Yankees Blue Jays Baseball

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hits a two-run home run in the first inning of the Blue Jays’ 9-3 win over the Yankees on Saturday in New York. Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press via AP

TORONTO — Vladimir Guerrero Jr. homered for the sixth time in eight games and finished with six RBI, Alejandro Kirk had two hits and two RBI, and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the New York Yankees 9-3 on Saturday.

The Yankees, who won Friday to snap a season-worst four-game losing streak, lost for the 10th time in their last 13.

Isiah Kiner-Falefa had four hits and George Springer reached base three times as the Blue Jays won for the third time in four games since snapping a season-long seven-game losing streak.

Toronto’s Chris Bassitt (7-6) allowed one run and six hits in six innings to win for the first time since June 2 against Pittsburgh. The right-hander was struck on the forearm by a 102 mph line drive from Yankees slugger Aaron Judge in the first inning, but remained in the game despite a noticeable welt on his pitching arm.

Yankees outfielder Juan Soto was scratched from the lineup because of a bruised right hand about 20 minutes before first pitch. Soto was injured sliding into home plate in the fourth inning of Friday’s 16-5 win.

GUARDIANS 7, ROYALS 2: Jose Ramirez homered, Josh Naylor had a pair of RBI, and Cleveland won in Kansas City, Missouri.

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DIAMONDBACKS 3, A’S 0: Zac Gallen returned from a hamstring injury that sidelined him a month, pitching one-hit ball over six innings in Arizona’s victory over Oakland in Phoenix.C

CUBS 5, BREWERS 3: Ian Happ hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Chicago won in Milwaukee, ending the Brewers’ winning streak at five games.

MARLINS 3, PHILLIES 2: Nick Gordon homered, Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit a go-ahead RBI single in the seventh inning, and Miami won in Philadelphia.

BRAVES 2, PIRATES 1: Adam Duvall’s single in the 10th inning drove in Luke Williams from second base, and Atlanta overcame a strong start by Pittsburgh rookie Paul Skenes to beat the visiting Pirates.

Skenes allowed one run on six hits in six innings and was typically dominant after giving up Jarred Kelenic’s homer to open the game. Skenes struck out the side in the sixth, giving him nine for the game.

NOTES

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BLUE JAYS: Closer Jordan Romano has been shut down because of continued pain in his injured right elbow, Manager John Schneider said.

The two-time All-Star will visit Dr. Keith Meister in Texas on Tuesday, Schneider said.

Romano missed part of spring training and the first 17 games of the regular season because of elbow soreness. He went on the injured list for a second time June 1.

Romano is 1-2 with a 6.59 ERA and eight saves in nine chances this season, his sixth. He matched his career high with 36 saves last year.

OBIT: Orlando Cepeda, the slugging first baseman nicknamed “Baby Bull” who became a Hall of Famer among the early Puerto Ricans to star in the major leagues, has died. He was 86.

The San Francisco Giants and his family announced the death Friday night, and a moment of silence was held as his photo showed on the scoreboard at Oracle Park midway through a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

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“Our beloved Orlando passed away peacefully at home this evening, listening to his favorite music and surrounded by his loved ones,” his wife, Nydia, said in a statement released through the team. “We take comfort that he is at peace.”

It’s been a heartbreaking month for the Giants given Cepeda’s death followed that of Hall of Famer Willie Mays, who died 10 days earlier on June 18 at age 93.

It looked like Cepeda’s career might be over after he played just 31 games for the Braves and A’s in 1972. But then the American League voted to add a designated hitter starting with the 1973 season, and the Red Sox called Cepeda to inquire whether he’d like to be their first designated hitter.

“Boston called and asked me if I was interested in being the DH, and I said yes,” Cepeda recalled in a 2013 interview with The Associated Press in the 40th year of the DH. “The DH got me to the Hall of Fame. The rule got me to the Hall of Fame.”

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