Game Summary
After a long and successful road trip, the Diamondbacks kicked off this six game homestand with a nearly drama-free victory over the defending AL Champs. It felt like a downright walk in the park to have a 3-run lead going into the 9th inning. What sorcery is this?! The Snakes didn’t play mistake-free ball, but they didn’t allow the Jays to capitalize on the mistakes they did make and they fully exploited the mistakes made by the opposition. We used to find ourselves on the other side of these; nice to be on the good side for a change!
Michael Soroka made his first start as an official member of the D-backs top-5 rotation after he beat out Brandon Pfaadt for the final slot once Merrill returned and it was good to see the good results didn’t disappear into thin air. Soroka cruised through his 7 innings of work, only allowing multiple baserunners in 1 of those innings. His strikeout numbers weren’t where he had been over the first few starts, but he was dialing up groundballs early in the count which allowed him to complete the 6th inning for the first time this year and then complete the 7th for good measure.
The defense was mostly wonderful, with the highlight being Geraldo Perdomo’s fantastic ‘tip drill’ double play to pour some water on a late Jays’ rally, but there were a couple miscues. Tim Tawa lost a routine fly ball in the open roof sky resulting in a 1-out double (stranded by Soroka), but the most egregious error of the night came by someone not even wearing an MLB jersey. One of the Golden Glovers down the right field line tried to glove a line drive that had just stayed fair, he knocked it down, which may or may not have helped him out as it rolled slowly to the fence. When Corbin made it to the ball, he grabbed and threw directly to the cutoff man Ildemaro who was playing second base on the night and then Vargas turned and threw a perfect strike from short right field to third base to nab Gimenez at third. Alas, it didn’t count due to the interference from the Golden Glover, but it was a great play to know that we’re capable of and it deserves a second look. Soroka once again was able to strand this double, picking up his defense just like his defense has mostly picked him up throughout the year.
The bullpen did it’s part, taking over a 5-2 advantage and only allowing 1-run. Jonny Lasagna wasn’t quite fully baked, allowing the lone run, but Paul Sewald continues to stack outs, getting a 1-2-3 9th with a strikeout. I’m still fully convinced the wheels will fall of Sewald at some point this year, but I’m really enjoying the display of competence he’s been having currently.
The offense was the final piece of this puzzle tonight and they did a good job capitalizing on opportunities and regularly keeping the pressure on the Jays’ pitchers. The biggest blow came in the 7th when young Jose Fernandez came up with runners at 2nd and 3rd and 2 outs. Fernandez hit a squibber up the first base line and hustled his way to the bag. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. fielded the ball cleanly, but either lost concentration or rushed his toss with Fernandez busting it down the line and lost control of the ball in the transfer. The Jays’ pitcher was hustling over himself and found himself in nearly perfect position to pick up the ball and step directly onto the first base bag, but he, too, rushed the whole thing and swatted the ball with his glove instead of picking it up. Fernandez ended up safe at first and 1 run scored on the play. Then Arenado got another big base hit, on top of the homer he hit earlier in the game, by lining a ball to center to score the runner from third and give the bullpen a 3-run lead to play with, a luxury they aren’t accustomed to.
The Blue Jays are hurting right now with many key players on the injured list (which is the only possible reason Joe Mantiply could be on the Jays’ active roster and multiplying runs for us instead of against us now) and possibly another joining that unit is old friend Daulton Varsho who left the game in the second inning with “knee discomfort”. I hope Varsho gets well soon, but the Diamondbacks capitalized on a team that’s not playing good baseball right now and they need to keep that up the rest of the weekend.
Win Probability and Box Score
Comment of the Game
The GameDay Thread was a little slow to get going, and finished with a total of 143 comments at time of publishing. Tonight’s COTG goes to Snake_Bitten concerning longtime dreams coming true:
Coming Up
The Diamondbacks face the defending AL champions for the second game of this 3-game set tomorrow afternoon with a 5:10pm first pitch. Max Scherzer (1-2, 9.58 ERA) will take the mound for Toronto and Zac Gallen (1-1, 3.60 ERA) takes the ball for the good guys.