The Province

Mission accomplish­ed for Blue Jays

OPENING DAY: Toronto gets Tampa ace out of the game early and picks up first win of the season

- KEN FIDLIN

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Chris Archer brought the ‘ Wow’ factor to the season opener but his good friend Marcus Stroman made off with the W.

Archer, the Tampa Bay Rays ace, struck out 12 Blue Jays in five innings but he was long gone when Roberto Osuna came out of the pen to put the finishing touches on Toronto’s 5-3 victory.

Stroman was not nearly as spectacula­r as Archer but he was far more controlled and efficient, working into the ninth inning and needing just 97 pitches to get there. Through eight innings, Stroman gave up three singles and a double but when the Rays got to him for a Corey Dickerson homer and a Desmond Jennings single to start the ninth, Osuna was summoned to get his first save of the season.

Edwin Encarnacio­n, who didn’t appear in even one spring training game because of injuries, drove in Toronto’s first two runs with a firstinnin­g single. He went 2-for-4 and also scored a run, crossing the plate when Troy Tulowitzki belted his first home run of the season in the top of the eighth to account for what turned out to be the winning runs.

It was a nice start for Tulowitzki’s first opener as a Blue Jay but he was more interested in what Stroman brings to the mix.

“He brings energy,” Tulowitzki said. “He competes as well as anybody I’ve ever seen. He keeps me busy. It’s really fun. When Stro takes the mound, it’s different. He raises the bar and makes you want to match his energy. Just the swag that he has is second to none.”

In separate innings, Ryan Goins and Jose Bautista made errors that extended the Rays’ at-bat. Both times Stroman got the extra out without allowing a run.

“These guys are unbelievab­le,” Stroman said. “I know how many times they are going to pick me up over the course of the year. Any opportunit­y I get to pick them up, I have to do that. These guys are the best defence I’ve ever played behind.”

That attitude was duly noted by Gibbons, who has seen many a pitcher react badly when a teammate muffs an easy play.

“A lot of pitchers in this game, those kinds of things disrupt them,” manager John Gibbons said. “They mope or they lose their focus. Not Stro.

“He thrives on that but he focuses. A lot of high energy guys can’t focus like that. What it comes down to is that he has a great feel for pitching. He can spin the ball as good as anybody and that’s what makes him good.”

Stroman trailed Archer by a mile in strikeouts, with only five, but he wore the Rays down with 15 ground ball outs, relying largely on his nasty sinker to get the job done.

“That’s my new pitch,” he said. “If I’m throwing it where I want to, I’m getting weak contact and keeping the ball on the ground. That’s my pitch that I kind of feed off of and when that pitch is working I feel like I’m able to incorporat­e other things that keep hitters off balance. It’s an early contact pitch. Today they were swinging early in the count and I was throwing it in a good spot.”

Archer, as good as he is, fell victim to Toronto’s grinding offence. The way they approached the first inning Sunday was textbook.

With one out in the top of the first, Josh Donaldson worked the count full, then got enough of an Archer slider to dump it into right field for a single. Jose Bautista followed with a seven-pitch walk.

After a wild pitch moved the runners up, Encarnacio­n stroked a 2-2 slider into the right centre gap for a two-run single.

Tulowitzki then walked before Archer rallied to strike out Chris Colabello and Michael Saunders.

When the inning was over, Archer had thrown 34 pitches to get the first three outs, putting him on a path to an early exit. That in itself was every bit as valuable as that 2-0 lead.

“Our guys know how to work pitchers and that plays a huge part in getting the starter out of the game and getting into that bullpen,” Stroman said. “Working counts like that early on and building Archer’s pitch count gave us success later in the game.

“Those guys at the top, (Kevin) Pillar, Donaldson right down to Tulo and Colabello and Saunders, every one of them is locked in. They have a plan and tonight it worked just the same way it worked so many times last year.”

It was clear from the start Archer had great stuff but lacked his usual precise command. He gave up an unearned run in the fourth after first baseman Logan Morrison clanked a liner off the bat of Saunders. Ryan Goins later drove him in. Through four innings, Archer had thrown 88 pitches.

Meanwhile, Stroman was having his own struggles, unable to get his breaking pitches over for strikes. Still, he was painting the corners with fastballs and sinkers well enough to get by until he found his breaking stuff later in the game.

Archer left after throwing 107 pitches through five innings, having struck out the side in his final three innings, wrapped around a walk, two hits, an error and an unearned run.

“When Stro takes the mound, it’s different. He raises the bar and makes you want to match his energy.” — Troy Tulowitzki

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Edwin Encarnacio­n didn’t play in a single spring training game due to injuries but still drove in the first two runs of the regular season during the first inning Sunday against the Tampa Bay Rays in St. Petersburg,...
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Edwin Encarnacio­n didn’t play in a single spring training game due to injuries but still drove in the first two runs of the regular season during the first inning Sunday against the Tampa Bay Rays in St. Petersburg,...

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