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Boston Lose 5-2 To Blue Jays

TORONTO — Junichi Tazawa thought he'd solved his struggles against the Toronto Blue Jays.

Turns out he was wrong.

Danny Valencia had a pinch-hit, three-run homer off Tazawa that put Toronto ahead in the seventh inning, and the Blue Jays beat the Boston Red Sox 5-2 Wednesday night.

Eight of 20 home runs off Tazawa in his big league career have been hit by Blue Jays batters.

"I looked at the video, and the pitch to Valencia leaked back quite a bit and went inside," Tazawa said through a translator. "I missed my location."

Tazawa said his coaches suspected he'd been tipping pitches against Toronto, so they made some changes.

"I'm using my breaking balls a little bit more, slide stepping," he said. "I think I've been doing a better job. Today, obviously, I didn't pitch as well, but I think I'm making some improvements."

Catcher David Ross said he doesn't understand why Tazawa, who came in with a career 6.52 ERA against Toronto, has fared so poorly against the Blue Jays.

"If I had an explanation, we'd find an answer," Ross said.

Jose Bautista homered for the second straight night, a two-run drive in the first that helped the Blue Jays improve to 7-16 in August.

With Boston leading 2-1, Edwin Encarnacion doubled off Joe Kelly starting the seventh, and left-hander Tommy Layne (0-1) relieved.

Dioner Navarro's at-bat was prolonged when Ross dropped his foul popup for an error.

"With the wind swirling, it pushed back on him," Red Sox manager John Farrell said.

After Navarro singled, Tazawa came in, and Valencia turned on a 2-0 pitch for his first home run since Toronto acquired him from Kansas City on July 28.

"Obviously we've been struggling, every win is important," Valencia said.

Kevin Pillar followed with a double, was sacrificed to third and made it 5-1 when he scored ahead of shortstop Brock Holt's throw on Jose Reyes' fielder's-choice grounder.

Marcus Stroman (8-5) allowed two runs - one earned - and five hits in 7 2-3 innings. He had been 0-3 in four starts since winning at Boston on July 29.

"He was terrific today," manager John Gibbons said. "That's what the kid is capable of."

Brett Cecil relieved after Dustin Pedroia's two-out single in the eighth and retired David Ortiz on a groundout, then finished for his fifth save in seven chances.

Ortiz, who returned to the lineup after sitting out the previous two games with a sore right foot, gave the Red Sox their first hit with a one-out single in the fourth.

Ross reached on a fielding error by third baseman Juan Francisco in the sixth, and back-to-back singles by Holt and Pedroia loaded the bases for Ortiz, who lined an RBI single to right. One pitch later, Holt scored on a wild pitch, but Stroman retired Mike Napoli on a groundout and struck out Daniel Nava.

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