Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Guerrero powers Jays past Marlins

- By John Wawrow

BUFFALO, N.Y. — It may not have been Toronto, but Buffalo felt much closer to home.

Though still playing the role of big league nomads, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Blue Jays welcomed the opportunit­y to finally have a crowd pulling for the actual “home” team in celebratin­g their return to western New York.

A win at Sahlen Field on Tuesday night felt pretty sweet, too.

Guerrero keyed a careerbest four-hit outing with his majors-leading 17th home run and the Blue Jays beat the Miami Marlins 5-1.

“The support of the fans here in Buffalo was great,” Guerrero said. “We really needed that. It felt like were playing home in Toronto. It was great, great for me, for the rest of my teammates.”

Manager Charlie Montoyo was wowed from the moment he caught a glimpse of a mostly blueand-white wearing crowd of over 5,300 in the stands.

“To have fans pulling for us for the first time in two years at the ballpark, it was great,” Montoyo said. “And all the players felt it, too. It was pretty cool.”

Not having played a game in Toronto since closing the 2019 season with an 8-3 win over Tampa Bay, the Blue Jays have spent the past year and a half playing on the road because of Canadian health restrictio­ns due to COVID-19.

Their so-called “home” games have either featured empty stands, as happened last year in Buffalo, or in front of indifferen­t fans, which was the case in opening the season 10-11 playing at their spring training site in Dunedin, Florida. The Blue Jays escaped the heat and humidity to return to their Triple-A site in Buffalo, where they went 17-9 last year and clinched their first playoff berth since 2016.

Robbie Ray (3-2) allowed one run on six hits through six innings, and the Blue Jays picked up where they left off a year ago in their adopted home.

Guerrero doubled in the first, hit a three-run homer in the third and added two singles. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. had three hits, including a towering solo home run.

The game ended with reliever Jordan Romano striking out pinch-hitter Jose Devers on a 3-2 count with the bases loaded. The Marlins lost their fourth straight.

Marlins shortstop Jazz Chisholm went 0 for 4, including striking out twice, and had an error in returning after missing four games with a sore right ankle.

Sandy Alcantara (2-5) allowed four runs on nine hits through six innings.

“You want to throw a perfect pitch. I just missed a little bit, hung my slider,” Alcantara said of Guerrero’s homer. “He won the fight. I tried to get an out, maybe a strikeout. But he swing the bat pretty well today.”

The teams close their two-game series on Wednesday night.

Guerrero’s homer came after singles by Marcus Semien and Bo Bichette for a 3-0 lead.

Starling Marte hit a double in the Miami fifth that drove in Luis Marte, who made his major league debut.

On his next time up following his home run, Guerrero was greeted with a chant of “MVP!” in the familiar confines of a stadium where he gained fans during a brief minor league stint before being promoted to Toronto.

This was the type of home-field advantage the Blue Jays felt they lacked in Dunedin. In Buffalo, many are familiar with the young core of Toronto’s roster, which spent time developing with the Triple-A Buffalo Bisons.

 ?? ADRIAN KRAUS/AP ?? The Blue Jays’ Vladimir Guerrero Jr. gestures as he rounds the bases after hitting a three-run home run against the Marlins during the third inning Tuesday in Buffalo, N.Y.
ADRIAN KRAUS/AP The Blue Jays’ Vladimir Guerrero Jr. gestures as he rounds the bases after hitting a three-run home run against the Marlins during the third inning Tuesday in Buffalo, N.Y.

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