled eight runs and was on the wrong end of last Saturday’s perfect game thrown by Chicago’s Philip Humber. However, since losing 7-4 to the White Sox on Sunday, the Mariners have totaled 21 runs during a three-game sweep at Detroit and won 9-5 in 10 innings at Toronto on Friday.

“The perfect game might have been the best thing that happened to us” said Canadian-born outfielder Michael Saunders, who homered twice and drove in five runs in the series opener.

Seattle was no-hit for five innings by Toronto’s Ricky Romero and trailed 5-3 in the ninth, but Saunders opened that inning with a solo shot and John Jaso tied the game with an RBI single. Saunders delivered the knock out blow with his 10th-inning grand slam.

A usually light-hitting fourth year outfielder, Saunders hit .189 (7 for 37) with two RBIs in his first 12 games of the season but is batting .364 (8 for 22) with nine RBIs in his last six.

“I still have a long way to go but I’m seeing results and I’m feeling a lot more comfortable in the box,” Saunders said.

Seattle, which has not won a series at Toronto since 2008, could face a major challenge Saturday against Blue Jays starter and former Mariner Brandon Morrow (1-1, 3.71 ERA).

Morrow, who spent his first three seasons in Seattle mostly working out of the bullpen, went 2-0 with a 2.77 ERA as a starter against the Mariners in 2011.

The right-hander allowed 10 runs in 13 innings over his two previous starts before throwing 6 2-3 innings of a 4-1 win at Kansas City on Monday, allowing the only run on a solo homer.

Now, Morrow will try to help the Blue Jays (10-10) end their longest skid of the season.

After being held to three runs while being swept in three games at Baltimore, Toronto came alive at the plate Friday but the bullpen blew its fifth save in nine chances.

“We’re all a little bit down,” said third baseman Brett Lawrie, who committed a key error in the ninth that led to the tying run.

Eric Thames homered and had three hits while Edwin Encarnacion hit his fifth home run as the Blue Jays lost for just the second time in their last 10 home meetings with the Mariners.

Toronto slugger Jose Bautista’s average dropped to .183 after an 0-for-4 night Friday. The two-time defending major league home run champ hit 97 in the past two seasons but has only three in 71 at-bats thus far in 2012.

However, he’s 7 for 12 (.583) with three homers against scheduled Seattle starter Kevin Millwood (0-1, 7.04).

The right-hander allowed one run, four hits and struck out seven in six innings of a 4-3 win at Texas in his season debut April 11, but has yielded 12 runs and 17 hits in 9.1 innings over his last two outings.

Millwood, who gave up five runs in 5 1-3 innings of a 7-4 loss to Chicago on Sunday, is 2-7 with a 5.17 ERA in 12 career starts against the Blue Jays.

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Blue Jays' Romero aims to extend win streak…

(Sports Network) – Lefty Ricky Romero can continue a streaking start tonight when the Toronto Blue Jays head home to Rogers Centre to begin a three-game weekend series with the Seattle Mariners.

The Blue Jays enter after a three-game tailspin in Baltimore, which ended in a series sweep on Thursday when Adam Jones and Chris Davis homered in a three- run eighth inning, pushing the Orioles past Toronto, 5-2.

Casey Janssen (1-1) was charged with two runs while recording just two outs for the Blue Jays, who had won four in a row prior to the series.

Drew Hutchison got the start, going five-plus frames and serving up six hits and two runs.

Romero pitched five innings for a no-decision in his initial outing of the season but has since won three straight – defeating Boston, Tampa Bay and Cleveland while surrendering 16 hits and six runs in 20 1/3 innings.

The 27-year-old Californian was a 14-game winner for Toronto in 2010 and won 15 last season while tossing a career-high 225 innings with 178 strikeouts.

In 27 1/3 innings so far this season, he’s allowed 10 runs on 19 hits.

The Mariners reply with young righty Blake Beavan, who starts for the 19th time overall and fourth time in 2012.

The 23-year-old was the 17th overall pick of the 2007 draft by the Texas Rangers but ultimately reached the majors with Seattle after he was acquired in a 2010 deal that sent Cliff Lee to the Rangers.

He was 5-6 in 15 games in 2011 with a 4.27 earned run average in 97 innings and has allowed seven runs in 19 1/3 innings this season.

He’s allowed no more than three runs while pitching at least six innings in all three outings.

He lost his only meeting with Toronto on Aug. 17, 2011 after allowing five runs in five innings of a 5-1 loss.

On Thursday in Detroit, Chone Figgins’ seventh-inning RBI double broke a tie and Seattle swept its three-game set with the Tigers in 5-4 fashion.

Justin Smoak broke an 0-for-15 spell with a first-inning three-run homer, Miguel Olivo added a solo shot and Charlie Furbush (1-1) fanned two around a groundout in the sixth to get the win.

Brandon League allowed two singles in the ninth but got Alex Avila to ground into a game-ending double play to record his seventh save in eight opportunities.

“They came back at us and we were able to counterpunch. That’s what you have got to do,” said Smoak.

Starter Hector Noesi allowed no hits through four innings but was tagged for four runs on five hits in the next inning-plus to receive a no-decision.

The Blue Jays won six of nine over the Mariners last season, sweeping the three-game series in Toronto.

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Griffin: Toronto Blue Jays fall again to Baltimore…

Griffin: Toronto Blue Jays fall again to Baltimore…

Image

BALTIMORE—It seems apparent after their 3-0 win over the Blue Jays on Wednesday night that the Orioles no longer are willing to roll over and be Toronto’s patsies. For years, the AL East has been viewed as the Yankees, Red Sox, Rays and Jays — and that other team. The O’s are intent on losing their “other team” status and joining the fun under manager Buck Showalter.

Baltimore had already taken two of three in Toronto earlier in April and are 4-1 against the Jays on the season. The O’s have not won a season series against Toronto since 2004. The Jays are now paying attention.

Showalter has a clear history of turning major-league teams around in his second full season as manager. The 1992 Yankees won 76 games, then followed it up with 88 victories in ’93. Showalter took the 1998 Diamondbacks to 65 wins and followed up with 100 in his second year. He moved to Texas and posted a 71-win season in 2003, his first year, then won 89 in his second campaign.

With the Orioles it’s a slightly different scenario. He took over halfway through 2010, but in his first full year as manager in 2011 they won just 69 games. The O’s seem to be following the same pattern of Showalter’s other teams, raising their record to 11-7. It’s early, but the signs are there.

On Wednesday, the O’s opened the scoring in the second inning on a solo homer to straightaway centre field by third baseman Wilson Betemit after Jays starter Kyle Drabek had fallen behind in the count 3-1. The other run against Drabek was another solo homer in the fourth by first baseman Chris Davis.

“You’ve got to make even a better pitch when you’re behind in the count,” Drabek opined. “They just happened to get enough of them to get out of here.”

Drabek has been one of the pleasant early-season surprises for manager John Farrell. Since the start of spring training, his mechanics and his demeanour have both improved tremendously, although his 13 walks in 24 innings show that more work on his command is necessary.

“I think the best way I can try to categorize this is he’s on the right path and that path is ongoing,” Farrell said. “I don’t think there’s an arrival spot on the path where he’s the pitcher he’ll ultimately be. It’s constant improvement, development and adjustment along the way.

“Overall he’s doing a better job of controlling his emotions and the efforts with which he executes his delivery. I thought in Kansas City he had a tendency to overthrow on occasion. That’s the way he’s kind of wired. He’s a competitive guy and as long as we continue to channel that emotion in the right way then he’s going to make it a greater percentage to execute from pitch to pitch.”

Drabek threw his 100th pitch with two outs in the sixth to Matt Wieters, but managed to finish the inning after the catcher singled. By definition it was a quality start for Drabek, but he was helped out by three double plays, including one on a vicious line drive to Kelly Johnson by Adam Jones as the second baseman slid over to cover the bag on a hit-and-run. Johnson played another solid game defensively.

“Two solo home runs, typically you’re going to say that’s not going to beat you,” Farrell said. “But when you run up against pitching like we have, it does. I thought for the most part (Drabek) threw the ball on the plate. Davis hits a pretty good pitch that was down and away. He hits it out the other way. Betemit ran into a 3-1 fastball. He did his job, kept us in the game, quality start.”

The Jays are still competing hard every night, but the extreme youth of the bottom three members of the starting rotation are becoming a problem for Farrell. At 24, Drabek is the grizzled veteran, alongside 22-year-old Henderson Alvarez and 21-year-old Drew Hutchison, who starts the series finale on Thursday.

The last time a Jays rotation featured a trio of starters this young was 1979, with Jim Clancy (23) Dave Stieb (21) and Phil Huffman (21). That team won a mere 53 games. But Farrell believes the youth of his rotation isn’t at all detrimental to his club’s ability to compete in the AL East.

“Yes, we can compete,” Farrell insisted. “Our challenges are to keep things in their proper perspective. We feel the urgency to win, to compete, and that feeling is no greater than for the group that’s in the clubhouse. If we didn’t feel they had the talent, the ability, we might not have that same optimistic view. But all possess the ability to compete in this division and it will come about.”

The O’s added a third run off Jason Frasor in the bottom of the eighth on a line-drive double into the left-field corner by Jones. Pedro Strop came on for his second save of the series.

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Toronto Blue Jays add veteran infielder Omar…

Brendan Kennedy

Staff Reporter

DUNEDIN, FLA.—When Omar Vizquel made the cut for his first major-league team, the Seattle Mariners in 1989, Toronto Blue Jays general manager Alex Anthopoulos was an 11-year-old elementary school student.

Twenty-three years later, Vizquel has made enough of an impression on his 34-year-old boss to earn a spot as a backup infielder in the Jays’ opening-day lineup.

“He did everything we would have hoped for,” Anthopoulos said, after announcing the roster decision.

Vizquel himself was not available to speak to the media after the Jays’ 9-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles, the team’s 21st victory of the spring season.

A 44-year-old springy shortstop with Cooperstown credentials, Vizquel brings a veteran presence to a predominantly young and inexperienced roster. He is also expected to mentor the team’s emerging Spanish-speaking shortstops, Yunel Escobar and Adeiny Hechavarria.

The Venezuelan served a similar role in his last two major-league stops with the Texas Rangers and Chicago White Sox, where he aided the development of promising young infielders Elvis Andrus and Alexei Ramirez, respectively.

“Omar’s here as a player first and foremost,” Anthopoulos insisted. “Those other things are just an added bonus. . . . He had a very good camp and he deserved to be on the team.”

Only twice between 1993 and 2006 did Vizquel not win a Gold Glove as the top defensive player at his position. When he turns 45 on April 25, he will be the oldest player ever to play shortstop in the major leagues.

“He’s a winner,” Anthopoulos said. “He’s a pro.”

Though he has always been known more for his glove than his bat, Vizquel is a crafty contact hitter and the team hopes some of Vizquel’s small-ball prowess will rub off on its younger players.

He showed off his veteran wiles Wednesday, laying a perfect bunt down the third-base line for an infield hit and scoring later in the inning. So far this spring Vizquel is batting .433, but Anthopoulos said he doesn’t put much stock in those numbers and was always more concerned with his defensive abilities.

Vizquel’s main competition in camp came from Mike McCoy, a reliable bench player who plays both the infield and outfield, but whose versatility was made redundant by the presence of speedy Rajai Davis and Ben Francisco, a spare outfielder the Jays acquired this off-season.

McCoy had options left on his contract — meaning he did not have to clear waivers before being sent down to the minors — so he was sent to Triple-A Las Vegas. Luis Valbuena, another spare infielder, is out of options, so he will either be traded or put on waivers before being sent down.

“We’ll try to trade him before putting him on waivers,” Anthopoulos said.

BY THE NUMBERS

OMAR VIZQUEL

Major-league seasons: 23

Games: 2,908

Gold gloves, all at shortstop: 11

Hits: 2,841

Career on-base percentage: .337

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Roundup: Bautista homers twice in Blue Jays win


DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) — Jose Bautista hit his first two homers of spring training and Travis Snider hit his third, leading the Toronto Blue Jays to a 5-2 win over the Houston Astros on Saturday.

Jeff Mathis singled to open the third inning against Astros starter Zack Duke and, two outs later, Bautista crushed a 1-1 pitch over the left field wall. In the third, Snider jumped on Duke’s fastball and also homered to left. In the fifth, Bautista sent Jordan Lyles’ first pitch to him over the 400-foot sign to the right of the batter’s eye in center field.

Right-hander Dustin McGowan gave up one hit and struck out one in two innings. It’s his first spring start as he comes back from several shoulder operations in pursuit of the fifth spot in the Blue Jays’ rotation.

Iwakuma makes strides for M’s

PEORIA, Ariz. (AP) — Hishashi Iwakuma’s second spring training outing for the Seattle Mariners was an improvement yet was short of where he wants to be.

His appearance limited because of high pitch counts in an intrasquad game and in his first start last Monday, Iwakuma gave up two runs and four hits over four innings Saturday in a 5-5, nine-inning tie against the Los Angeles Dodgers in a split-squad game.

Iwakuma threw 52 pitches in an outing that included a walk, a hit batter and a wild pitch. He gave up a solo homer to Matt Treanor in the third and another run in the fourth.

O’s Matusz throws 4 strong innings

CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) — Brian Matusz bounced back from a shaky spring debut, pitching four sharp innings as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Philadelphia Phillies 1-0 Saturday.

Matusz went 1-9 with a 10.69 ERA in 2011. He struggled in his first exhibition outing this year, giving up three runs and six hits in two innings to Pittsburgh.

Against Philadelphia, Matusz allowed three hits without a walk while striking out four.

Joe Blanton pitched three scoreless innings for the Phillies. The 31-year-old righty was limited to eight starts last year because of an elbow injury.

Blanton allowed four hits, struck out three and walked one.

Chris Davis greeted Phillies reliever Scott Elarton with a leadoff home run in the fourth. Elarton, who hasn’t pitched in the big leagues since 2008, retired the next 12 batters.

Verlander tosses 4 scoreless innings

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Jose Valverde and Joaquin Benoit allowed home runs after Justin Verlander scattered three hits over four innings and a Washington Nationals split squad tied the Detroit Tigers in a game that ended 5-5 after 10 innings Saturday.

Corey Brown and Andres Blanco homered off Tiger closer Jose Valverde and setup man Joaquin

Benoit to lift the Nationals into a 5-4 lead in the eighth inning.

Brandon Inge and Brennan Boesch each homered to help Detroit take a 4-0 lead behind Verlander, the AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, who struck out four. Tigers Catcher Alex Avila threw out two of the Nationals who reached on base hits trying to steal.

Washington starter John Lannan went two innings, giving up two runs on four hits, including Inge’s home run.

Jurrjens, Pineda both wild

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) — Starters Jair Jurrjens and Michael Pineda both had trouble finding the plate and were pulled in the third inning Saturday as the New York Yankees beat the Atlanta Braves 8-3.

Jurrjens walked six in 2 1-3 innings for the Braves. He allowed five hits and three runs in his second spring start.

Pineda gave up one run on four hits, three walks and a wild pitch in 2 2-3 innings. The Yankees acquired him in an offseason trade with Seattle after he was an All-Star last year and led all rookies in strikeouts.

Alex Rodriguez doubled and drove in two runs for the Yankees and Jose Gil had two hits.

Michael Bourn doubled and singled for Atlanta.

Angels’ Wilson strong in second start

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — C.J. Wilson pitched three scoreless innings in his second spring outing and the Los Angeles Angels beat a split-squad of San Francisco Giants 9-5 on Saturday.

The left-hander allowed one hit, struck out two and walked one. He signed a $77.5 million, five-year deal with the Angels over the winter, opting to leave AL champion Texas.

Mark Trumbo, the Angels’ leader in homers (29) and RBI (87) last season, hit his first spring homer and made a splendid diving grab to his left on Joaquin Arias’ line drive to third in the second, robbing him of a single.

Giants right-hander Shane Loux pitched 2 1-3 innings and was charged with three runs, two earned, and four hits.

Giants prospect homers twice

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Pablo Sandoval homered and doubled during San Francisco’s seven-run third-inning, and the Giants beat a Milwaukee Brewers split-squad 13-3 on Saturday.

Sandoval led off the third with a double. He added his first spring homer later in the inning, a long drive over the fence in right.

San Francisco’s big inning made it 10-0.

Giants prospect Tommy Joseph hit two home runs, and Barry Zito pitched three scoreless innings. The embattled left-hander allowed one hit and hit a batter.

Milwaukee’s Mat Gamel, taking over at first this season after the departure of Prince Fielder, hit his third homer of the spring, a three-run drive in the fourth inning.

Butler stays hot for Royals

SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) — Billy Butler hit a two-run homer and Luis Mendoza worked four scoreless innings as the Kansas City Royals beat the Colorado Rockies 5-2 Saturday.

Butler, who is 7 for 15 in six spring training games, homered in the fifth with Eric Hosmer aboard.

Mendoza, the 2011 Pacific Coast League pitcher of the year, gave up just two hits, both to Brandon Wood, and struck out three. He has not allowed a run in six innings in two spring training starts as he is competing for a spot in the Kansas City rotation.

Rockies right-hander Jhoulys Chacin allowed one run on three hits, while striking out three, in three innings to take the loss. Wood had three of the Rockies’ nine hits, who have lost five straight.

Rangers’ Lewis throws 4 perfect innings

GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Colby Lewis pitched four perfect innings for the Texas Rangers in a 3-2 loss to a Chicago White Sox split squad Saturday.

Lewis, the Rangers expected opening day starter, struck out five and threw 36 pitches. He struck out Paul Konerko, Adam Dunn and A.J. Pierzynski in the second inning.

Konerko ended the perfect game with a leadoff single in the fifth off Scott Feldman.

Dylan Axelrod, who is vying for a spot in Chicago’s bullpen, allowed a run and three hits, struck out one and walked two in two innings.

The White Sox scored three runs in the ninth.

As a precaution, Texas right fielder Craig Gentry left the game with tightness in his left hamstring. The Rangers rested most of their regulars Saturday.

Choo shines in Indians loss

GOODYEAR, Ariz. (AP) — Dustin Moseley worked three scoreless innings and Will Venable had three hits to help the San Diego Padres beat the Cleveland Indians 5-2 Saturday.

Shin-Soo Choo hit his second home run and doubled for Cleveland. Russ Canzler added an RBI double in the seventh off new Padres closer Huston Street.

Moseley, coming back from shoulder surgery on Aug. 3, gave up one hit and struck out three in his second spring outing.

Indians starter Justin Masterson struck out four and gave up one run and four hits over three innings.

Venable had a double and two singles, driving in one run. Jesus Guzman, Yonder Alonso and John Baker each had two of San Diego’s 14 hits and minor leaguer Andy Parrino hit a solo homer.

Dempster helps Cubs past Brewers

PHOENIX (AP) — Ryan Dempster figured once through the order against a division rival was enough.

Dempster pitched three scoreless innings and the Chicago Cubs beat a Milwaukee Brewers split-squad 6-1 on Saturday afternoon.

“I’m going to face those guys a lot during the year,” said Dempster, who worked in the bullpen after leaving the mound. “There’s no sense facing them more than I had to.”

The right-hander allowed two hits and walked two in his second spring start, but he said the results he’s looking for aren’t found on the scoreboard.

“Results are where I throw the pitch,” he said. “That’s what I’m trying to do, execute my pitches.”

Dempster was 0-2 with a 4.24 ERA in three starts against the NL Central champion Brewers last season. He was 10-14 with a 4.80 ERA overall in one of his worst seasons since joining the Cubs in 2004.

Chris Narveson pitched 3 2-3 innings in the longest outing by a Brewers pitcher this spring. Narveson allowed two hits, though the second was a wind-aided home run to left field by Starlin Castro.

Zimmerman leads Nationals past Mets

VIERA, Fla. (AP) — Ryan Zimmerman hit two doubles and drove in two runs as a split squad of Washington Nationals beat R.A. Dickey and the New York Mets 8-2 Saturday.

Dickey had a rough outing, giving up five runs and eight hits in three innings. Adam LaRoche made his spring debut and hit an RBI single off the Mets knuckleballer.

Chien-Ming Wang, a candidate for the fifth spot in the Nationals’ rotation, allowed two runs and three hits in two innings in his first spring outing. He threw 43 pitches, 26 for strikes.

Ike Davis and Omar Quintanilla each had two hits for the Mets.

Valencia powers Twins over Pirates

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) — Danny Valencia hit a three-run homer among his two hits Saturday as the Minnesota Twins broke out of a hitting funk and beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2.

Valencia doubled in the fifth inning and homered in the sixth. It was Twins’ first extra-base hit in six games.

The Twins did all their scoring off reliever Jo-Jo Reyes, who allowed four hits and a walk in two innings.

Twins starter Terry Doyle allowed two runs on seven hits and one walk in 2 2-3 innings. Doyle was a Rule 5 pick in December and must be offered back to the Chicago White Sox if he doesn’t make the Twins’ roster.

Erik Bedard tossed three scoreless innings and gave up one hit for Pittsburgh. Casey McGehee went 3 for 3 with one RBI and Nate McLouth went 2 for 2.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Spring roundup: Bautista homers twice in Blue Jays…


DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) — Jose Bautista hit his first two homers of spring training and Travis Snider hit his third, leading the Toronto Blue Jays to a 5-2 win over the Houston Astros on Saturday.

Jeff Mathis singled to open the third inning against Astros starter Zack Duke and, two outs later, Bautista crushed a 1-1 pitch over the left field wall. In the third, Snider jumped on Duke’s fastball and also homered to left. In the fifth, Bautista sent Jordan Lyles’ first pitch to him over the 400-foot sign to the right of the batter’s eye in center field.

Right-hander Dustin McGowan gave up one hit and struck out one in two innings. It’s his first spring start as he comes back from several shoulder operations in pursuit of the fifth spot in the Blue Jays’ rotation.

Iwakuma makes strides for M’s

PEORIA, Ariz. (AP) — Hishashi Iwakuma’s second spring training outing for the Seattle Mariners was an improvement yet was short of where he wants to be.

His appearance limited because of high pitch counts in an intrasquad game and in his first start last Monday, Iwakuma gave up two runs and four hits over four innings Saturday in a 5-5, nine-inning tie against the Los Angeles Dodgers in a split-squad game.

Iwakuma threw 52 pitches in an outing that included a walk, a hit batter and a wild pitch. He gave up a solo homer to Matt Treanor in the third and another run in the fourth.

O’s Matusz throws 4 strong innings

CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) — Brian Matusz bounced back from a shaky spring debut, pitching four sharp innings as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Philadelphia Phillies 1-0 Saturday.

Matusz went 1-9 with a 10.69 ERA in 2011. He struggled in his first exhibition outing this year, giving up three runs and six hits in two innings to Pittsburgh.

Against Philadelphia, Matusz allowed three hits without a walk while striking out four.

Joe Blanton pitched three scoreless innings for the Phillies. The 31-year-old righty was limited to eight starts last year because of an elbow injury.

Blanton allowed four hits, struck out three and walked one.

Chris Davis greeted Phillies reliever Scott Elarton with a leadoff home run in the fourth. Elarton, who hasn’t pitched in the big leagues since 2008, retired the next 12 batters.

Verlander tosses 4 scoreless innings

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Jose Valverde and Joaquin Benoit allowed home runs after Justin Verlander scattered three hits over four innings and a Washington Nationals split squad tied the Detroit Tigers in a game that ended 5-5 after 10 innings Saturday.

Corey Brown and Andres Blanco homered off Tiger closer Jose Valverde and setup man Joaquin

Benoit to lift the Nationals into a 5-4 lead in the eighth inning.

Brandon Inge and Brennan Boesch each homered to help Detroit take a 4-0 lead behind Verlander, the AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, who struck out four. Tigers Catcher Alex Avila threw out two of the Nationals who reached on base hits trying to steal.

Washington starter John Lannan went two innings, giving up two runs on four hits, including Inge’s home run.

Jurrjens, Pineda both wild

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) — Starters Jair Jurrjens and Michael Pineda both had trouble finding the plate and were pulled in the third inning Saturday as the New York Yankees beat the Atlanta Braves 8-3.

Jurrjens walked six in 2 1-3 innings for the Braves. He allowed five hits and three runs in his second spring start.

Pineda gave up one run on four hits, three walks and a wild pitch in 2 2-3 innings. The Yankees acquired him in an offseason trade with Seattle after he was an All-Star last year and led all rookies in strikeouts.

Alex Rodriguez doubled and drove in two runs for the Yankees and Jose Gil had two hits.

Michael Bourn doubled and singled for Atlanta.

Angels’ Wilson strong in second start

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — C.J. Wilson pitched three scoreless innings in his second spring outing and the Los Angeles Angels beat a split-squad of San Francisco Giants 9-5 on Saturday.

The left-hander allowed one hit, struck out two and walked one. He signed a $77.5 million, five-year deal with the Angels over the winter, opting to leave AL champion Texas.

Mark Trumbo, the Angels’ leader in homers (29) and RBI (87) last season, hit his first spring homer and made a splendid diving grab to his left on Joaquin Arias’ line drive to third in the second, robbing him of a single.

Giants right-hander Shane Loux pitched 2 1-3 innings and was charged with three runs, two earned, and four hits.

Giants prospect homers twice

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Pablo Sandoval homered and doubled during San Francisco’s seven-run third-inning, and the Giants beat a Milwaukee Brewers split-squad 13-3 on Saturday.

Sandoval led off the third with a double. He added his first spring homer later in the inning, a long drive over the fence in right.

San Francisco’s big inning made it 10-0.

Giants prospect Tommy Joseph hit two home runs, and Barry Zito pitched three scoreless innings. The embattled left-hander allowed one hit and hit a batter.

Milwaukee’s Mat Gamel, taking over at first this season after the departure of Prince Fielder, hit his third homer of the spring, a three-run drive in the fourth inning.

Butler stays hot for Royals

SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) — Billy Butler hit a two-run homer and Luis Mendoza worked four scoreless innings as the Kansas City Royals beat the Colorado Rockies 5-2 Saturday.

Butler, who is 7 for 15 in six spring training games, homered in the fifth with Eric Hosmer aboard.

Mendoza, the 2011 Pacific Coast League pitcher of the year, gave up just two hits, both to Brandon Wood, and struck out three. He has not allowed a run in six innings in two spring training starts as he is competing for a spot in the Kansas City rotation.

Rockies right-hander Jhoulys Chacin allowed one run on three hits, while striking out three, in three innings to take the loss. Wood had three of the Rockies’ nine hits, who have lost five straight.

Rangers’ Lewis throws 4 perfect innings

GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Colby Lewis pitched four perfect innings for the Texas Rangers in a 3-2 loss to a Chicago White Sox split squad Saturday.

Lewis, the Rangers expected opening day starter, struck out five and threw 36 pitches. He struck out Paul Konerko, Adam Dunn and A.J. Pierzynski in the second inning.

Konerko ended the perfect game with a leadoff single in the fifth off Scott Feldman.

Dylan Axelrod, who is vying for a spot in Chicago’s bullpen, allowed a run and three hits, struck out one and walked two in two innings.

The White Sox scored three runs in the ninth.

As a precaution, Texas right fielder Craig Gentry left the game with tightness in his left hamstring. The Rangers rested most of their regulars Saturday.

Choo shines in Indians loss

GOODYEAR, Ariz. (AP) — Dustin Moseley worked three scoreless innings and Will Venable had three hits to help the San Diego Padres beat the Cleveland Indians 5-2 Saturday.

Shin-Soo Choo hit his second home run and doubled for Cleveland. Russ Canzler added an RBI double in the seventh off new Padres closer Huston Street.

Moseley, coming back from shoulder surgery on Aug. 3, gave up one hit and struck out three in his second spring outing.

Indians starter Justin Masterson struck out four and gave up one run and four hits over three innings.

Venable had a double and two singles, driving in one run. Jesus Guzman, Yonder Alonso and John Baker each had two of San Diego’s 14 hits and minor leaguer Andy Parrino hit a solo homer.

Dempster helps Cubs past Brewers

PHOENIX (AP) — Ryan Dempster figured once through the order against a division rival was enough.

Dempster pitched three scoreless innings and the Chicago Cubs beat a Milwaukee Brewers split-squad 6-1 on Saturday afternoon.

“I’m going to face those guys a lot during the year,” said Dempster, who worked in the bullpen after leaving the mound. “There’s no sense facing them more than I had to.”

The right-hander allowed two hits and walked two in his second spring start, but he said the results he’s looking for aren’t found on the scoreboard.

“Results are where I throw the pitch,” he said. “That’s what I’m trying to do, execute my pitches.”

Dempster was 0-2 with a 4.24 ERA in three starts against the NL Central champion Brewers last season. He was 10-14 with a 4.80 ERA overall in one of his worst seasons since joining the Cubs in 2004.

Chris Narveson pitched 3 2-3 innings in the longest outing by a Brewers pitcher this spring. Narveson allowed two hits, though the second was a wind-aided home run to left field by Starlin Castro.

Zimmerman leads Nationals past Mets

VIERA, Fla. (AP) — Ryan Zimmerman hit two doubles and drove in two runs as a split squad of Washington Nationals beat R.A. Dickey and the New York Mets 8-2 Saturday.

Dickey had a rough outing, giving up five runs and eight hits in three innings. Adam LaRoche made his spring debut and hit an RBI single off the Mets knuckleballer.

Chien-Ming Wang, a candidate for the fifth spot in the Nationals’ rotation, allowed two runs and three hits in two innings in his first spring outing. He threw 43 pitches, 26 for strikes.

Ike Davis and Omar Quintanilla each had two hits for the Mets.

Valencia powers Twins over Pirates

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) — Danny Valencia hit a three-run homer among his two hits Saturday as the Minnesota Twins broke out of a hitting funk and beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2.

Valencia doubled in the fifth inning and homered in the sixth. It was Twins’ first extra-base hit in six games.

The Twins did all their scoring off reliever Jo-Jo Reyes, who allowed four hits and a walk in two innings.

Twins starter Terry Doyle allowed two runs on seven hits and one walk in 2 2-3 innings. Doyle was a Rule 5 pick in December and must be offered back to the Chicago White Sox if he doesn’t make the Twins’ roster.

Erik Bedard tossed three scoreless innings and gave up one hit for Pittsburgh. Casey McGehee went 3 for 3 with one RBI and Nate McLouth went 2 for 2.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Blue Jays prospect Mitchell Taylor suspended 50…

OAKLAND, Calif.Toronto Blue Jays pitching prospect Mitchell Taylor has been suspended 50 games for violations of baseball’s minor league drug program.

The Associated Press reported Friday that it was Taylor‘s second violation for a drug of abuse.

Taylor is on the roster of Bluefield of the rookie-level Appalachian League. The 19-year-old Spring, Texas, native was drafted by the Jays in the seventh round (216th overall) in 2010. Last year he went 4-2 with a 4.23 earned-runs average with 61 strikes outs in eight games started.

Taylor hails from the same high school and hometown as Red Sox ace Josh Beckett.

Twenty players have been suspended this year under the minor league drug program, including seven for drugs of abuse.

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