Yankees stop Blue Jays in their tracks with resounding victory
Gerrit Cole backed by 12 runs as New York closes in on clinching 2nd in East
Gerrit Cole limited Toronto to five hits over seven innings in his final preparation for the playoffs, and Aaron Hicks drove in three runs in a 12-1 rout over the Blue Jays on Tuesday night.
"It's nice to be finishing strong before starting the playoffs," Cole said.
Cole finished his first season with the Yankees with a 2.84 ERA and 94 strikeouts in 73 innings after signing a $324 million, nine-year contract as a free agent with the team he rooted for growing up.
"Outstanding — is that an adjective?" Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. "He's gotten better as the season's gone on and he's entrenched himself in our culture and with our team. And I feel like he's pitching his best baseball that we've seen at this point."
Cole allowed three earned runs in his last 27 innings, dropping his ERA from 3.91 at the end of August after the second of three straight losses that followed 20 consecutive winning decisions.
"Shorter than we all expected," Cole said. "Gave our team a chance to win more often times than not and am settled in now with with the guys and with the team, just in the locker room and whatnot, adjusting to these new protocols and adjusting to just a totally new environment."'
Cole's surge coincided with the Yankees moving Kyle Higashioka behind the plate for his last four starts. Cole had a 1.00 ERA while pitching to Higashioka (three earned runs in 27 innings) and a 3.91 ERA while pitching to Gary Sanchez (20 earned runs in 46 innings). Cole's next start will be Tuesday, likely against Minnesota or the Chicago White Sox.
"We did a nice job of getting his pitch count high," Toronto manager Charlie Montoyo said. "He got the lead, and somebody that good with that lead, could (keep going) after that."
Strange delay
Aaron Judge, in a 2-for-17 slump since coming off the injured list, had his first three-hit game since Aug. 8 and the Yankees improved to just 2-10 when not homering. New York had 15 hits and went 8 for 10 with runners in scoring position.
Gio Urshela had four hits and Gleyber Torres had three hits and two RBIs. New York has won 11 of 13 following a 5-15 slide.
New York lowered its magic number to one for clinching second place in the AL East. The Yankees (32-23) remained 1 1/2 games behind Minnesota (34-22) for the No. 4 seed in the AL and home-field in the first round of the playoffs.
Biggio hit his seventh homer and reliever Chase Anderson struck out five for Toronto (28-27), whose magic number to clinch a playoff spot fell to two when the Seattle Mariners lost to the Houston Astros later Tuesday.
Hicks drove in a run in the first with his second triple this season and added a two-run single in the fifth. He is batting 225, his highest average since before play on Aug. 18.
The game was delayed in the eighth inning when the Yankees brought in Tyler Lyons, whose contract was selected from the alternate training site earlier Tuesday. Lyons was on Boone's lineup card but not on the umpires' version, so they sent him back to the dugout. That forced New York to utilize Zack Britton with an eight-run lead.
"I know the transaction went through late.," Boone said. "We'll try and make sure we're airtight on that moving forward."
Tanner Roark (2-3) allowed six runs and seven hits in 4 1/3 innings.