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Blue Jays beat Yankees 3-0 in New York home opener behind Clement’s tiebreaking pinch homer

Juan Soto went 0 for 4 with a pair of strikeouts in his pinstripes debut, slamming his bat and helmet after making the final out of the eighth.

Associated Press

Apr 5, 2024, 9:33 PM

Updated 259 days ago

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Blue Jays beat Yankees 3-0 in New York home opener behind Clement’s tiebreaking pinch homer
Pinch-hitter Ernie Clement had a tiebreaking solo home run off Caleb Ferguson leading off the seventh inning, and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Yankees 3-0 Friday in New York’s home opener.
Juan Soto went 0 for 4 with a pair of strikeouts in his pinstripes debut, slamming his bat and helmet after making the final out of the eighth.
He bowed to fans in right field in the top of the first and was greeted with a standing ovation when he came to the plate in the bottom half. Soto is in a 1-for-16 slide after a 9-for-17 start.
Marcus Stroman matched Yusei Kikuchi with shutout ball before the bullpens took over.
Clement, a 28-year-old who appeared in just 35 major league games over the previous two seasons, drove the second pitch from Ferguson (0-1) into the left-field seats for his first career pinch homer.
Nick Burdi threw a pair of run-scoring wild pitches in the ninth, prompting boos from the sellout crowd of 47,812.
Yimi García (1-0) got the final two outs of the sixth and Génesis Cabrera retired two batters in his first appearance since a three-game suspension for causing a benches-clearing incident at Tampa Bay last weekend.
Chad Green got his first save since 2022 with the Yankees as Toronto pitched a six-hitter to start the last leg of an opening 10-game trip.
After beginning 6-1 on the road, New York dropped to 81-40-1 in home openers. The Yankees were shut out in a home opener for the first time since 1967.
Giancarlo Stanton was 0 for 4 and is hitting .120 (3 for 25) with 13 strikeouts.
An earthquake about three hours before game time wasn’t felt by most of the Yankees on the field for batting practice.
Stroman allowed three hits in six innings. He has not allowed an earned run in 12 innings this season.
A day after playing catch in Central Park, Kikuchi gave up four hits in 5 1/3 innings.
Cheered when he was introduced, Paul O’Neill drew boos when he bounced the ceremonial first pitch to Don Mattingly, now Toronto’s bench coach, in pairing of former Yankees stars.
Toronto selected the contract of right-hander Paolo Espino from Triple-A Buffalo and designated right-hander Wes Parsons for assignment.