Well, they did not give the kind of dramatic counter-attack they could have envisioned at the time, but they did show a significant and boost in five-row down rally on Sunday for a rugged 10-9 victory that prevented a three-race sweep. The Blue Jays’ attack came after the clashes last month, but it was mostly AWOL during a frustrating weekend, scoring just three 10-point series in the first two games before collapsing in the final. Yusei Kikuchi left behind a deficit of 3-2, Adam Cimber and Max Castillo, in their debut in the big league, left 8-3 and seemed a deflated end. But Luis Severino, dominating with five, came out of the game after a single by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Alejandro Kirk walking to open the sixth. The Blue Jays loaded the bases against Miguel Castro and Lourdes Guriel Jr. made it a game in a row with his fifth career Grand Slam. After Yimi Garcia scored zero in the seventh – jaw with Gleyber Torres after making him swing to finish the frame – Bo Bichette won a single on the field and after picking a Guerrero player and Kirk walking, Teoscar Hernandez timed a Peralta change and sent it to the center of the left field, firing the bedlam among the crowd of 44,395. The drama did not end there, as top Anthony Rizzo ousted Tim Mayza with an out in the eighth, and the next two Yankees also arrived, pushing manager Charlie Montoyo to bring Jordan Romano closer to the eighth for the first time. this season. He got DJ LeMahieu out before throwing out Aaron Judge with a fast 98 mph ball to the top of the belt to finish eighth, and then took a walk and a single to close the door in ninth. The use of Romano underscored the desperate nature of this game for the Blue Jays, who finished a nine-game winning streak for the Yankees, who, 49-17, are in the fourth-best start through 66 games in the history of major leagues. The Blue Jays, who with 38-28 control of a wild position, improved to 4-8 against the Yankees, and this sign is a key reason why they are just 17-20 against teams 0,500 or better. The Yankees, on the other hand, are 20-8 against teams of 0,500 or better. They are now 36-3 ahead after six appearances, underscoring how unlikely this defeat was. This, in part, explains why there was so much emotion long before Garcia and Torres got into it. In the first, New York’s Josh Donaldson hit his bat on the ground after being hit by Kikuchi and later hit a two-wheeled homer in the third. Hernandez, in turn, hit his chest to the line of the first base after going deep. Kirk, meanwhile, was particularly careful behind the plate with men at the base, placing his glove in one place but moving it quickly elsewhere in the event of a relay. He also made a pair of solids in Kikuchi, picking Donaldson at the beginning to finish the first and throwing Aaron Hicks trying to steal to finish the second.