Journal Pioneer

Wild Betances costs Yankees in 7-6 loss to Blue Jays

- BY RONALD BLUM

Dellin Betances threw a fullcount breaking ball with no bite to Russell Martin that sailed well high and outside, forcing in the go-ahead run with his fourth walk of the eighth inning.

The All-Star reliever swiped at the toss back from catcher Austin Romine as manager Joe Girardi walked to the mound and fans booed on another long afternoon for the New York Yankees.

“The team is fighting. You can’t put the blame on those guys. I’ll take the blame,” Betances said after Wednesday’s 7-6 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays.

Justin Smoak and Kendrys Morales hit back-to-back home runs in the third inning off Michael Pineda, who also allowed Kevin Pillar’s leadoff homer in the fourth that put the Blue Jays ahead 5-0.

Aaron Judge started a comeback with his major leaguelead­ing 29th homer, a two-run homer in the fourth. The Yankees surged ahead 6-5 when JiMan Choi hit a two-run homer in the fifth and Didi Gregorius’s two-run double later in the inning chased Marco Estrada, who was pitching on his 33rd birthday.

Judge’s homer tied Joe DiMaggio’s Yankees rookie record, set in 1936, and Choi’s came in his New York debut.

Martin tied the score 6-6 with a seventh-inning homer against Chad Green, then walked to drive in the go-ahead run in the eighth.

With a runner on first, Roberto Osuna struck out Judge for the final out.

“Our best against their best,” Toronto manager John Gibbons said, “and our best won.” Miguel Montero, making his Blue Jays debut, fouled off a pair of 3-2 pitches leading off their eighth against Betances (3-4) before taking an inside curve. Worried about a bunt, Betances walked Kevin Pillar on four pitches, then put on No. 9 hitter Ryan Goins with four more. He started Jose Bautista with another ball - his 10th in a row- before recovering to throw a called third strike past the slugger.

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