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Bullpen blowup extends Detroit Tigers' skid to 6 games with 4-3 loss to Jays in 10 innings

TORONTO — Detroit Tigers third baseman Ryan Kreidler and catcher Eric Haase threw their hands in the air simultaneously while Toronto Blue Jays slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. jogged to home plate.

Manager A.J. Hinch bounced out of the dugout for a conversation with third base umpire Erich Bacchus. The Tigers were charged with obstruction, as determined by the umpire, which allowed the Blue Jays to even the score in the fourth inning of Wednesday's game at the Rogers Centre.

The obstruction call changed the scoreboard but didn't deter the Tigers. What hurt the Tigers was right-handed reliever Trey Wingenter's inability to dominate the strike zone in the ninth inning. The Blue Jays took advantage and forced extra innings, and the Tigers lost, 4-3, in the 10th inning on a walk-off single from George Springer.

The Tigers (2-9) have lost six games in a row.

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) is ruled safe because of nterference and allowed to score after initially being tagged out by Detroit Tigers catcher Eric Haase (13) in the fourth inning at Rogers Centre in Toronto on Wednesday, April 12, 2023.
Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) is ruled safe because of nterference and allowed to score after initially being tagged out by Detroit Tigers catcher Eric Haase (13) in the fourth inning at Rogers Centre in Toronto on Wednesday, April 12, 2023.

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Before the obstruction play, the Blue Jays had runners on first and second base with two outs in the fourth inning. Shortstop Javier Báez backhanded a grounder beyond the infield dirt in the shallowest part of left field. Since Báez went for the ball, Kreidler positioned himself to cover third base, but at the same time, Guerrero turned the corner and chugged for home plate.

Kreidler was in the baseline when Guerrero rounded third base.

The Tigers tagged Guerrero out on the basepath, thanks to a dart from Báez, but their efforts didn't matter because of the obstruction call. Guerrero, looking surprised, simply trotted home to tie the game, 1-1, with two outs in the fourth.

Kerry Carpenter, who crushed 36 home runs in the minors and majors last season, put the Tigers ahead, 3-1, with a two-run blast off right-hander Kevin Gausman's fastball. His first homer this season came at the perfect time, with two outs in the seventh inning.

After taking a 3-1 lead, the Tigers trusted the bullpen to hold the two-run advantage. A pair of right-handed relievers — Jason Foley and Alex Lange — slammed the door in the seventh and eighth innings.

But right-hander Trey Wingenter failed to dominate the strike zone in the ninth inning.

Wingenter took over in search of his first save since the 2019 season. Guerrero singled to open the bottom of the ninth, Matt Chapman walked on four pitches and Daulton Varsho was hit by a pitch to load the bases.

Left-hander Chasen Shreve replaced Wingenter with the bases loaded and no outs. Whit Merrifield cut the Tigers' lead to 3-2 with a sacrifice fly, and pinch-hitter Alejandro Kirk knotted the score, 3-3, with another sacrifice fly.

The Blue Jays ended the game in the 10th inning against righty José Cisnero, who replaced Shreve to face Springer with one out and a runner on third base. Before that, Báez — the free runner in extra innings —  advanced to third base with one out but was stranded by Spencer Torkelson's flyout and Haase's groundout.

Wolfie bites again

The Tigers scored first in the top of the fourth inning.

Nick Maton drilled a home run against the Blue Jays for the second straight night at the Rogers Centre. This time, he tagged a high-and-outside fastball from Gausman for a 408-foot solo shot to straightaway center field.

It was the Tigers' first hit off Gausman.

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Gausman allowed three runs on four hits with zero walks and nine strikeouts across eight innings, throwing 77 of 103 pitches for strikes. He generated 20 whiffs with four fastballs, 14 splitters and two sliders, and his velocity — across the board — was significantly higher than his typical pitch speeds.

Maton has nine homers in his MLB career.

Four of them are against the Blue Jays.

E-Rod navigates Blue Jays

While Gausman pitched deep into the game, Rodriguez turned in a quality start for the Tigers. He allowed one run on seven hits and one walk with three strikeouts, throwing 64 of 96 pitches for strikes.

If it weren't for the obstruction, the Blue Jays would not have scored against him.

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Two defensive plays helped save runs in the first inning. After Springer's leadoff single, Bo Bichette grounded into a double play. The next batter, Guerrero, worked a walk but was thrown out on the bases trying to score from first base on Chapman's double to right-center field.

The Tigers executed a perfect inning-ending relay, from right fielder Matt Vierling to second baseman Maton to catcher Haase. Carpenter, playing left field, threw out Chapman trying to advance from first base to third base on a single from Varsho to end the sixth inning.

Rodriguez recorded eight whiffs and 18 called strikes.

Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him on Twitter @EvanPetzold.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers' losing streak hits 6 with 4-3 (10) loss to Blue Jays