Blue Jays offence struggles as Tigers avoid series sweep, end 6-game losing skid
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. delivers Toronto's lone run with 3rd-inning single
The Blue Jays were left to focus on the small victories Thursday after the visiting Detroit Tigers avoided a three-game sweep with a 3-1 win over Toronto at Rogers Centre.
Toronto starter Chris Bassitt made a second straight quality start, the Blue Jays bullpen gave up only one run in the series and George Springer extended his hitting streak to seven games.
Bassitt (1-2), who struggled in his Blue Jays debut before rebounding in his second start, allowed two earned runs and four hits over a six-inning appearance.
"He's really good at reading hitter's swings and is not afraid to throw any pitch in any count," said Toronto manager John Schneider. "I think it just keeps hitters a little bit at bay. That has been his [modus operandi] for a while and it's what he's continuing to do."
The veteran right-hander, who signed a three-year deal with Toronto last fall, had seven strikeouts and issued three walks.
"I'd say my stuff kind of has returned back to normal," Bassitt said. "Velo is up on basically every pitch that I need it to be up. So the sharpness was there."
It was the first home loss of the season for the Blue Jays, who started the campaign with a 10-game road trip.
Bo Bichette had two hits for his sixth multi-hit game of the season. Toronto outhit Detroit 8-7.
Tigers starter Spencer Turnbull (1-2) threw five strong innings, giving up six hits, one earned run and a walk, while striking out six. Chasen Shreve, Jason Foley and Jose Cisnero each threw an inning of relief ahead of Alex Lange, who worked a clean ninth for his first save.
"We've had a tough time getting to the 27th out," said Tigers manager A.J. Hinch. "Today, to a man, everybody helped us."
Baez pulled from game after baserunning gaffe
Detroit shortstop Javier Baez was pulled from the game after he was doubled off in the second inning. He had started trotting to third base — assuming the inning was about to end on Akil Baddoo's fly ball — and didn't realize it was only the second out.
"If you watch the last couple of series, we've made a number of mental mistakes, and the one thing we can control is our preparedness and our readiness," Hinch said. "Javy happened to be the runner that made the big mistake where I made the move.
"But it's a message to our whole team that we've got to clean that up."
Jonathan Schoop came on for Baez and Nick Maton moved from third base to shortstop. Baez said he's on the same page as his skipper.
"Obviously we've got to show respect to the game," Baez said. "He took a decision and I respect that. He's the manager and we've got to respect what he does."
Each team scored a run in the third inning as Jake Rogers came home on a Tyler Nevin sacrifice fly. In the bottom half, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. delivered an RBI single that plated Cavan Biggio.
Vladdy is hitting .429 through his first 13 games 🔥 <a href="https://t.co/SL2pgl1U6B">pic.twitter.com/SL2pgl1U6B</a>
—@BlueJays
Detroit regained the lead in the fifth inning when Zach McKinstry hit a gapper that brought home Baddoo, who led off with a walk.
The Blue Jays put runners in scoring position in the frame as Springer and Bichette singled before advancing on a Daulton Varsho grounder. Turnbull escaped by striking out Alejandro Kirk.
The Tigers loaded the bases with nobody out in the seventh but couldn't pad their lead.
Sidearmer Adam Cimber got Nevin to ground into a forceout and left-hander Tim Mayza came on and snuffed the threat with another force and a flyout.
Detroit finally added an insurance run in the eighth off right-hander Anthony Bass. Spencer Torkelson hit a leadoff double and scored on a double by Rogers.
The unbeaten Tampa Bay Rays (13-0) will kick off a three-game series on Friday night against Toronto.
Drew Rasmussen (2-0, 0.00 earned-run average) was scheduled to start the opener against Blue Jays right-hander Jose Berrios (0-2, 11.17).