Yankees’ Jameson Taillon stifles Blue Jays for fourth time this season

TORONTO — Jameson Taillon has made almost a third of his starts this season against the Blue Jays, who got their fourth crack at him on Saturday. 

But they have still yet to put much of a dent in his 2.70 ERA. 

Taillon (8-1) turned in his latest strong start against the Yankees’ AL East foe, tossing 5 ²/₃ scoreless innings and striking out a season-high eight in a 4-0 win over the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre. 

The right-hander scattered just four hits and two walks over his outing, leading the way to the Yankees’ ninth straight win and extending their division cushion over the Blue Jays to 12 games. Taillon, who has had a big hand in the Yankees handling the Blue Jays this season, improved to 3-1 against them with a 2.05 ERA across 22 innings. 

Jameson Taillon pitches Saturday during the Yankees' win over the Blue Jays.
Jameson Taillon pitches Saturday during the Yankees’ win over the Blue Jays.
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Jameson Taillon salutes the fans after exiting in the sixth inning.
Jameson Taillon salutes the fans after exiting in the sixth inning.
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Entering Saturday, the Blue Jays had the majors’ fourth-best batting average (.257), third-best OPS (.752) and were scoring the 11th-most runs (4.55 per game), no thanks to Taillon. 

Against Toronto’s righty-heavy lineup, Taillon leaned on his slider to keep hitters off balance. He also had solid command of his fastball and sinker, getting three of his eight strikeouts looking. 

The Blue Jays threatened to break through in the second and fifth innings, to no avail. In the second, back-to-back one-out singles put runners on the corners, but Taillon got Matt Chapman to pop out and then struck out Santiago Espinal looking at a slider. 

In the fifth, Raimel Tapia hit a leadoff double, but Taillon responded by striking out the next three batters to strand him at second. 

Taillon then got some help to escape the sixth inning with his ledger still clean. He issued another leadoff walk to George Springer — his second of the day, the first game this season in which he has walked more than one — before Bo Bichette singled. Taillon then got Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to pop up to shallow left field and Alejandro Kirk to fly out deep to center. 

Aaron Boone pulled Taillon after 88 pitches, calling to the bullpen for Michael King, who struck out Teoscar Hernandez with runners on the corners to end the jam.

source: nypost.com