Ottawa Citizen

Donaldson, Jays get to Paxton early

- ROB LONGLEY rlongley@postmedia.com

There have been enough days in the young and impressive baseball life of Canadian pitcher James Paxton that he might have wished the Blue Jays didn’t exist.

And you can probably add a glorious Sunday afternoon at Safeco Park to the list.

It was glorious to the thousands of Jays fans who took over the place again, anyway, starting with a tworun homer from Josh Donaldson in the first inning, the big blow in a 4-0 Toronto win.

In the process, the Jays handed the Ladner, B.C. native his first loss of the season, chasing him from the game after just four innings.

“He’s blown me up in the past. He’s tough on any hitter,” said Donaldson, who added an RBI single in the fourth inning. “He’s got really good stuff and in my opinion, he’s probably one of the tougher lefties in the game. Today I was able to get fortunate.”

The early blow was especially significan­t given that it gave Happ some breathing room.

And the resulting win was notable, giving the Jays a 2-1 series victory over the Mariners and allowing them to return home with a 3-3 record from the week-long West Coast road trip.

The Yankees may be slugging themselves away from the rest of the AL East, but the Jays win moved them to within 1.5 games of a wildcard spot.

Heading into this one, however, the pitching edge appeared to go to the Mariners’ 6-foot-4, 235-pound Canadian.

The 28-year-old left-hander brought a 5-0 record and 1.69 ERA into Sunday’s game, played before thousands of baseball fans from his home province.

But after Jays leadoff hitter Kevin Pillar doubled, Donaldson did his thing, hitting his eighth homer of the season and sixth in 14 games since returning to the Jays lineup after an extended stint on the DL. Before hundreds of Jays supporters were even in the stadium, their team was up 2-0.

It was an uncharacte­ristic start for Paxton, who gave up just his second homer of the season, and one that continued the frustratio­n that has defined his relationsh­ip with the Jays.

After being selected 37th overall by Toronto in the 2009 amateur draft, acrimoniou­s negotiatio­ns ensued and Paxton ended up unsigned. The situation was made worse by the fact that he was banned from his senior year at the University of Kentucky after thenJays president Paul Beeston talked publicly about negotiatio­ns with Paxton’s agent, Scott Boras.

That’s a no-no under NCAA rules and Paxton headed to the Independen­t League for a season, after which he was drafted by the Mariners 132nd overall in the 2010 draft.

“You could tell he was a little bit off location wise, especially early,” Jays manager John Gibbons said of the former Delta Secondary School student. “That was a good thing for us.”

HAPPY WITH HAPP

The victory also signalled the return to form of Jays starter J.A. Happ, who was making his third appearance since returning from the disabled list.

Happ, the 20-game winner from a year ago, had eight strikeouts in six shutout innings for his first win of 2017 and more importantl­y felt like he’s ready to resume an important role in the Jays rotation.

“As far as I’m concerned, I felt strong out there,” said Happ, who faced his former team. “I felt like I had more life than I had in the first two outings on my fastball. That’s a good sign for sure.”

Happ said he was also emboldened by being staked to an early 2-0 courtesy of the Donaldson homer.

“It feels good just to go out there and be even more aggressive and stick to your game plan,” said Happ, who threw a season-high 104 pitches. “It’s easier to do that when you’ve got a couple points on the board.”

 ??  ?? Josh Donaldson
Josh Donaldson

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