Las Vegas Review-Journal

Stanton starts with bangs for Yanks in win over Jays

Reigning NL MVP homers twice in New York debut

- By Name The Associated Press

TORONTO — Giancarlo Stanton felt like a rookie again.

Stanton began his Yankees career in style, hitting the hardest-hit opposite-field home run since Major League Baseball began tracking exit velocity in 2015, adding an RBI double and a second homer into the center-field party deck in the ninth. Stanton’s four RBIS led the Yankees over the Toronto Blue Jays 6-1 on Thursday and gave Aaron Boone in a win in his first game as a profession­al manager.

“My biggest challenge, I told myself, was going to be to be calm,” Stanton said. “You want to get the first one out of the way, and then you can relax.”

Stanton was given the silent treatment by the Yankees, except for head athletic trainer Steven Donohue, when he returned to the dugout after the second home run. So Stanton high-fived imaginary hands.

“I had to get it late,” he said. “But I got some air high-fives.”

Stanton became the seventh Yankee to hit multiple home runs on Opening Day, the first since Joe Pepitone in 1963.

“Every pitch, it just seemed like he was in a really good place,” Boone said.

Stanton took a strike from J.A. Happ (0-1) in the first inning, then hit a 426-foot, two-run drive to right measured at 117.3 mph.

“It’s an interestin­g feeling, man,” Stanton said. “It was similar to my first one ever.”

Stanton led the major leagues with 59 home runs last year and won the National League MVP, then was acquired from Derek Jeter’s payroll-paring Miami Marlins to join American League Rookie of the Year Aaron Judge on the resurgent Bronx Bombers, who fell one win shy of reaching the World Series last year.

Stanton became the first player to homer in his first Yankees plate appearance since Judge two years ago.

“We’ve got it in us,” Stanton said. “Top to bottom, we’re going to be tough.”

Stanton doubled off John Axford in the fifth and hit a 434-foot home run off Tyler Clippard in the ninth.

Luis Severino (1-0) pitched 5 2/3 scoreless innings for the Yankees, who won their opener for the first time since 2011.

“The key to the game was Severino,” Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said. “He shut us down pretty good.”

Brett Gardner hit a leadoff home run off Danny Barnes in the seventh. Judge singled, doubled and walked for New York, which opened with a road win for the first time since 2006.

“It’s definitely fun to do it for real and get off on a good note,” Boone said.

Boone had been a television analyst since retiring as a player after the 2009 season. New York fired Joe Girardi after the Game 7 loss to Houston in the AL Championsh­ip Series, deciding it needed a new approach.

Severino got a visit from pitching coach Larry Rothschild after issuing consecutiv­e walks in the first, but escaped the jam by striking out Kendrys Morales.

 ?? Nathan Denette ?? The Canadian Press Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run in the first inning of New York’s 6-1 victory Thursday at Toronto. He added another homer in the ninth.
Nathan Denette The Canadian Press Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run in the first inning of New York’s 6-1 victory Thursday at Toronto. He added another homer in the ninth.

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