Series Sum-Up: vs Kansas City, September 19-21

 

Game 1: Tuesday, September 19
JAYS WIN!! 5-2
Winning Pitcher: Marcus Stroman
Save: Roberto Osuna

 

Marcus Stroman held the Royals scoreless for 6 innings. Whit Merrifield led off the 1st with a single, but two ground balls from the following batters were hit too softly for double plays. A Mitch Moreland ‘double’ with 9% hit probability got between the middle infielders in the 2nd. Stroman allowed one runner in each of the next two innings, then got a double play in the 4th and retired the next seven in order. Jose Bautista made a sliding catch on a foul pop-up in the top of the 3rd. Meanwhile, Ian Kennedy also kept the Jays from scoring for the first 5 innings.

 

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Bautista made another nice catch, this one at the wall, in the top of the 6th. The Jays took the lead on a two-run Darwin Barney home run. After Kennedy left the game, Josh Donaldson singled, but Justin Smoak hit into a double play. The first Royals run scored after a pair of singles led off the 7th, and then a Moustakas sac fly. Kevin Pillar reached on a double in the bottom of the inning, and then scored, along with Kendrys Morales, on a Russell Martin double. Barney then singled to plate Martin, making it 5-1.

 

Stroman’s night was done after that, having allowed one run in four hits over 7.0 innings. Alex Gordon homered to lead off the 8th off Ryan Tepera. Roberto Osuna came in for the 9th, and with two strikeouts got his 37th save of the year, a new career high.

 

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Game 2: Wednesday, September 20
Jays lose, 5-15
Losing Pitcher: Brett Anderson

 

Brett Anderson was not at his best during this game, as he didn’t even make it out of the 2nd. In the 1st inning, he allowed two singles to start, and Melky Cabrera hit a sac fly to bring a run in. In the 2nd, the inning began with a single, a double, an RBI single from Alcides Escobar, and then a walk. Whit Merrifield drove in another run with a single before the first out. The Royals pulled off a double steal, with Russell Martin making a throwing error that resulted in a run. The play at the plate was reviewed; the call was upheld.

 

Cabrera walked, then Eric Hosmer drove in a pair with a double. Anderson left the game, still with one out. Luis Santos took over, and gave up a two-run homer to Salvador Perez. The Blue Jays didn’t even get their first hit of the game off Jakob Junis until the 5th – it was a Kevin Pillar single. In the top of the 6th, with Carlos Ramirez pitching, Merrifield led off with a home run, then a walk and a double led to another run, a groundout scored another, and Mike Moustakas hit another home run. 13-0 Royals. Those were the first runs Ramirez had allowed all year – in either the minors or the major league.

 

The Jays scored four runs in the 7th, thanks to a single, Michael Saunders reaching on a fielding error, a walk, a two-run Teoscar Hernandez double. Raffy Lopez cored one with a sac fly, then Ryan Goins did the same. Four singles led to another pair of runs for Kansas City, then Raffy Lopez hit a solo home run in the 9th to bring the game to its final score.

 

 

Game 3: Thursday, September 21
Jays lose, 0-1
Losing Pitcher: J.A. Happ

 

Quite the opposite of the slugfest the day before, this game was decided by the 3rd inning. Jose Bautista nearly lost a ball in the lights, but recovered to make a catch behind himself. The Jays got a leadoff single in the 2nd, then hit into a double play and stranded a walk.

 

In the top of the 3rd, a walk, a single, and a Melky Cabrera RBI single led to the only run of the game. Luke Maile then threw out a runner for the third out of the inning. Two Kansas City runners reached in the 4th – on a single and a Josh Donaldson throwing error that took Justin Smoak off the base – but J.A. Happ got a double play and a strikeout to get out of it.

 

The Blue Jays only had five baserunners total – two hits and three walks – all of them against starter Jason Vargas. The bullpen threw 2.2 innings and shut the Toronto batters down completely. Nine Blue Jays struck out, three of them against relievers. Meanwhile, only two walks were allowed by Jays pitching – both by Happ, and both to Alex Gordon. Happ allowed seven hits over 6.2 innings, and got six strikeouts. Dominic Leone and Ryan Tepera each pitched an inning, and Matt Dermody faced one batter and got an out.

 

Overall Notes:

The Blue Jays suffered their 82nd loss of the season on Thursday, confirming that they will never reach the .500 record for the season.

 

On Tuesday night, news broke that the Jays were close to signing Marco Estrada to a contract extension. The contract is for one year, at 13 million dollars. He said he could have gone to free agency but staying in Toronto was a priority – and if the Jays made the playoffs in 2018 and he missed it, he would be disappointed. Video of his press conference can be found here.

 

Weirdly Specific Record Alert:

  • On Tuesday they broke the record for the most innings the Jays bullpen has ever pitched in a season
  • The Alex Gordon home run allowed in Game 1 was the 5,694th home run hit in MLB this season, which breaks the all-time record set in 2000.

 

My Favourite Player(s) of the week: Stroman

Stroman reached a career high of 12 wins for the season, with a 7-inning start where he only allowed one run. He allowed four hits, and walked two. He struck out five, and his ERA is down to 3.01. Of his 92 pitches, 61 were strikes. He got mostly ground-ball outs – ten, compared to two flyouts. He also earned this interesting distinction, among some impressive names:

 

Where We Are Now:
71-82
.464
Last in the AL East, 17.5 games back from Boston

 

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