MLB

Blue Jays drop 3rd in a row to Rays as team plays through heartbreak

The Toronto Blue Jays staggered through a weekend of heartbreak with their third loss in a row on Sunday. A day after first-base coach Mark (Bud) Budzinski and his wife Monica lost the eldest of three children, 17-year-old daughter Julia, to a sudden and unexpected death, the Blue Jays fell 7-3 to the Tampa Bay Rays.

Toronto mourns sudden passing of 17-year-old daughter of 1st-base coach Budzinski

Tampa Bay Rays left fielder Randy Arozarena, shown in Saturday's outing, hit a two-run home run in the fifth inning of a 7-3 win over the Blue Jays on Sunday in Toronto. (Nick Turchiaro/USA TODAY Sports via Reuters)

The Toronto Blue Jays staggered through a weekend of heartbreak with their third loss in a row on Sunday.

A day after their popular first-base coach Mark (Bud) Budzinski and his wife Monica lost the eldest of three children, 17-year-old daughter Julia, to a sudden and unexpected death, the Blue Jays fell 7-3 to the Tampa Bay Rays before 35,757 at Rogers Centre in Toronto.

On Saturday, the 48-year-old Budzinski left the Blue Jays in the third inning of the second game of the team's doubleheader against the Rays after learning of the tragic news.

The Blue Jays issued a statement, saying that Budzinski would take some time away from the team to grieve with his family. There also was a moment of silence for Julia before the game as players and coaches from both teams stood in front of their respective dugouts.

The emotional damage was evident in the words and body language of the Blue Jays.

"My heart breaks for Bud," Toronto manager Charlie Montoyo said, his voice quivering with tenderness. "There's good men and great men. He's a great man. He's a special kind of person. His family is great. The only thing I can share about what happened is that he left a note for the team. He did this while going through a tragedy, and that tells you everything about him."

The Blue Jays reciprocated, with many players writing their coach in support. The outpouring was felt around the league, with Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora and his Detroit Tigers counterpart A.J. Hinch offering their sympathy.

Hinch was a minor-league roommate of Budzinski's.

"He's someone I consider a dear friend," Hinch said. "His daughter is the same age as my daughters."

"I just found out about his daughter passing away in an accident," Cora said. "It puts everything in perspective."

'Happy, fun last day for her'

Julia died in a tubing accident in Virginia on the weekend.

Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources spokesperson Paige Pearson said in a statement two girls fell off a tube being pulled behind a boat on the James River on Saturday.

As the boat operator returned to get them out of the water, the boat hit a wave causing it to be pushed on top of a 17-year-old victim, striking her with the propeller.

"It was a very happy, fun last day on earth for her," Budzinski's mother Monica, who says she was with her daughter at the boat, said at a vigil at Julia's Virginia high school Sunday night. "Sadly obviously, but it was happy, laughing, having a good time, and that's the way I'm going to remember her, that's the way everybody needs to remember her. She loved life, she loved being outside, sports, everything.

"She'll live on through all you guys."

Pearson said foul play is not suspected. Life-jackets were worn and alcohol was not a factor.

Montoya also left the nightcap of the doubleheader to be with Budzinski until he found a flight home to Richmond, Va. Montoya returned later in the game.

Blue Jays bullpen catcher Luis Hurtado coached first base in Budzinski's absence.

Blue Jays management contemplated the possibility of not playing on Sunday.

"I was not aware of that," Toronto starter Ross Stripling (4-3) said. "I think Bud would have wanted us to play, try to win the series. But that's not the way it unfolded."

Rays offence catches fire in 5th inning

The Blue Jays (44-36) lost their third game in a row to the Rays (43-36) to drop the five-game set 3-2 and split their week-long eight-game homestand at 4-4.

The Blue Jays were tied 1-1 through four innings after leaving eight runners on base, including six stranded in scoring position.

In the fifth inning, the Rays scored six times. Stripling yielded a leadoff double to Taylor Walls, who scored Yandy Diaz's single to right field.

Harold Ramirez drilled a two-run shot to right field to end Stripling's day. He lasted 4 Γàö innings, giving up four runs (three earned) on seven hits with three strikeouts and a walk.

Stripling had not allowed more than two runs in five straight starts.

Toronto reliever Trent Thornton replaced Stripling and was greeted with a solo homer from Ji-Man Choi and a two-run blast to straightaway centre field two batters later to Arozarena.

The Rays enjoyed a 14-hit offensive outing with Choi leading the way with three hits. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. also enjoyed a three-hit tour.

Tampa Bay starter Shane Baz (1-1) squeezed out of jams in the first four innings, leaving the bases loaded in the first and fourth frames.

Injury update

The Blue Jays will wait to see how Kevin Gausman's ankle contusion feels after the club's charter flight to California before determining whether he will make his next scheduled start on Thursday. Gausman felt some stiffness and soreness a day after taking a 100-m.p.h. line drive off his right ankle, forcing him to leave the opener of the Blue Jays doubleheader in the second inning on Saturday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tim has covered the hockey landscape and other sports in Canada for three decades for The Canadian Press, CBC Sports, the Globe and Mail and Toronto Sun. He has been to three Winter Olympics, 11 Stanley Cups, a world championship as well as 17 world junior championships, 13 Memorial Cups and 13 University Cups. The native of Waterloo, Ont., always has his eye out for an underdog story.

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