Donaldson powers Blue Jays past Red Sox 7-5

Updated: May 28, 2016, 12:01 AM ET
Associated Press

TORONTO -- Despite hitting two home runs and driving in five runs, the scariest thing about Josh Donaldson might just be that the best is yet to come.

After going 4 for 5 to lead the Toronto Blue Jays to a 7-5 victory over the Boston Red Sox that snapped a five-game home losing streak, the All-Star third baseman insists he's finally rounding into form.

"Honestly, I haven't felt right all year," he said. "I've been kind of grinding, trying to get there. Maybe at some points trying to do too much at times. A couple days ago, I was starting to feel it and I was kind of getting excited about it."

The pair of homers, his 12th and 13th, represent the same number that he had on May 27 last year, his AL MVP-winning season, though he is six RBI shy of his 2015 pace.

As far as manager John Gibbons is concerned, the 30-year-old Donaldson can do no wrong, particularly when he is almost single-handedly dragging his team across the victory line.

"He's a special player," Gibbons said. "He can beat you so many ways -- with the bat, with the glove, things like that."

With slugger Jose Bautista out of the lineup, serving his one-game suspension following his role in the benches-clearing brawl in Texas earlier this month after his appeal was overturned, it was left to others to do the heavy lifting.

Donaldson got the Blue Jays on the board with a solo shot off Boston starter Joe Kelly over the electronic scoreboard in right-center field in the first inning, and finished up with a two-run line drive that crept inside the right-field foul pole in the eighth.

Justin Smoak added a solo shot in the fifth inning, while Ezequiel Carrera, playing in place of Bautista, scored twice in the victory.

Boston manager John Farrell, the former Blue Jays skipper, said the only way to stop Donaldson might be to walk him.

"If the first base is open, yeah, four wide ones the way he swung tonight," Farrell said. "But he's such a good player, and does it in critical moments as we saw."

Toronto starter Aaron Sanchez allowed three runs and five hits and struck out six in 6 2/3 innings. Joe Biagini (2-1) got four outs for the win, and Roberto Osuna pitched the ninth for his 11th save.

Kelly lasted just 4 2/3 innings, giving up five runs, nine hits and three walks, while striking out eight. Koji Uehara (2-2) worked the eighth inning, allowing Carrera to reach on a bunt before surrendering the winning home run to Donaldson, two pitches after he had just missed in crushing a ball foul into the fifth deck of Rogers Centre.

"He obviously had a good day against Joe Kelly and then obviously Koji comes in with I think probably a 10 mph difference and he hit it out," Bogaerts said. "He's a good player and he put a good swing on that one."

AIRING IT OUT -- PART I

For the first time at home this season, the Blue Jays could feel a breeze blowing through the stadium as the retractable Rogers Centre roof was cranked open. It was Toronto's 23rd home game of the season. Last year, the team played 52 of 81 regular-season home games under an open sky.

AIRING IT OUT -- PART II

In the seventh inning, a male fan jumped on the field and sprinted through the infield throwing his clothes aside as he ran. Down to just his underwear, the fan ran through an attempted tackle from one member of the security staff before finally being dragged down in right field and escorted away.

JOSE HITS BACK

Despite lodging an appeal, Blue Jays slugger Jose Bautista had his one-game suspension upheld by Major League Baseball and served it Friday. Bautista was one of seven Toronto players and coaches penalized following the bench-clearing brawl at Texas on May 15. Bautista calling the decision "unfair," and was equally critical of Tuesday's decision to reduce the suspension to Rangers second baseman Rougned Odor, the player who punched Bautista and sparked the brawl, from eight games to seven. "I can't say that I agree with it," he said. "He either has friends in high places or that organization does."

TRAINER'S ROOM

Red Sox: DH David Ortiz, who has more home runs (39), doubles (33), RBI (104) and extra-base hits (72) than any visiting player in Rogers Centre history, was given the day off, with Hanley Ramirez taking his place in the lineup. Ramirez is now 10 for 21 with seven RBI as a DH in 2016.

Blue Jays: Reliever Aaron Loup, out since spring training with a forearm issue in his pitching arm, made his third straight appearance for Triple-A Buffalo on Friday night. The left-hander gave up one hit and struck out one in two-thirds of an inning as he nears a return to the majors.

UP NEXT

Red Sox: RHP Rick Porcello (7-2, 3.47) has had four consecutive quality starts versus the AL East, but is 2-5 with a 7.15 ERA all-time in seven appearances at Rogers Centre.

Blue Jays: RHP Marcus Stroman (5-1, 3.89) is 4-0 with a 2.38 ERA in five career starts against Boston.


Copyright 2016 by The Associated Press

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index

Comments

Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN's media platforms. Learn more.


MORE MLB HEADLINES