Stanton homers, Paxton wins 10th straight as Yanks top Jays

Giancarlo Stanton launched his first homer since missing nearly three months to injury, James Paxton won his 10th straight start and the New York Yankees beat the Toronto Blue Jays 7-2 Saturday.

New York manager Aaron Boone was ejected after another tangle with a rookie umpire, and the 101-win Yankees got promising news shortly before first pitch when an MRI of Gleyber Torres’ achy right hamstring came back negative.

Two years after leading the majors with 59 homers for Miami, Stanton hit just his second of the season leading off the sixth against reliever Brock Stewart. He also had an RBI double in the fourth. Stanton has only played 12 games this year due to biceps, shoulder, calf and knee injuries. He was replaced defensively in the seventh inning to manage his workload.

The AL East champions entered with a major league-leading 294 homers.

Paxton (15-6) allowed an unearned run while pitching three-hit ball over six innings. The left-hander threw just 87 pitches and has a 2.25 ERA during his winning streak, the longest for a Yankees pitcher since Ron Guidry’s 11 in 1979.

Toronto batters struck out 15 times, including on their last five outs and 10 of their final 11 as shadows extended between the plate and the mound.

Boone watched nearly all of it from the clubhouse. The second-year manager shouted profanities from the dugout at plate umpire Jeremie Rehak — a call-up from Triple-A — after Stanton struck out looking against T.J. Zeuch to end the first inning. Crew chief Joe West quickly booted Boone from third base, and Rehak also tossed Yankees hitting coach Marcus Thames.

It was the fifth ejection this year for Boone, including his memorable “savages” tirade at rookie umpire Brennan Miller in July — Yankees players routinely wear T-shirts commemorating the rant. New York was already peeved with West over his strike zone Friday night, when Brett Gardner argued animatedly after a called strike in the ninth.

Toronto ended a five-game winning streak, which matched its best of the season.

Brandon Drury reached in the third when shortstop Didi Gregorius booted a grounder for an error, and Jonathan Davis followed with an RBI single.

New York slugger Aaron Judge doubled leading off the fourth and scored on Stanton’s two-base hit. Mike Ford drove in Stanton with a single two batters later for a 2-1 lead. Ford had three hits and two RBIs.

Stanton’s homer sparked a four-run inning that included RBI hits by Clint Frazier and Kyle Higashioka.

Zeuch (1-1), a 6-foot-7 sinkerballer making his fourth big league start, took advantage of Rehak’s low strike zone to rack up six strikeouts in four innings. He allowed two runs and four hits.

PROCEED WITH CAUTION

The Yankees will still be careful with Torres despite the encouraging diagnosis. The star second baseman slipped and fell awkwardly fielding a ground ball Friday night. Torres was not in the lineup Saturday, although Boone said Torres he feeling good.

The 22-year-old leads the team with 38 homers and is hitting .284 with 90 RBIs and an .889 OPS. The Yankees have six games remaining before their postseason opener Oct. 4.

SECOND CAREER

The Yankees will honor retiring left-hander CC Sabathia with a ceremony prior to Sunday’s game. New York plans to put Sabathia in the bullpen for the postseason, and the 39-year-old is expected get a practice run with his second career relief appearance on Tuesday at Tampa Bay.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Blue Jays: SS Bo Bichette remained in concussion protocol after being hit by a fastball on the bill of his helmet Thursday and also won’t play Sunday. Toronto is optimistic he’ll return this season.

Yankees: DH Edwin Encarnación (oblique) could return to the lineup during the upcoming midweek series against Tampa Bay. He’s a bit ahead of C Gary Sánchez (groin tightness), but Boone said Sánchez could be back for the final regular season series at Texas.

UP NEXT

Yankees RHP Luis Severino (0-0, 0.00) makes his second appearance after missing most of the season with a lat injury. He pitched four scoreless innings against the Angels on Tuesday in his season debut. Toronto will pitch rookie RHP Trent Thornton (5-9, 4.93), likely after an opener.

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