The Province

JAYS SWEAT IT OUT

Rack up 10 runs against the Twins and, as it turns out, needed every one of them

- lhornby@postmedia.com @sunhornby LANCE HORNBY

In a goofy season where no lead is safe, the Blue Jays must have known a six-run head start was not good enough for cruise control.

They had to reach double figures to win a one-run game on Saturday, as the Minnesota Twins stayed alive until the ninth before Toronto’s 10-9 decision was in the books.

“We get big crowds like that, we like to entertain them,” relieved manager John Gibbons said as 45,591 sweated along in the domed Rogers Centre.

He, too, was having flashbacks to recent late-game letdowns, such as last week in Chicago. This time, the Jays didn’t waste six strong innings from Marco Estrada, plus three hits from Josh Donaldson, including a perfect bunt and a home run. The bullpen wavered twice, in a four-run eighth and a rough closing by Roberto Osuna, hampered by a Justin Smoak error. Osuna also started a double play with the dangerous Joe Mauer looking for his fourth hit of the afternoon.

“The offence showed up today and and it almost fell apart,” noted Estrada, who threw almost 100 pitches to improve to 6-8. “I’m glad we pulled it out.”

Gibbons wondered if rust contribute­d to Estrada’s exit, sitting in the dugout, while the Jays batted around in their half of the fifth, scoring six runs. Ezequiel Carrera, taking full advantage of a chance at leadoff, singled to trigger an inning that saw Donaldson go deep and the next four Jays reach base. No. 9 hitter Raffy Lopez, in addition to guiding Estrada through some tricky pitch selections, ended the uprising with a two-run single.

“They took a run at (Estrada). But he’d been sitting awhile,” Gibbons said. “He lives and dies with location. He moves it around quite a bit. But he’s got to get certain calls and nibble at the corners. Marco’s been good since he got here. In a lot of ways, he was probably due for (a mid-season dip with a long line of nodecision­s and one win since late May). I think he’s feeling good where he is right now.”

After Estrada left and the game reached the eighth, Gibbons agreed “it got a little hairy”. Four Twins runs came after reliable relievers Tim Mayza and Ryan Tepera loaded the bases for Max Kepler’s grand slam that suddenly cut the Jays lead to 8-7.

Donaldson’s RBI double, himself coming around to score, was only a brief respite as Osuna gave up a single and Smoak misplayed a grounder.

“I was standing in the corner (of the dugout), kind of blocked a little bit and I assumed it was an out,” Gibbons said of Smoak’s rare blunder. “I didn’t know what the hell happened.”

Osuna had to be quick and accurate to turn a 1-4-3 double play, then get Jorge Polanco to ground out to end the game.

The manager’s decision to give Donaldson a day off from third base on Friday, limiting him to designated hitter and taking the start from frequent DH Kendrys Morales, seemed to pay off. Both Donaldson and Morales were struggling of late, yet both homered Saturday.

“Josh needed to DH and get a little rest,” Gibbons said. “This time of year, they’re starting to drag, to fatigue a little more in the dog days of August. So a day here or there should help all of them.”

It was only the Jays’ second win in the past eight games, but their 50th in August the past three years, a winning percentage bettered only by the Chicago Cubs.

“That’s a tough lineup,” Estrada said of the wild cardchasin­g Twins. “The home run (from No. 9 hitter Eduardo Escobar), got away from me, I got a little lazy. Some pitches stayed over the plate, but I threw pretty well. I thought a lot of pitches were strikes that I didn’t really get. I’m not a guy that throws 100 (mph). I have to use every pitch I have.”

It was just enough on this day.

 ?? TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI/GETTY IMAGES ??
TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Eddie Rosario (20) of the Twins leaps for a high-hop single by Jays’ Jose Bautista while Byron Buxton moves in to help yesterday at the Rogers Centre. Below, Josh Donaldson watches as his high pop-up down the first base line falls in for a bloop double...
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Eddie Rosario (20) of the Twins leaps for a high-hop single by Jays’ Jose Bautista while Byron Buxton moves in to help yesterday at the Rogers Centre. Below, Josh Donaldson watches as his high pop-up down the first base line falls in for a bloop double...
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