ST. LOUIS — Somehow, the Blue Jays are the hottest team in baseball.
Despite injuries to two of their most important position players and question marks in two of their five rotation spots, they’ve won 12 of their last 14 games, including three in a row on the way to a sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals.
After their latest win, a 5-2 victory on a hot afternoon at Busch Stadium, the Blue Jays are a season-best eight games above .500 with a 38-30 record. This team is playing as well as it has in at least two years, finally putting together talent and fundamentals for extended stretches while building confidence with each passing win.
In the series finale against the Cardinals, the Blue Jays chipped away offensively, using a sacrifice bunt and two sacrifice flies to even the score after St. Louis jumped out to an early lead. In the fifth inning, Ernie Clement added a solo home run on the way to the Blue Jays’ American League-leading 21st comeback win of the season.
But the pitching staff was even more impressive in this one, as Eric Lauer, Braydon Fisher and Spencer Turnbull combined to limit the Cardinals to just two runs over seven innings. That set up a scoreless eighth from Brendon Little and the first save of Yariel Rodriguez’s career on a day closer Jeff Hoffman was unavailable due to his recent workload.
Lauer found a rhythm after the Cardinals scored early and ended up allowing two runs on four hits over 4.1 innings. The way he’s pitching, the Blue Jays can confidently turn to him for upcoming starts against the Diamondbacks and Guardians, if needed.
Fisher came in to help Lauer complete the fifth, which set up Turnbull’s Blue Jays debut. Pitching in a big-league game for the first time since last June 26, the right-hander pitched well, allowing just two singles over the course of two scoreless innings while striking out two on his way to the win.
Turnbull’s fastball averaged 90.8 m.p.h., a little higher than his recent triple-A results but a little lower than the 92 m.p.h. he averaged with the Phillies before a lat injury sidelined him last summer. All things considered, it was a step forward for Turnbull, who could be used as a reliever or a starter moving forward, according to manager John Schneider.
While winning bullpen games is no one’s idea of a sustainable long-term plan, there’s no taking away the 38 wins the Blue Jays have now banked. Entering play Wednesday, their playoff odds had climbed to 60 per cent, according to FanGraphs — and another win will only boost those further.
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In the eighth inning, Schneider and team trainer Jose Ministral visited Clement at third base after a diving attempt on a Nolan Arenado single, but Clement stayed in the game to complete the inning before Addison Barger replaced him in the ninth.
Earlier in the day, the Blue Jays lost Nathan Lukes to the seven-day concussion injured list while selecting the contract of 27-year-old outfielder Will Robertson from triple-A, where he had hit 12 home runs with a .991 OPS. While the Loose Creek, Mo. native had plenty of friends and family in the stands Wednesday, his MLB debut will have to wait a little longer.
From here, the Blue Jays head to Philadelphia, where they’ll wrap up their three-city road trip with three against the Phillies starting Friday. That’s a real test for the Blue Jays, but lately they’ve had a lot of those, and they’ve been responding as well as any team in the sport.
More from Sportsnet Blue Jays select Robertson to roster, place Lukes on injured listBlue Jays’ Max Scherzer to start for triple-A Bisons on Friday
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