Blue Jays fly over White Sox, 1-0

When you have a game featuring one pitcher who was once a superstar but has been awful all year facing another who was a big star earlier in the season but hadn’t been for weeks, it could go either way — slugfest or pitchers’ duel.
Duel it was, and a good one. Fast one, too — the game started 40 minutes late due to a statue-unveiling ceremony by the Blue Jays but ended right when expected, because it only took two hours and seven minutes.
Turns out, extra rest over the All-Star break can pay off. At least for pitchers.
Davis Martin was terrific for the Sox, only needing 35 pitches to cruise through the first three innings, allowing just a broken-bat single to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. The fourth wasn’t as smooth. With one out, Guerrero hit the ball as far as you can at Rogers Centre without getting to trot around the bases, to the joy of Joe Carter, the subject of the statue:
George Springer then snuck a grounder under Colson Montgomery’s glove:
Guerrero came in, and that was it for the scoring in the game. Martin went 5 2/3 inning and Sean Newcomb and Jordan Hicks were solid in relief, despite Newcomb giving up a double to the first batter he faced and putting men on second and third.
Good as Martin was, Shane Bieber was better, looking like his old self despite a horrendous start to the season. He went six innings on 80 pitches, giving up just three hits and two walks while striking out six. All three hits were doubles, two of them the opposite way by Munetaka Murakami and Braden Montgomery leading off innings. But the Sox went 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position, all through the first five innings.
Once the Blue Jays went to the pen, there was no problem about runners in scoring position, because there weren’t any. Andrew Benintendi drew a leadoff walk in the seventh, but that was followed by two Ks and a ground out. Chase Meidroth laid down a nifty leadoff bunt single in the eighth, but pinch-runner Luisangel Acuña was caught stealing.
Not only was the pitching really good on both sides, it was really efficient. The Sox only threw 108 pitches in eight innings, the Blue Jays 114 in nine.
The loss dropped the White Sox to 51-46 but left them still in first in the AL Central (at least for the moment) because the Guardians also lost the first game of a doubleheader to the Pirates. The series in Toronto ends tomorrow afternoon, with Sean Burke and Trey Yesavage doing the honors.



