DUNEDIN, Fla. — J.D. Martinez hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in a three-run ninth inning, and the Boston Red Sox rallied to beat the Toronto Blue Jays 8-7 on Thursday night.
Alex Verdugo had an RBI grounder before Martinez connected on his 250th homer. The two-out drive came off Rafael Dolis (1-1), making his second appearance since returning from a right calf injury.
Martinez shouted and repeatedly pumped his fists while rounding the bases. He stopped a 12-game homerless drought Wednesday.
Phillips Valdez (2-1) went 1 1/3 scoreless innings and Matt Barnes worked the ninth to get his 10th save in 11 chances. After walking Rowdy Tellez with two out, Barnes struck out Danny Jansen with a 98 mph full-count fastball.
Boston (27-18) held onto the AL East lead. Toronto dropped to 10-7 at TD Ballpark, where the Blue Jays have four more home games before shifting next month to their Triple-A affiliate’s ballpark in Buffalo, New York.
Jonathan Davis and Randal Grichuk had RBI singles off Hirokazu Sawamura in the sixth as the Blue Jays went up 7-5. Grichuk’s hit came after shortstop Xander Bogaerts made a diving grab on Teoscar Hernández’s two-out grounder, but second baseman Michael Chavis was charged with an error for dropping a flip toss.
A match up of five-game winners turned into offensive fireworks early.
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Grichuk had RBI doubles off Nick Pivetta in the first inning, and the Red Sox had seven straight batters reach with two outs during a five-run second against Steven Matz.
Bobby Dalbec hit an opposite-field three-run homer that struck the right-field pole, and Kiké Hernández and Martinez contributed run-scoring singles.
After Bo Bichette hit an RBI double in the bottom of the second, Cavan Biggio had an RBI single in a two-run fifth that tied it at 5.
Pivetta allowed five runs, seven hits, two walks and struck out eight in five innings.
Matz, who gave up five runs and 10 hits over six innings, was in line for the win until Dolis blew the save.
BREAKING THROUGH?
There was some lighthearted ribbing regarding Boston left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez’s lack of hitting prowess (0 for 20, 10 strikeouts) heading into his start Sunday at Philadelphia.
“I would be really happy if he gets one but I will also be really surprised,” said Bogaerts, who put the chance of Rodríguez getting a hit at one percent.
Red Sox Manager Alex Cora said he was not confident.
Cora has a rule that players can’t wear earrings but will let Rodriguez do it when he bats to see if it helps.
REUNION
Cora is looking forward to seeing former Boston president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski, who currently holds the same position with the Phillies. The pair were together during the Red Sox’s 2018 World Series championship season.
As for Dombrowski’s legacy, Cora said “he won” and “he did it his way, too.”
TRAINER’S ROOM
Red Sox: Utilityman Danny Santana (foot infection) could be called up from Triple-A Worcester shortly.
Blue Jays: Manager Charlie Montoyo said center fielder George Springer (quadriceps) continues his running progression but needs to be built up more and will require a rehab assignment.
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