Blue Jays ride Springer’s power surge to win over Reds

George Springer belted his franchise-best 23rd leadoff homer in the first inning and added a two-run shot in the fourth, lifting the visiting Toronto Blue Jays to a 12-9 victory over the Cincinnati Re

Blue Jays ride Springer’s power surge to win over Reds

George Springer belted his franchise-best 23rd leadoff homer in the first inning and added a two-run shot in the fourth, lifting the visiting Toronto Blue Jays to a 12-9 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday.

Toronto’s Bo Bichette launched a three-run shot, Daulton Varsho also went deep and Alejandro Kirk ripped a bases-clearing double. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had an RBI single among his three hits and scored on a passed ball for the Blue Jays (80-59).

Louis Varland (4-3) allowed one hit in 1 2/3 scoreless innings in relief. Seranthony Dominguez bridged the gap to Jeff Hoffman, who retired the side in the ninth to secure his 30th save of the season.

Cincinnati’s Austin Hays belted a three-run homer into the second deck in left field in the second inning and added an RBI double in the fourth.

TJ Friedl launched a solo homer, Matt McLean had an RBI double and scored on an error and Elly De La Cruz and Gavin Lux each had an RBI single.

That wasn’t enough for the Reds (70-69), however, who have lost nine of their last 12 games.

Scott Barlow (6-3) was greeted rudely in his first career start after Cincinnati scratched Nick Lodolo hours before the game due to illness. Barlow, who was making his 433rd major league appearance, allowed four runs on two hits with three walks in one inning.

Springer set the tone early by depositing a 1-1 sweeper from Barlow over the wall in left-center field.

Toronto quickly loaded the bases before Kirk’s double off the wall in center field gave his team a 4-0 advantage.

De La Cruz put Cincinnati on the scoreboard before Guerrero countered with an RBI single to right field and Bichette sent a first-pitch changeup over the wall in center field. The homer was his 18th of the season and second in as many games.

The Reds responded with five runs in the second inning against Jose Berrios, highlighted by Hays’ mammoth homer.

Springer’s fourth-inning homer gave Toronto a 10-6 lead and boosted his team-leading homer total to 26 on the season.

Hays and Lux each drove in a run in the fourth inning to halve the deficit, and Varsho and Friedl each went deep before Guerrero scored on a passed ball in the ninth to cap the scoring.