Edmonton Journal

Blue Jays mauled by Tigers

- Neil Davidson

LAKELAND, Fla. — R icky Romero’s comeback bid hit another road bump Tuesday in an ugly 18-4 Jays loss to a Detroit Tigers split squad.

The plan was for Romero and Marcus Stroman to combine for nine innings, with none of Toronto’s establishe­d bullpen members along for the ride. Instead the Tigers had their way with Romero, Jeremy Jeffress, Stroman and Marcus Walden.

How bad was the Jays’ day? Romero had a dismal outing and he was long gone before the Tigers put up nine runs in the fifth inning for a 13-0 lead.

The Jays issued 11 walks and were outhit 17-6 by Detroit in three hours and 28 minutes of spring training torment. Reading Detroit’s linescore was like dialing Moscow: 02119302.

“Today all the way around it was just a bad day, every phase of the game,” said Toronto manager John Gibbons. “I’ll let that one go. I’ve got nothing to say. Tough for me to analyze. You were watching what I was watching.”

Several questions later, Gibbons did offer some analysis.

“It just shows you if you don’t pitch, it’s tough to play,” he said.

Romero gave up a two-run homer to Austin Jackson in the second after hitting a Tiger to put him on base and yielded another run in an unsightly third inning that featured a triple, four walks and two wild pitches. It could have been far worse, but two Tigers were caught stealing in the inning.

The left-hander exited after 2-2/3 innings, giving way to Jeffress after yielding three runs on three hits with five walks, a hit batsman and two wild pitches. Unofficial­ly Romero threw 57 pitches, 23 for strikes on a sunny 20 C day with 8,328 on hand at scenic Joker Marchant Stadium.

“We’ve taken too many steps forward to dwell on this,” Romero said philosophi­cally afterwards.

Romero and Jeffress walked eight between them in the first four innings. Asked afterwards if Romero would get another start, Gibbons opted not to answer. But he did note Romero’s earlier improved outings.

“I’m encouraged. I’ve seen it. So he can still build off that,” he said.

Things continued to fall apart when Stroman gave up a walk, four singles, a double and a grand slam homer to Don Kelly in a fifth inning that went from bad to worse. It took Stroman, a first-round pick in the 2012 draft, seven batters to record an out in the inning.

Walden, a fellow minor-leaguer, took over and the onslaught continued as Ian Kinsler slammed a three-homer over the left-field fence.

Jeffress walked three and struck out two while giving up an unearned run in 1-1/3 inning. Stroman got one out, at the expense of six hits and seven earned runs. Walden gave up five earned runs on six hits in 1-1/3 innings.

While Romero suffered a meltdown on the mound, Toronto bats were quiet against Tigers starter Drew Smyly. Melky Cabrera, with a single and double, and Colby Rasmus (walk) were the only Jays to get on base in Smyly’s five innings.

Toronto finally got on the board in the sixth inning with four runs against reliever Blaine Hardy. And the scoreboard kept ticking with Detroit adding three in the sixth and two in the eighth.

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 ?? Carlos Osorio/THE ASSO
CIATED PRESS ?? Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Brett Lawrie tags out Detroit Tigers runner Ben Guez on Tuesday.
Carlos Osorio/THE ASSO CIATED PRESS Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Brett Lawrie tags out Detroit Tigers runner Ben Guez on Tuesday.

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