Jays in flight in AL East despite injuries, home field changes and tough schedule
About one quarter of the Toronto Blue Jays’ season is complete and Canada’s only big-league team finds itself right in the mix in the American League East.
Considering the team’s injury woes, an unexpected variety of starting pitchers and ever-shifting home field plans, the Blue Jays’ contender status is quite an accomplishment.
“With everything that we’ve gone through, all the injuries, playing on the road it seems like every day, these guys have done a great job picking up each other,” manager Charlie Montoyo said Tuesday on a pre-game call with media. “Every time we lose somebody, somebody else picks (them) up.”
Toronto (22-17) entered Tuesday’s game against the visiting Red Sox just 1 1/2 games behind first-place Boston in the East division standings. With victories in 15 of their last 22 games, the Blue Jays opened the three-game series five games over the .500 mark for the first time this season.