MLB

Bichette's clutch 8th-inning grand slam catapults Blue Jays to victory over Red Sox

Bo Bichette hit a tiebreaking grand slam in the eighth inning to power the Toronto Blue Jays to a 6-2 win over the Boston Red Sox on Monday night at Rogers Centre.

Chapman, Gurriel Jr. hit solo homers in Toronto win

Blue Jays shortstop Bo Bichette hits his first career grand slam, which proved to be the game-winner, in the eighth inning of a 6-2 win over the Red Sox on Monday in Toronto. (Mark Blinch/Getty Images)

Mired in a slump over the first few weeks of the season, Blue Jays shortstop Bo Bichette made an adjustment to his hitting approach ahead of Monday's game against Boston.

The change paid immediate dividends.

Bichette hit a tiebreaking grand slam — the first of his career — in the eighth inning to power Toronto to a 6-2 win over the Red Sox at Rogers Centre.

"I'm just trying to be a little bit more selective but aggressive at the same time in what I want," Bichette said. "So I felt a lot better today."

Bichette, who's hitting .219 this season, had been pulling off on his swing of late and chasing balls out of the strike zone.

Manager Charlie Montoyo said he could tell Bichette was coming around because he was starting to hit more to the right side, a good indicator that his swing is on track.

The Toronto shortstop turned on a 1-0 pitch from reliever Tyler Danish for his second homer of the year, sending it just over the wall in right field.

"From experience, I never panic or anything for 60 or 70 at-bats or whatever, because people have track records," Montoyo said. "Everybody struggles and some people have slow starts, others have good starts. I knew it was going to be fine.

"He made the adjustment today and that was good to see."

Santiago Espinal, Bradley Zimmer and George Springer had reached on one-out singles before Bichette's first career grand slam.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr., and Matt Chapman hit solo homers and starter Jose Berrios worked seven-plus innings for the Blue Jays (11-6), who outhit Boston 10-7.

The Red Sox (7-10) have dropped five of their last six games.

"We're just kind of running into some tough luck, you know? We're hitting the ball hard, it's going right at people," said Red Sox outfielder Alex Verdugo. "It seems like there's really no holes at the moment."

Quality pitching and solid defence also helped the Blue Jays win for the fifth time in six games.

Berrios made a nice defensive play to escape a one-out, bases-loaded jam in the second inning. He snagged a comebacker from Christian Arroyo and threw home to start a 1-2-3 double play.

Springer made a highlight-reel catch to rob Kevin Plawecki of extra bases in the fifth inning. The Toronto centre-fielder chased down the line drive and made a diving grab just before the warning track.

Gurriel led off the bottom half of the frame with his second homer of the year. Boston starter Nathan Eovaldi had retired 11 straight batters before Gurriel turned on an 0-2 slider.

Chapman's solo shot, his third homer of the season, came on a 1-2 cutter in the seventh inning.

Berrios was pulled for sidearmer Adam Cimber (4-0) after giving up back-to-back singles in the eighth. Plawecki advanced the runners with a bunt and Kike Hernandez drove in Bobby Dalbec with a single.

Arroyo tied the game when he scored on a sacrifice fly by Verdugo.

Berrios and Eovaldi, who threw seven innings, had similar lines. Berrios allowed two earned runs, five hits and a walk while striking out four. Eovaldi also gave up two earned runs and five hits but didn't issue a walk and had five strikeouts.

Matt Strahm (1-1) shouldered the loss. Julian Merryweather worked the ninth inning for the Blue Jays.

The game took two hours 16 minutes to play.

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