Stop me if you’ve heard this one: the Jays lost and suffered an injury. Daulton Varsho left the game in the third with what’s being described as knee discomfort. It’s not clear what happened, he hadn’t had any particularly awkward plays in the field and he struck out looking in his one at bat. Vladimir Guerrero jr. also jammed a finger recieving a throw at first and had to call time and speak with the trainers. He stayed in the game but was clearly favouring his glove hand. Other than that things went fine, assuming you also ignore the three fielding errors.
The offence continued to sputter. The first baserunner came on an Ernie Clement double with one out in the third. They got creative to manufacture a run in the fourth inning. Myles Straw and Jesus Sanchez singled to put runners on the corners with one out. John Schneider put on the squeeze play with Lenyn Sosa at the plate. He laid down the bunt perfectly, allowing Straw to score but being thrown out at first. After a 1-2-3 fifth inning they added on a second run the old fashioned way, as Straw wrapped a solo home run around the foul pole in left field. In all, they managed two runs on five hits off Michael Soroka, who went seven innings.
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Braydon Fisher did a bit of a high wire act as the opener for Toronto. Geraldo Perdomo hit a two out ground rule double and advanced to third when Fisher botched a pickoff throw. A ground out avoided damage, though.
Eric Lauer looked better tonight, sitting more in the 90-92 zone that’s his norm than the 87-89 we saw the last couple of outings as he dealt with illness. He cruised through his first two innings of work before giving up a solo home run to Nolan Arenado in the fourth. He struggled a bit more in the fifth. A walk and a couple of line singles manufactured a second run for the Diamondbacks, and Jose Fernandez snuck a grounder up the middle for a third, making it 3-1.
Arizona picked up another in the seventh. Spencer Miles struck out his first batter but then gave up a single and a walk. A ground out advanced the runners. Miles go Fernandez to tap to first, but Guerrero fumbled the ball trying to make the toss to Miles at the bag, allowing a run to score and prolonging the inning. Arenado lined a single to plate another, making it 5-2.
The Jays got what looked like a rally going in the top of eight, but some tough luck put a damper on it. Heineman and Lukes lead off with back to back singles. Straw hit a soft grounder to second base that bounced off the heel of second baseman Ildemaro Vargas’ glove but right into shortstop perdomo’s hands, allowing him to turn an error into a double play. Vlad managed a broken bat single that at least plated Heineman to cut the gap to 5-3 before Sanchez struck out to end the inning. Joe Mantiply gave the run buack in the bottom half. James McCann singled on a grounder up the middle, and Tim Tawa lined a double to make it 6-3.
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Paul Sewald retired the Jays in order to end the inning.
Jays of the Day: No.
Less so: Lauer (-0.13), Miles (-0.14), Okamoto (-0.13)
Game two is at 8:10pm ET tomorrow evening. Zac Gallen (1-1, 3.60) will go for the Diamondbacks, while Max Scherzer (1-2, 9.58) will try to better his dismal recent efforts as he battles forearm tendinitis.
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