National Post

Red Sox get to struggling starter Sanchez

Righty done and gone after four innings

- Rob Longley

• Until Wednesday night, there wasn’t much about historic Fenway Park t hat i ntimidated Aaron Sanchez.

Not the vaunted Green Monster that dominates left field. Not the good- hitting team he usually faces here. And not the prospect of playing in a contest with added meaning.

Past successes here tumbled quickly from memory in the young pitcher’s latest trip to the mound as Sanchez’s command must have been left behind in the cramped visitor’s clubhouse.

The result was a disarmingl­y easy 5-1 Boston victory allowing the Sox to take a 2-1 lead in this four-game series between the first- and lastplace teams in the American League East.

It certainly was another demoralizi­ng result for a Jays team unable to find any traction both on offence or from its starting rotation.

Sanchez was shaky from the opening batter and especially through the first two innings in which no less than eight Red Sox runners reached and four of them crossed the plate.

Sensing t he struggles from Sanchez, the Boston batters were barely swinging, forcing the recovering righty to throw 49 pitches through two innings. That too was an ominous developmen­t given the weary arms chilling in the right-field visitor’s bullpen.

With such a slow start and an offence that is essentiall­y dormant, it was clear early that this was going to be a beatdown for a Red Sox team that should have been weary from an excruciati­ng previous four days.

The demoralizi­ng night for Sanchez was in sharp contrast to his previous visits to Boston. In fact, in six career starts at Fenway he had never lost (3- 0) and had a 2.05 ERA.

It was just the eighth start for Sanchez in a season interrupte­d by three trips to the disabled list. But it was also his third start back from the latest DL stint.

And it certainly was a dramatical­ly different outcome than his most recent start here. Sanchez was on the mound last Oct. 2 for a 2-1 Jays win on the day the team clinched a wild-card berth.

With losses the past two days, the Jays are once again distancing themselves from such jubilation at the end of the 2017 season. They are now a prohibitiv­e 10 games behind the Red Sox in the division and 5.5 out of a wildcard spot with little prospect for climbing out of such a hole soon.

Sanchez settled down some after the first two innings, but with the pitch count climbing and his best stuff on hold, his night was done after f our i nnings. Though only three of the runs he allowed were earned, Sanchez gave up six hits and a concerning five walks to the Red Sox.

And it’s back to the drawing board for a pitcher many felt would be the ace of the staff this season and now has a record of a mere 1-3.

From manager John Gibbons to pitching coach Pete Walker to general manager Ross Atkins, the Jays were hoping for much more from Sanchez on Wednesday.

The expectatio­n was that in his third start back from his latest medical leave, he would return to the form that earned him the ERA title last season. With that not happening, beyond Marcus Stroman and perhaps J. A. Happ, the Jays starting rotation is in rough shape.

As Walker mused earlier in the week, the team desperatel­y needs a nice clean run through the starting five. Hard to imagine that happening based on recent efforts.

We caught up with Atkins between innings late in Wednesday’s game and he too was at a loss for the rugged outing from Sanchez.

Is it more fallout from the blister? Is it the up and down from the DL destroying any chance at momentum? Is it a confidence issue with the 25-year-old righty?

Tough to say precisely what got to Sanchez on Wednesday, but his location was a definite concern. The Red Sox hitters took advantage of it as well, forcing Sanchez to f i nd t he zone on his own. And we saw how that worked.

So typical of the quirks of Fenway, the Jays opened the third with sharp hits off the left- field wall from Miguel Montero and Darwin Barney. Unfortunat­ely, they were held to a pair of singles. What followed was so typical of the impotence this team has shown on offence. A Jose Bautista strikeout was followed by a Steve Pearce ground out into a double play and that was that … The Jays got their first run in the fifth when a Bautista fly ball to right field scored backup catcher Montero from third … With danger in the Jays offence at a minimum now, Boston starter Drew Pomeranz didn’t have to do too much to record his 10th win of the season. The Sox have won nine of Pomeranz’s last 11 starts … Now at 29-17 at Fenway, the Sox have the best home record in the AL … Noted Jays killer Dustin Pedroia was at his lethal best driving in three Boston runs on a pair of hits … The Jays left eight runners on base.

Beyond t he o bvi o us, t here’s one other rather large reason why the Jays aren’t competitiv­e in the AL East race. Their recorded vs. divisional opponents is now 16- 27 … Also, the Jays have now lost seven of nine vs. the Red Sox this season, including a Boston sweep at the Rogers Centre. The Jays were outscored 29- 6 in that series … Cesar Valdez, called up from Buffalo earlier in the day to take Mike Bolsinger’s spot on the roster, took over for Sanchez in the fifth.

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