Aaron Sanchez loses no-hitter late as Jays edge Orioles
Toronto pitcher was looking to throw 2nd no-hitter in franchise history
Aaron Sanchez's no-hit bid, as well as his shutout, ended in a near-calamitous eighth inning. At that point, he was just hoping to get his first win since last July.
Curtis Granderson made it happen, delivering a tiebreaking homer in the ninth to carry the Toronto Blue Jays past the Baltimore Orioles 2-1 Tuesday night.
Seeking to throw the second no-hitter in Blue Jays history, Sanchez got through seven innings before Tim Beckham led off the eighth with a sharp grounder through the legs of third baseman Josh Donaldson that went for a double.
There was no time to lament what might have been, because the right-hander had a 1-0 lead to protect.
"After I gave up the hit, I was like, whatever," Sanchez said. "It would have been cool if I got to throw a no-hitter, but ... I didn't care about anything else but winning the ball game."
'He was dynamite tonight'
Anthony Santander followed with a single to right, and rookie Chance Sisco hit an RBI double to make it 1-all.
Sanchez avoided further damage by getting Jonathan Schoop to bounce into an inning-ending double play with the bases loaded.
Not long after that, Granderson hit a sidearmed fastball from Darren O'Day (0-1) over the right-field scoreboard. It was his first homer since signing as a free agent with Toronto this past off-season.
And so, after a 2017 season that included four trips to the disabled list, Sanchez (1-1) put a notch in the win column.
"He was dynamite tonight," manager John Gibbons said. "That unbelievable changeup has really opened up a lot of things for him. It was probably one of the most effortless outings I've ever seen him have."
Roberto Osuna got three straight outs for his fifth save. He became the youngest player in major league history (23 years, 62 days) with 100 career saves.
Milestone for Osuna
"To do something like this is very special," Osuna said. "I am real proud of myself."
Orioles starter Andrew Cashner pitched seven shutout innings, allowing four hits and three walks. He struck out six.
On almost any other night, that would have been good enough to get the win. But Cashner — making his third start with Baltimore after signing as a free agent in February — had to settle for matching zeroes with Sanchez.
"I knew he was going to be good coming out; he's got one of the best sinkers in baseball," Cashner said. "You just try to match what he's doing and give us a chance to win."
The Blue Jays broke up the scoreless duel in the eighth with an unearned run on a throwing error by Santander on a single to right by Yangervis Solarte.
Toronto's defence helped sustain the no-hitter in the early innings. Right fielder Steve Pearce and centre fielder Kevin Pillar made leaping catches on deep fly balls, and second baseman Devon Travis raced into the outfield to snag a fifth-inning blooper by Beckham.
Sanchez was in the running to join Dave Stieb as the only pitchers to throw no-hitters for Toronto. Stieb beat Cleveland on Sept. 2, 1990.
Morales on 10-day DL
The Toronto Blue Jays have placed first baseman Kendrys Morales on the 10-day disabled list with a strained right hamstring.
The injury occurred while Morales was running out a single in the second inning of Monday night's game against the Orioles. Morales remained on first base after being examined, but was replaced by a pinch runner after advancing to second on a fielder's choice.
Toronto manager John Gibbons expects Morales to return after the minimum stay on the DL, adding that Morales will likely start taking batting practice on Wednesday or Thursday.
Morales is batting .227 with one homer and six RBIs in eight games.
The Blue Jays filled the roster spot by recalling reliever Tim Mayza from Triple-A Buffalo on Tuesday. The left-hander was 1-0 with a 6.88 ERA over 17 innings for Toronto in 2017.