Berrios beat up as Blue Jays suffer 1st sweep of season at hands of Yankees
Toronto pitcher allows 5 runs over 5.1 innings in loss to New York
Gleyber Torres sent a fastball soaring, started jogging toward first base and raised his right arm about the time a young boy in the first row of the right field short porch caught the ball on the fly.
Torres followed his go-ahead, three-run homer with a two-run single and led the surging New York Yankees over the visiting Toronto Blue Jays 5-3 Wednesday for their 15th win in 17 games.
A heralded phenom who is just 25, Torres came up to the Yankees in 2018 and became an All-Star in each of his first two seasons, hitting 62 home runs. But he slumped for the next two seasons, totalling just 12 long balls.
"I got too many opportunities to do things for my team and I missed. I failed," Torres said.
That's 🖐️ RBI for GT. <a href="https://t.co/S4qlwLWC3V">pic.twitter.com/S4qlwLWC3V</a>
—@Yankees
Yankees manager Aaron Boone benched Torres for six of this season's first 25 games, including opening day, when Torres' tying sacrifice fly in the 10th helped the Yankees beat Boston.
Torres had a game-ending single against Cleveland on April 23, a walk-off home run in the opener of Sunday's doubleheader against Texas and drove in all the runs in the series finale against the Blue Jays.
Torres' fourth-inning homer off Jose Berrios on on 0-2 fastball ended an 0-for-11 skid and gave New York a 3-1 lead. After Toronto closed, Torres singled in the sixth against Trevor Richards.
So call me, Gleyby. <a href="https://t.co/D2LelKv0V0">pic.twitter.com/D2LelKv0V0</a>
—@Yankees
Torres has 16 RBIs in his last 15 games and four home runs in his last 11. Overall, he is batting .222 with 18 RBIs and five homers — four to the opposite field
"I think it's a little bit mechanical. I think it's a little bit maturity, I think it's a little bit work and routine," said Boone, who cited Torres for getting his hips and lower body better aligned this season. "He's had to fight for some playing time here early in the year, and he's responded to that in a way you'd hope."
New York finished a two-game sweep to win its seventh straight series and improved to a major league-leading 22-8, its best 30-game start since 2003. The Yankees are 13-0 when scoring five runs or more.
"We've won in a lot of different ways," Boone said. "It's been pitching some days, maybe a baserunning play. We've had our handful of games where we've scored a bunch of runs and had a couple of blowout games. And we've scrapped and found ways late. ... That's built a lot of confidence in that room, that we know we don't have to lean on one thing on a given night."
Toronto drops 4th straight
Toronto has lost a season-high four straight and seven of nine overall, dropping to 3-6 against New York.
On a sloppy day for the Blue Jays, Bo Bichette failed to advance to third on an errant pitch following his fifth-inning double. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. then struck out, slammed his bat against the ground and snapped the lumber over his left knee.
After Yankees shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa bobbled Santiago Espinal's two-out grounder in the sixth for the first of his two errors, Alejandro Kirk tripped over second base and was tagged by Torres after initially beating the throw.
Jameson Taillon (3-1) allowed Toronto's first three batters to reach and fell behind when Teoscar Hernandez grounded into a forceout, then settled down and allowed two runs in 5 1/3 innings.
Berrios (2-2) gave up five runs and five hits in 5 1/3 innings, raising his ERA to 5.82.
Toronto got sacrifice flies from Matt Chapman in the seventh off Michael King and George Springer in the ninth against Aroldis Chapman. Bichette hit a long drive just foul before striking out as he swung under a 100 mph pitch, and Guerrero hit a game-ending popout as Aroldis Chapman remained perfect in eight save chances.
"It's early," DJ LeMahieu said after scoring twice, "but I'm very excited where we're at."