Times Colonist

Bassitt helps Blue Jays top Yankees in series opener

- GREGORY STRONG

TORONTO — Every pitch is a process for Blue Jays starter Chris Bassitt. He’ll often bend down or talk to himself before locking in and unloading from an arsenal that offers both variety and quality.

When his game is on, his weapons can leave opponents handcuffed.

The Yankees had no answers for the veteran right-hander in Toronto’s 3-1 win over New York on Monday night at Rogers Centre.

“He is the epitome of the kitchen sink, he’ll throw everything,” said Yankees manager Aaron Boone. “He will make things up on the fly.

“He’s very good at just coming up with different pitches so it’s hard to really get a bead on him.”

Bassitt (2-2), who throws eight different pitches, held the Yankees to one earned run and four hits. He mixed in mid-90s fastballs with sweepers as slow as 69 m.p.h. over his 6 1/3-inning appearance.

“I thought he just made big pitch after big pitch,” said Blue Jays manager John Schneider. “That’s kind of what he does.”

Alejandro Kirk had two hits as Toronto extended its win streak to three games. The Blue Jays (9-8) have won five of seven and are over the .500 mark for the first time since winning on Opening Day.

The Yankees, who started play with the best record in the major leagues, fell to 12-5.

“It is a very tough lineup but we had a game plan and stuck to it,” Bassitt said.

Tim Mayza finished off the seventh inning for Bassitt and Chad Green threw a clean eighth. Yimi Garcia completed a 1-2-3 ninth inning against the heart of the Yankees’ lineup for his second save.

“There’s no better bullpen arm, whatever you want to call him, in the big leagues right now,” said Bassitt, who walked two and struck out five. “Yimi Garcia is unbelievab­le right now.”

Both teams had four hits in the opener of the three-game series.

Kirk delivered his first extrabase hit of the season with a double down the left-field line in the third inning. Bichette scored from second base on the play.

“Definitely not my night,” Luis Gil said through an interprete­r.

The right-hander allowed three earned runs, three hits and seven walks to go with six strikeouts.

RELIEF ON THE WAY

Specifics on timing weren’t available, but Toronto relievers Jordan Romano and Erik Swanson were expected to be activated “soon” from the injured list, Schneider said before the game.

An announceme­nt will likely be made today. Romano (elbow) and Swanson (forearm) were with the big-league club on Monday after completing their rehab assignment­s at Triple-A Buffalo.

The Blue Jays reinstated catcher Danny Jansen (wrist) from the 10-day IL before the game.

JACKIE ROBINSON DAY

Players on both teams wore No. 42 for Jackie Robinson Day. The number was universall­y retired by Major League Baseball in 1997. Robinson broke MLB’s colour barrier in 1947 with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

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