TORONTO, Oct 2 (Reuters) – After six months and 161 games Major League Baseball will need all 162 contests to bring the postseason picture into focus with the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, Toronto Blue Jays and Seattle Mariners chasing two American League wildcard spots.
It will be all to play for on Sunday with the Yankees (91-70) and Red Sox (91-70) holding a one game advantage on the Blue Jays (90-71) and perhaps the Mariners (89-71) who take on the Los Angeles Angels later on Saturday.
Should the four teams remain tied after Sunday’s action it would mean two tie-breaker games on Monday, with the winners playing the wildcard contest on Tuesday.
The winner of the wildcard moves into the divisional round where the Tampa Bay Rays, Houston Astros and Chicago White Sox await.
“It kind of makes sense that it would come down to the very last day,” said Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner. “That seems about right with the way the season has gone.”
Saturday’s action settled nothing as the Yankees blew a chance to clinch a wildcard berth when they were hammered 12-2 by the Rays while the Blue Jays kept their postseason ambitions moving in the right direction drubbing of the Baltimore Orioles 10-1.
Toronto got home runs from five different players giving them an MLB leading 258 on the season establishing a new team record.
The Red Sox survived a roller-coaster end to their afternoon beating the Washington Nationals 5-3 to keep pace with the Yankees.
Deadlocked 1-1 going into the ninth the Red Sox scored four but then needed to fight off a Nationals rally in the bottom of the inning sparked by an Andrew Stevenson two-run homer.
In New York, Rays Brandon Lowe slammed three home runs to power Tampa to 100 wins on the season and deny the Yankees an opportunity to clinch a wildcard
The Blue Jays bats were also booming in Toronto as George Springer, Vladimir Guerrero Jr, Danny Jansen, Teoscar Hernandez and Bo Bichette all homered.
Toronto will hope for similar production on Sunday needing a win to stay in the chase.
It has been a particularly nomadic marathon for the Blue Jays who began the season playing home games at their Spring training base in Florida, moved to Buffalo, New York for much of the summer before COVID-19 restrictions in Canada relaxed enough allow them to return to Toronto in late July.
For travelling that long-and-winding road, Toronto manager Charlie Montoyo believes his team has earned the right to be in contention on the final day of the season.
“This team deserves credit and we are going to go all the way to 162,” Montoyo. “We could have quit in Dunedin, then when we moved to Buffalo we could have quit there too but we never did and we deserve to be here in this moment.”
Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by Sandra Maler
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.