Blue Jays fall to Royals in series finale
Salvador Perez's 2-run shot breaks scoreless tie in 7th
Salvador Perez tapped his bat twice on the plate to make sure it wasn't cracked, then sent the next pitch he saw from Toronto reliever T.J. Zeuch into the left-field fountains, breaking open a scoreless game and sending the Kansas City Royals to a 2-0 victory over the Blue Jays on Sunday.
Brady Singer kept the Blue Jays off the board through six innings. Kyle Zimmer (1-0) and Josh Staumont each worked a perfect inning, and Greg Holland finished off the two-hitter for his second save of the season.
Kansas City has won a major league-leading 55 consecutive games when ahead after seven innings.
Perez's two-run shot off Zeuch (0-2) in the seventh inning came one day after his two-out, walk-off homer gave the Royals a 3-2 win and split of their doubleheader. That homer soared an estimated 459 feet, the one Sunday a mere 441.
Kansas City also won the opener Thursday night to take a series from Toronto for the first time since September 2017.
"That shutout to me, just giving up a couple hits — there's a lot of pride that catchers take," said Matheny, himself a former backstop, "and I know Salvy takes a lot of pride in how that game unfolds. But they all did a terrific job."
"We're just showing up and trying to do our best," said Perez, whose banner week included a 4-for-4 performance against the Angels in which he had his 1,000th hit and a walk-off pickoff against Los Angeles the very next night.
"It was a great week," Perez admitted with a smile, "and hopefully we can continue to do it."
Sunday's game was scoreless through six, but it wasn't so much a pitcher's duel as an exercise in offensive ineptitude.
Singer must be wondering whether his teammates like him.
The Royals did not score a single run with him on the mound in his first two starts, and they failed to again despite a solid job against the Blue Jays. Singer allowed just two hits and walked three while striking out six.
At least he rendered the Blue Jays equally ineffective with runners on base. They left two aboard in the second, runners on the corners in the third and two more in the fourth, keeping the game scoreless even with busy base paths.
"I feel good where we are as a team with all the injuries," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said. "Guys are playing now that weren't supposed to play, and that's how it goes. Maybe some guys are putting more pressure on themselves because now the lineup's not as strong as it used to be, but that's how it goes."
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