MLB

Springer answers boos with homer, 3 RBIs to lift Blue Jays over Yankees

Springer hit a go-ahead, two-run homer and an RBI double, and the Blue Jays made three dazzling defensive plays to beat New York 3-0 Monday night.

Manoah strikes out 7, allows 1 hit over 6 innings for Toronto

Blue Jays' George Springer, right, celebrates with third base coach Luis Rivera as he runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the third inning of Toronto's 3-0 win over the Yankees on Monday night in New York City. (Frank Franklin II/The Associated Press)

Greeted by boos at Yankee Stadium, George Springer responded with the type of racket he and his Toronto Blue Jays are ready to make.

Springer hit a go-ahead, two-run homer and an RBI double, and the Blue Jays made three dazzling defensive plays to beat New York 3-0 Monday night.

Toronto is off to a 3-1 start after missing the playoffs last year despite a 91-71 record.

"I think that the world is probably a little bit behind what we thought, but we've always been confident in what we can do," shortstop Bo Bichette said. "We've known that we had an ability to make some noise for a few years internally. Obviously, we didn't. But I think this is the first year that people are kind of on board."

Bichette made two sparkling plays, Teoscar Hernandez had a great grab in right field and Alek Manoah (1-0) allowed one hit over six innings.

"Those little things, that's how you win games," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said. "They're just kids, so they're just going to get better little by little."

Springer remains targeted by fans for his time on the 2017 championship Houston Astros, found guilty by Major League Baseball of stealing signs with an unauthorized camera.

Fans booed Springer before and during each at-bat, and he finished a triple short of the cycle in the leadoff spot. No. 9 batter Santiago Espinal had three singles for the Blue Jays.

"I'm concentrating on the stuff that I can control, which is the swings and all that stuff," Springer said.

Manoah permitted only Joey Gallo's opposite-field single with one out in the second. The 24-year-old right-hander struck out seven and worked around four walks, helping the Blue Jays extend their Yankee Stadium winning streak to five.

He pitched six shutout innings of two-hit ball to win his major league debut in the Bronx last May 27.

"It's the mecca," Manoah said. "You kind of want to come in, you want to play hard. There's a lot of fans here and it's just an exciting ballpark to play in and something you dream of as a kid."

Springer followed Espinal's third-inning single by pulling a slider from Jameson Taillon (0-1) into the left-field seats for his second homer in two days. Espinal hit a two-out single in the seventh and scored when Springer sliced a fastball to the opposite field for a doubl e on two hops to the right-field wall.

Manoah loosened up before the game with a football, then mixed 44 fastballs, 22 sliders, 18 sinkers and 15 changeups, getting five swings and misses on fastballs, four on sliders and three on changeups.

He walked the bases loaded in the third before Giancarlo Stanton hit a broken-bat grounder to Bichette, who made a backhand pickup and off-balance throw to first from the edge of the outfield grass.

Hernandez slid to grab Kyle Higashioka's looper into short right field with two on in the seventh after Gleyber Torres' leadoff single off Trevor Richards and Aaron Hicks' walk.

Espinal, shifted to the left side of second, ranged back to the right side of second to glove pinch-hitter Josh Donaldson's 106 mph grounder against Adam Cimber. Espinal flipped to Bichette, who made an acrobatic, 360-degree turn at second and threw to first for an inning-ending double play.

Romano sets franchise record for consecutive saves

Jordan Romano finished the four-hitter for his third save and franchise-record 26th in a row dating to last season, and the Yankees lost their second straight after opening with two wins. Of the seven times New York was shut out last year, two were against Toronto.

Taillon became the first Yankees pitcher to last five innings, allowing five hits with six strikeouts and no walks.

"They made a couple big plays when they did get in trouble, but for the most part Manoah was in control," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.

Jansen put on IL with oblique strain

Blue Jays catcher Danny Jansen was put on the 10-day injured list earlier Monday with a strained left oblique muscle.

Montoyo said before the series opener at Yankee Stadium that Jansen felt soreness in his side while swinging, was having a scan and would not be available for the game. Shortly before the first pitch, the Blue Jays placed Jansen on the IL.

Jansen was 4 for 7 with two home runs in the opening series against Texas.

Toronto also recalled left-hander Anthony Kay from Triple-A Buffalo and selected the contract of catcher Tyler Heineman from the International League club. Left-hander Tayler Saucedo was optioned to Buffalo and outfielder Josh Palacios was designated for assignment.

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