Buehrle falls to Yankees again, Blue Jays lose 6-3

IAN HARRISON
Associated Press

TORONTO (AP) — Through six solid innings, Mark Buehrle made it look as if his longtime slide against the New York Yankees might be about to end.

Then, in a span of four batters, it all went wrong again.

Jacoby Ellsbury and Chase Headley homered, and the Yankees beat Buehrle and the slumping Toronto Blue Jays 6-3 on Friday night.

Buehrle (11-9) allowed four runs and seven hits in six-plus innings in another loss to New York. The veteran left-hander is 1-13 with a 6.14 ERA in 20 career starts against New York, including an 0-11 mark in his past 16 outings against them.

“It’s not like we’re all running to the bat racks because Buehrle is pitching,” New York’s Derek Jeter said. “I think that’s just a fluke thing.”

More importantly for the Blue Jays, Buehrle is 1-8 in his last 15 starts this season.

Jose Bautista homered and Dioner Navarro had three hits, but the Blue Jays dropped to 7-17 in August.

“We’ve just got swing our way out of it,” manager John Gibbons said. “We’re better hitters than what we’re producing as a whole right now.”

Bautista put the Blue Jays in front with a second-deck homer in the fourth. It’s the first time Bautista has connected in three straight games since July 1-3, 2011.

New York, who had managed just four hits through the first six innings, answered with a five-run seventh, with the first four batters reaching against Buehrle. Brian McCann doubled, Carlos Beltran walked and Brett Gardner hit an RBI double, with Beltran scoring on an errant relay throw by second baseman Steve Tolleson.

“The first six innings is the most I’ve been locked in and, location-wise, hitting my spots for a lot of the season,” Buehrle said. “I started missing some pitches there in the seventh and didn’t get away with them.”

Aaron Loup came on after Ichiro Suzuki’s infield single, and Gardner made it 3-1 when he scored on a wild pickoff throw by catcher Navarro. Two pitches later, Ellsbury lined a two-run homer to right. It was the first homer by a left-handed batter in Loup’s career, snapping a streak of 233 at-bats.

Capuano (2-3) pitched 6 1-3 innings in his first win in seven starts since joining the Yankees.

“I couldn’t be prouder to get a win as a Yankee,” Capuano said.

David Robertson got the final four outs for his 35th save in 38 chances.

Kevin Pillar chased Capuano with an RBI double in the seventh, and Melky Cabrera’s sacrifice fly made it 5-3, but Adam Warren got Edwin Encarnacion to fly out with runners at first and second.

Headley made it 6-3 with a first-pitch homer off Dustin McGowan in the ninth. Ellsbury followed with a triple but was out at the plate trying to score on Jeter’s grounder to third, injuring his left ankle as he slid into Navarro.

Ellsbury stayed in the game and X-rays were negative, but manager Joe Girardi said his status for Saturday was in doubt.

“It’s frustrating because he’s playing so well,” Girardi said.

PAINFUL PAST

Jeter got a standing ovation from the crowd of 43,318 before the first at bat of his final scheduled series in Toronto. He’ll be honored with a gift and ceremony before Sunday’s finale. Asked before the game for a defining memory of his career in Canada, Jeter referenced opening day in 2003 when he injured his shoulder in a collision with Blue Jays C Ken Huckaby. “The first thing I think about is dislocating my shoulder,” Jeter said. “I don’t know if that’s a good thing.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Yankees: Injured Yankees ace Masahiro Tanaka is being sent back to New York because of general soreness in his right arm. Tanaka will play light catch and work out every day at Yankee Stadium over the weekend, but Girardi said it would be “maybe a week” before Tanaka throws another bullpen.

Blue Jays: OF Colby Rasmus returned to the lineup at DH after missing the previous two games with an illness. … RHP Brandon Morrow (right index finger) will make his second rehab appearance on Saturday, this time with Triple-A Buffalo. Morrow threw one scoreless inning for Class-A Dunedin on Wednesday.

UP NEXT

Yankees RHP Michael Pineda (3-2) faces Blue Jays RHP Drew Hutchison (8-11) on Saturday. Pineda is 1-0 with a 2.08 ERA in three starts since returning from the disabled list after missing 87 games with a sore shoulder.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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