Toronto Star

The openers: Bumgarner hits two bombs, but the Bronx Bombers disappoint

- BEN WALKER

Leave it to Madison Bumgarner to get baseball off to a smashing start.

Before the World Series champion Chicago Cubs took the field and after the New York Yankees lost their sixth straight opener, Bumgarner struck.

The San Francisco ace, known for his dominant pitching in October, provided an opening day jolt by hitting not one, but two home runs Sunday for the Giants in a 6-5 loss to Arizona.

Bumgarner’s bombs were not exactly what Henry Sands came to see at Chase Field. After watching his team lose 93 times last season, the Diamondbac­ks fan — every fan, really — is hoping this will be their season.

“It is the beginning of the year, it is baseball again. It is something I have to look forward to, it is home,” Sands said. “The Diamondbac­ks are tied for the top, then they work their way down. But first is the goal.”

Exactly where the Cubs finished last November, winning a Game 7 thriller in Cleveland to capture their first World Series crown since 1908.

The Cubs opened Sunday night at St. Louis, and fans of the longtime rivals mixed and mingled outside Busch Stadium.

Ted Summers and Katie Moll, both from Manchester, Missouri, walked hand in hand along the concourse. He wore a Cubs shirt, hers featured St. Louis star Yadier Molina — earlier in the day, the Cardinals catcher added $60 million and three years to his contract.

They were still coming to grips with the Cubs wearing the crown. “It was weird,” Moll said. “I don’t know how to explain it. It was just, hard to believe, I guess. Never going to happen again. It’ll take another 108 years.”

The first game of the 2017 Major League Baseball season was in Tampa Bay, and the afternoon at Tropicana Field began with a minor glitch when the Yankees’ replay system was a bit blurry.

Not much went right for New York once play began. Showing that spring training stats often don’t mean much, the Yankees, who had the best record in exhibition play, and Masahiro Tanaka, who had the top ERA, got roughed up by the Rays, 7-3.

“It happens. He’s human,” Yankees pitching coach Larry Rothschild said.

Corey Dickerson of the Rays singled for the first hit of the new season and teammate Evan Longoria launched the first home run.

On Monday, a sellout crowd is expected at Camden Yards, 25 years after the stadium opened in Baltimore and began a boom of retrostyle ballparks.

Orioles manager Buck Showalter already envisioned a perfect ending to the opener against the Blue Jays.

“I just want the weather to be good, the beer to be cold, the baseball to be good, everybody has a great time, the Orioles win and they want to come back,” he said. “In that order.”

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