Yankees crush 5 homers in single inning to cap commanding series sweep over Blue Jays
New York batters slug 19 longballs, score 43 total runs in three games against Toronto
Brett Gardner, DJ LeMahieu and Luke Voit homered on consecutive pitches for the New York Yankees — and that was just the start of the night's power surge.
By the time the Bombers' barrage was over, the Yankees had hit a record-setting 1.42 miles of home runs in a three-game sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Yankees tied a major league record with five home runs in an inning and hit six overall in a 10-7 win Thursday night that extended their winning streak to eight.
New York set a major league record for most home runs in a three-game span with 19 — three more than the previous high — and became the first team with six or more home runs in three straight games. The Yankees (29-21) outscored Toronto 43-15 over the three games and outhit the Blue Jays 44-28, opening a 2 1/2-game lead over the Toronto for second place and closing within one game of Minnesota (31-21) for a first-round playoff series at home.
Voit's home run was his major league-leading 20th.
Aaron Hicks struck out, and Giancarlo Stanton and Gleyber Torres followed with home runs that gave the Yankees a 9-2 lead and chased Anderson. The Yankees hit five homers in an inning for the first time, the seventh big league team to achieve the feat.
These <a href="https://twitter.com/Yankees?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Yankees</a> bats are insane right now. <a href="https://t.co/Yt0WlzNgs2">pic.twitter.com/Yt0WlzNgs2</a>
—@MLB
"That was a lot of fun." Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. "Obviously a tie game going into that inning and then everyone just started unloading with real good at-bats."
The Yankees hit 2,005 feet of home runs in the inning, according to Statcast, 2,377 in the game and 7,496 in the series.
"It was awesome," said Stanton, who had four hits for the first time since July 23, 2018. "In general it was just amazing to see everyone contribute like that."
After losing 15 of 20 games and nearly dropping out of the AL's eight playoff spots, the Yankees have outscored their opponents 71-20 over their winning streak.
Masahiro Tanaka (3-2) allowed three runs and seven hits in seven innings, striking out five. Tanaka has thrown at least five innings in each of his last five starts.
Anderson gave up seven runs and eight hits in 2 2/3 innings. He thought he may have been tipping piltches.
"Yeah, I think they put some good swings on all those pitches, so I [was] kind of wondering if I was doing something," Anderson said.
Jays go down swinging
Toronto closed in the ninth against Jonathan Holder on Danny Jansen's run-scoring single and Cavan Biggio's bases-loaded walk. Aroldis Chapman relieved with the bases loaded and gave up a two-run single to Bo Bichette, then struck out Randal Grichuk and Teoscar Hernandez for his third save. Chapman threw fastballs on all 12 pitches, ending the game with a 101 mph pitch that Hernandez swung under.
"We could have just said OK, they're swinging the bats great, we're done. We came back and made them use their closer," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said.
Lourdes Gurriel Jr. was 3 for 3 with two homers off Tanaka and added an infield single in the ninth. He is 11 for 20 with three homers and five RBIs against the Yankees this season.
"Other than that, I feel like I did a pretty good job out there," Tanaka said through a translator. "I had good command and good control."