Higashioka's pair of home runs carry Yankees past Blue Jays

New York ace Gerrit Cole fans 8 Toronto batters in 6 innings

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Caption: New York Yankees catcher Kyle Higashioka homered twice to help push the Yankees to a 3-1 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays Monday night. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images/File)

Kyle Higashioka is not Gerrit Cole's personal catcher but they will be paired together a lot.
Higashioka homered twice to support Cole, and the New York Yankees beat Toronto 3-1 on Monday night in the Blue Jays temporary home at their spring training ballpark.
Higashioka caught Cole for the second straight start — and win — after working with him during last year's playoffs. Gary Sanchez, the Yankees' No. 1 catcher, was behind the plate for Cole's first start of the season, against the Blue Jays on opening day.
"Full time, no," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. "He's going to catch him a lot. I like it because he usually lines up with wanting to give Gary a day [off]. But I also feel good about Gary catching him. So, there's going to be games where Gary catches him"
Cole (2-0) allowed one run and three hits in six innings, struck out eight and walked one. The hard-throwing right-hander finished with a flurry by retiring his final 15 batters — striking out seven. With 29 strikeouts this season, he matched David Cone for the most by a Yankees pitcher through three starts.
"I think the most satisfying part was after a kind of rough first inning or two kind of calmed down and kept them to no runs after that," Higashioka said. "A credit to Gerrit, he really locked it in. That was pretty cool."
Cole has a 1.47 ERA. He has struck out at least seven in his last 12 regular-season starts, the longest such stretch in Yankees history.
Robbie Ray (0-1) didn't allow a hit before Rougned Odor singled with one out in the fifth and Higashioka followed with a 416-foot opposite-field shot to right-centre for a 2-1 lead.
"Everyone feels good about the way Ray pitched today," Toronto manager Charlie Montoyo said.

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Higashioka made it 3-1 in the eighth on a 427-foot solo shot to left off Ryan Borucki.
"He's locked in," Cole said.
Last Sept. 16, Higashioka had a three-homer game against the Blue Jays, also in a game started by Cole. Five of his 12 career homers have come against Toronto.
Justin Wilson, Darren O'Day and Aroldis Chapman completed a five-hitter. Chapman worked the ninth in his first save chance this season, and the Yankees got back to .500 at 5-5 by winning consecutive games for only the second time this season.
Ray allowed two runs, three hits, three walks and struck out three over five innings in his first start of the season after being sidelined late in spring training by a bruised elbow. He was carrying his child down the stairs at his rental home when he slipped and fell. Ray's child was uninjured in the fall.
Five Toronto pitchers held the Yankees to four hits.
It was the fourth game for Toronto at TD Ballpark this season and the first that counted there for the Yankees. The Blue Jays are playing at their spring training home through May due to Covid-19 restrictions in Canada, then appear likely to return to Buffalo, New York, the ballpark of their Triple-A team and Toronto's home during the shortened 2020 season.
"I guess I'm kind of indifferent to that," Cole said about pitching in Dunedin. "It was fine."
Cole threw 42 pitches in the first two innings before settling down and needing 56 in his next four.
He allowed Randal Grichuk's RBI grounder in the first. He worked out of a two-on, no-out jam during the second by striking out Alejandro Kirk, Josh Palacios and Marcus Semien.
Grichuk opened the ninth with a double off Chapman but left stranded when the closer retired his next three batters.