Sloppy defence, poor pitching plagues struggling Blue Jays as Orioles claim series opener
Starter Yusei Kikuchi gives up 6 runs, 3 unearned in Toronto's 7th loss in 9 games
Not even the return of leadoff hitter George Springer could pull the Toronto Blue Jays out of their August funk.
The victory was the ninth in 13 games for the Orioles (60-55), while the Blue Jays (61-53) continued to stumble with two wins in nine outings.
Toronto was riddled by some sloppy defence and poor pitching from starter Yusei Kikuchi (4-7) in the fourth inning that saw the visitors score three times.
"Not ideal games defensively back to back, which gets highlighted a little bit," Blue Jays interim manager John Schneider said, referring to a messy defensive game in a loss to the Cleveland Indians on Sunday. "But overall, the defence has been great.
The home side fell behind 3-0 but rallied for two runs in the third inning thanks to a two-run single from Lourdes Gurriel Jr. before 26,769 at Rogers Centre.
Kikuchi struck out Austin Hays to begin the fourth. But the next batter, Jorge Mateo, reached base on a Bo Bichette throwing error.
Mateo moved to second when Baltimore's Terrin Vavra walked and advanced to third after Kikuchi's throwing error on a pickoff attempt at second base.
A Ryan McKenna double to the gap in left centre scored two more for a four-run Orioles lead.
"I felt like I was attacking the hitters early, but then I lost that rhythm," Kikuchi said.
Kikuchi was good for only 3 1/3 innings, giving up six runs (three unearned) on four hits with three walks and three strikeouts.
An Anthony Santander RBI single in the first frame and a two-run second-deck blast from Ryan Mountcastle in the third inning gave the Orioles an early lead.
Baltimore scored another in the fifth on a sacrifice fly from Vavra. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who saw his 22-game hit streak end on Sunday, countered with his team-leading 24th homer with one out in the fifth.
Number 24 for Vladdy 💥 <a href="https://t.co/9G1660ArNW">pic.twitter.com/9G1660ArNW</a>
—@BlueJays
Springer will be the Blue Jays' designated hitter for the time being until his sore elbow heals enough to allow him to play centre field. He went 2-for-4 with a double down the left-field line in the third inning, an infield hit in the seventh and a walk in the ninth.
With the return of Springer to his leadoff spot, Gurriel moved from first to third in the batting order.
Gurriel had another two hits. He has reached base safely in 38 of 44 games, going 61-for-171 (. 357) for the best average in the majors since the beginning of June.
The Blue Jays designated outfielder Bradley Zimmer for assignment to make room for Springer.
Baltimore starter Kyle Bradish went 4 2/3 innings, yielding three runs on six hits with four walks and five strikeouts. Reliever Bryan Baker (4-3) was awarded the win.
The Blue Jays now are 15-11 since Schneider replaced Charlie Montoyo as manager.
Schneider confirmed the Blue Jays are close to signing Yoshi Tsutsugo to a minor-league deal. The outfielder/first baseman was released by the Pittsburgh Pirates last week.
Blue Jays ace Alek Manoah (12-5) will face righty Dean Kremer (4-4) in the second game of the three-game tilt against Baltimore on Tuesday. Manoah is 1-0 in two starts with a no-decision against the Orioles in 2022, and 2-0 in five career starts.