MLB

Blue Jays open final homestand at TD Ballpark with loss to Phillies

Rhys Hoskins hit a three-run double during a five-run seventh inning and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-1 on Friday night.

Toronto starter Matz tosses 5 scoreless innings before pitching change

Philadelphia Phillies players celebrate after scoring during the team's 5-1 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday. (Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Rhys Hoskins hit a three-run double during a five-run seventh inning and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-1 on Friday night.

J.T. Realmuto returned to the Phillies' starting lineup one day after being placed on the COVID-19-related injured list and drew a two-out, bases-loaded walk that made it 1-all in the seventh.

"Obviously, I'm intently watching J.T.'s at-bat there," Hoskins said. "He might attack me somewhat similar. Just kind of waited him out. I knew he had to come to me with the bases loaded there in a pretty big situation and just didn't miss the pitch that was more on the plate than the other ones."

The star catcher went 0 for 4 as the designated hitter. He felt ill and had a fever Wednesday night, but was cleared by MLB to return.

Tim Mayza replaced Toronto reliever Trent Thornton (1-1) with two on and one out in the seventh and walked Bryce Harper and Realmuto.

Hoskins followed with a double off Mayza to make it 4-1. Alec Bohm added an RBI double later in the inning.

"Really good at-bats from our guys," Phillies manager Joe Girardi said. "They got behind in the count and they ended up taking those walks, which was the difference. Then you get a huge hit from Rhys and tack on a run with Alec."

The Blue Jays bullpen has been a strength this season.

"It was a bad night," Toronto manager Charlie Montoyo said.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. put the Blue Jays up 1-0 with an opposite-field homer in the sixth off Vince Velasquez.

It was Guerrero's first homer against the Phillies. His Hall of Famer father, Vladimir Guerrero, hit 31 off Philadelphia, his most off any opponent.

This was the opener of the Blue Jays' third and final homestand at TD Ballpark. Toronto is playing at its spring training facility in Dunedin due to COVID-19 restrictions in Canada and will move home games to Buffalo, New York, next month.

The Blue Jays completed a stretch Thursday when they played 25 of their first 36 games on the road to become the first AL team to do it since the 1932 St. Louis Browns and the 6th team in MLB history, according to Stats Perform.

Realmuto grounded out with the bases loaded to end the third and struck out with two on to finish the fifth. Harper went 2 for 3 with the three walks.

Velasquez gave up one run and three hits in 5 innings. He struck out seven and walked three.

Connor Brogdon (4-1), one of five pitchers to combine on a four-hitter, got the final out in the sixth for the win.

Toronto starter Steven Matz needed 107 pitches to get through five scoreless innings, allowing four hits, three walks and striking out nine.

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