Times Colonist

Kikuchi stays hot, Jays top Yankees

TORONTO 5 NEW YORK 4

- TIM WHARNSBY

The Toronto Blue Jays will not tire of seeing their sleepy left-hander Yusei Kikuchi perform as he did against the New York Yankees on Tuesday.

Kikuchi (1-1), who claimed last fall after a late-season win that he sleeps 13 to 14 hours the night before a start, spearheade­d the Blue Jays to a 5-4 victory against the Yankees (12-6).

He struck out nine and allowed only a run on four hits and a walk in a masterful 94-pitch outing as Toronto (10-8) won its season-high fourth in a row, while the Yankees dropped their third straight.

“It’s my sixth year, and this is the most confident I’ve been with all my pitches,” Kikuchi said. “I don’t have to think about the little things, like my mechanics. I’m just going out there and attacking the hitter.”

That was evident in the first inning as Kikuchi struck out the first three batters he faced: Anthony Volpe, Juan Soto and Aaron Judge.

“He’s got a great mix, and his curveball was such a big pitch for him tonight,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “It was electric at times.

“He’s got weapons, and he’s confident with every pitch.”

The only concern for Kikuchi was in the sixth inning he began to cramp on his left side. Schneider and trainer Jose Minisral made two visits that inning to check on their Japanese pitcher, but on each occasion he claimed he was fine.

Kikuchi departed with the Blue Jays in front 3-1 before an appreciati­ve 31,175 at Rogers Centre.

With the game deadlocked at 1-1, Vladimir Guerrero

Jr. slammed a two-out single through the infield and into centre field to score Ernie Clement and Daulton Varsho. Guerrero went 2-for-3 with two walks.

“We executed our plan at the plate, and that’s been the key in the last four games,” said Guerrero, adding that he has benefited from roving instructor Edwin Encarnacio­n’s presence around the team the past few days.

The offensive plan was to make Yankees starter Carlos Rodon (1-1) throw plenty of pitches early.

He departed after four innings, having tossed 101 pitches with five hits, three runs, four walks and five strikeouts.

Bo Bichette worked Rodon for a 12-pitch walk in the first inning, and Guerrero made the Yankees’ starter throw eight more in a third-inning walk.

The Blue Jays scored two more in the sixth inning on an error from New York second baseman Gleyber Torres and an RBI single from Bichette.

The Yankees made it close with a two-run seventh inning off reliever Trevor Richards, which included a run-scoring double from Alex Verdugo and a sacrifice fly from Oswaldo Cabrera.

Toronto reliever Yimi Garcia enjoyed a 1-2-3 eighth inning. Canadian stopper Jordan Romano had a rocky ninth but earned his first save of the year. He hit Torres and gave up a one-out double to Verdugo. Romano then coaxed two infield outs with the first grounder scoring Torres.

BULLPEN BOLSTERED

Before the game, the Blue Jays reinstated relievers Romano (right elbow inflammati­on) and Erik Swanson (right forearm inflammati­on) from the 15-day injured list.

Nate Pearson was optioned to Triple-A Buffalo, and Mitch White was designated for assignment to make room for the return of the veteran righthande­d pitchers.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Blue Jays starting pitcher Yusei Kikuchi delivers against the Yankees during the first inning in Toronto on Tuesday. Kikuchi went six innings, giving up one run.
NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS Blue Jays starting pitcher Yusei Kikuchi delivers against the Yankees during the first inning in Toronto on Tuesday. Kikuchi went six innings, giving up one run.

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