Waterloo Region Record

Arrieta, Baez lead Cubbies

Blue Jays stage three-run rally in 8th, but can’t come all the way back to win

- John Jackson

CHICAGO — Jake Arrieta may never duplicate the second half he had two years ago in winning Major League Baseball’s National League Cy Young Award. The Chicago Cubs don’t care. They’ll take what the righthande­r is giving them now.

Arrieta pitched into the seventh inning and allowed a run, Javier Baez homered and drove in three runs, and Chicago beat the Toronto Blue Jays, 7-4, on Friday in a rare interleagu­e baseball matchup between the two in the Windy City.

Arrieta (13-8) allowed one run and six hits in 6 1/3 innings to win his third straight start. He has allowed two earned runs or fewer and gone at least six innings in each of his seven starts since the all-star break.

Despite going 22-6 with a 1.77 ERA in 2015, Arrieta, 31, said recently that he believes his best pitching is still to come.

Ryan Goins had a two-run single and Kevin Pillar added an RBI double to highlight a threerun eighth for the Blue Jays. Miguel Montero, who began the season with the Cubs, went 2 for 4 with a run scored against his former team.

This is Toronto’s second visit to Wrigley Field and first since June 2005.

Blue Jays starter J.A. Happ (6-9) allowed five runs and nine hits in five innings to snap a three-game winning streak.

After Toronto went up 1-0 in the first, the Cubs answered with three runs in the second, aided by a Happ’ mental mistake.

With runners on second and third and one out, Heyward hit a grounder wide of first base. Smoak easily fielded it, but Happ didn’t break to cover and Heyward beat him to the bag for a run-scoring single.

Baez followed with a bloop single to make it 2-1. One out later, Almora Jr. singled to score Heyward. Chicago stretched the advantage to 5-1 in the fifth on Rizzo’s two-run single.

Toronto scored three in the eighth off Pedro Strop to trim the Cubs’ lead to one, but Baez’s two-run homer — his 20th — in the bottom of the inning provided insurance. Lester placed on DL The Cubs got an encouragin­g report on Jon Lester before placing the ace left-hander on the 10-day disabled list. Lester was examined by team physician Dr. Stephen Gryzlo after he departed Chicago’s 13-10 loss to Cincinnati on Thursday in the second inning. He was diagnosed with tightness in his left lat and shoulder fatigue, but his shoulder and side were deemed structural­ly sound. Still friends Montero was designated for assignment by the Cubs following some comments critical of Arrieta holding on runners in early July. “I knew it was going to be a challenge,” Montero said. “To be honest, I was nervous early in the game. I never felt like (that), not even in my debut in the big leagues.”

“I came up for my second at-bat and I asked him if he wanted to go out for a drink tonight, so we might do that,” Arrieta said. “He’s one of my favourite guys. It’s a little upsetting to see the way that it ended for him here, but it is what it is.” Up next Cubs lefty Jose Quintana (3-2, 3.86 ERA) faces righty Nick Tepesch (1-1, 5.23) on Saturday. Quintana has a 1.77 ERA in nine starts against Toronto.

 ?? PAUL BEATY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Toronto Blue Jays second baseman Darwin Barney misses an RBI single hit by Cubs’ Albert Almora Jr. in the second inning Friday afternoon in Chicago. The Blue Jays lost the first game of a three-game weekend interleagu­e baseball set to the defending...
PAUL BEATY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toronto Blue Jays second baseman Darwin Barney misses an RBI single hit by Cubs’ Albert Almora Jr. in the second inning Friday afternoon in Chicago. The Blue Jays lost the first game of a three-game weekend interleagu­e baseball set to the defending...

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