Donaldson leads Toronto to win

The Associated Press

HOUSTON—The Toronto Blue Jays haven’t scored many runs in the first three games of their four-game series against Houston. So far, strong pitching and timely home runs have been enough.
Josh Donaldson hit two home runs, Marco Estrada threw seven solid innings and Toronto beat the Houston Astros 3-1 last night.
The Blue Jays have scored six runs in the three games—all on solo homers.
“We’re not scoring a lot of runs,” Toronto manager John Gibbons said.
“It’s been pretty impressive pitching on both sides these three games. But our pitching has been so good too when we do get a couple runs we’ve been able to put it away because we’ve had a tough, tough time down here.”
Jose Bautista hit his second home run in two nights in the sixth as he and Donaldson went back-to-back.
“Any home run from anyone is huge,” Estrada said.
“It was a pitcher’s duel, and luckily, we pulled off a couple homers to give me a cushion there. Any home run that’s hit is always huge.”
Donaldson led off the fourth with a home run to right field before hitting his 27th home run of the season in the sixth. It was Donaldson’s third multi-homer game this season.
“I was able to barrel out a couple balls that I felt were mistakes,” Donaldson said.
Estrada (7-4) won his second straight start, allowing one run and four hits with seven strikeouts.
“I just want to follow (Russell Martin) as much as possible,” Estrada said. “They have a really good lineup over there, bunch of young stars over there. They put together some good at bats. I’m glad my changeup was working pretty well and even some decent cutters.”
Estrada has allowed four runs or fewer in each of his past 12 starts.
“I can’t say I haven’t seen it before,” Gibbons said about Estrada. “That’s what he does. That’s the way he’s been since he came over here. That’s a typical outing if you want to know the truth. He’s really, really good.
Joe Biagini escaped a one-out jam in the eighth, inducing a flyout from Jose Altuve and striking out Carlos Correa to strand runners on second and third. Roberto Osuna pitched the ninth for his 23rd save.
“Altuve was aggressive knowing he was going to get a strike,” Houston manager A.J. Hinch said. “You know Correa’s at-bat, their guy did a pretty good job of getting ahead of him and it was a bad time for a miss.
“Human element of the game sometimes you know hurts you and in that regard it was a borderline pitch that didn’t go our way.”
Marwin Gonzalez, who had missed the past four games with a right hand injury, had a double in the sixth. Altuve followed with an RBI double to cut the lead to 3-1.
Houston has lost five of its past six games.
Collin McHugh (7-8) allowed three runs and six hits with 10 strikeouts in six innings. The right-hander, who allowed a season-high three home runs, was coming off his worst outing of the season Friday when he allowed eight runs in 1 2/3 innings of a 14-6 loss to Detroit.
“Home runs are kind of accidents,” McHugh said. “They could have easily been doubles or singles if it’s an inch higher or an inch lower. They found barrel on fastballs and it got out of the park.”
Elsewhere in the American League, the Tigers tore up the White Sox 2-1; the Rays stung the Royals 12-0; the Orioles beat the Rangers 3-2; the Twins defeated the Indians 13-5; the Rockies towered over the Dodgers 12-2; the Angels beat the Athletics 8-6; and the Mariners unravelled the Red Sox 3-1.
In National League action, the Cubs edged the Marlins 2-1; the Nationals defanged the Diamondbacks 8-3; the Padres sobered up the Brewers 12-2; the Phillies mugged the Giants 5-4; and the Braves walloped the Pirates 8-4.