Blue Jays in wild-card tie with win over Mariners

SEATTLE -- Toronto starter Marco Estrada flirted with a no-hitter, and teammate Edwin Encarnacion belted his 41st home run of the year, as the Blue Jays held off the Seattle Mariners 3-2 on Monday night to move back into a tie atop the American League wild-card standings.

Estrada threw six innings of no-hit ball before Seattle's Robinson Cano led off the seventh with a single. Encarnacion's two-run homer in the third inning stood up as the game-winner as the Blue Jays (82-68) pulled into a tie with the Orioles, three games ahead of the Mariners (79-71) in the wild-card race. Detroit (2 1/2 back) and Houston (three games back) were also in the mix after Monday night.

Estrada (9-9) allowed one hit over seven scoreless innings. He walked the first batter he faced in the eighth inning and came out after 97 pitches. The Mariners ended up walking the bases loaded with two outs in that inning before Toronto turned to closer Roberto Osuna, who got Cano to fly out to deep right field to end that threat.

The Mariners threatened again in the bottom of the ninth, when Seattle pinch hitter Shawn O'Malley had a two-out single off Osuna before Mariners center fielder Leonys Martin belted a two-run homer that pulled Seattle to within 3-2. Osuna then struck out Ben Gamel to earn his 34th save of the season.

Encarnacion went 2-for-4 with a two-run homer that gave the Jays their first lead, at 2-0 in the third. Center fielder Kevin Pillar, the No. 9 hitter, added three singles on a night when Toronto had seven hits after scoring just one run over the final two games of the Angels series over the weekend.

Cano had the only hit for Seattle, which has been shut out in two of its past four games and has been held to two runs or fewer in four out of five.

Seattle starter Taijuan Walker survived a first-inning scare to throw 5 1/3 innings, allowing three runs off five hits. Walker (6-11) used his right hand to knock down a hard line drive off the bat of Encarnacion in the first inning. Walker, who was protecting his midsection from taking the brunt of the hit, received a visit from a team trainer and was able to stay in the game.

Toronto third baseman Josh Donaldson was ejected in the seventh inning for arguing a third-strike call. Donaldson took issue with the call from home-plate umpire Chris Conroy and had to be restrained by on-deck hitter Encarnacion and manager John Gibbons after his ejection.

The Blue Jays stole three bases, including two from Pillar after singles in the third and fourth innings.

Encarnacion gave the Blue Jays an early lead with a two-run homer in the top of the third inning. Encarnacion's 41st home run of the season, which tied him with Brian Dozier of the Twins for the second most in the American League, gave Toronto a 2-0 lead.

Pillar added an RBI single to put Toronto ahead 3-0 in the fourth. Pillar had two singles, two stolen bases, an RBI and a run scored in his first two at-bats.

Estrada pitched five innings of no-hit baseball to open the game.

Estrada retired the first 11 batters before issuing a two-out walk to Cano in the fourth inning, ending his bid for a perfect game. Mariners cleanup hitter Nelson Cruz followed that with another walk to put two runners on base, but a sliding catch from Pillar in center field ended that threat.

NOTES: As is annually the case, Blue Jays fans outnumbered Mariners fans at the game. As Canada's only major league team, Toronto draws fans from nearby Vancouver, British Columbia, and Victoria, British Columbia, creating one of the most fervent atmospheres at Safeco Field every season. ... The Blue Jays named longtime executive Paul Beeston the organization's president emeritus. ... Toronto has several ex-Mariners on its roster. OF Michael Saunders and 1B Justin Smoak played the bulk of their careers in Seattle, while LHP J.A. Happ, the Jays' Tuesday starter, was with the Mariners for the first half of last season. RHP R.A. Dickey also did a stint in Seattle, while veteran RHP Joaquin Benoit began this season with the Mariners before being traded for struggling RHP Drew Storen on July 25. Storen and Mariners 1B Adam Lind are both former Blue Jays.
Final1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9thRHE
Toronto Blue JaysBlue Jays002100000380
Seattle MarinersMariners000000002230
WP:Marco Estrada (TOR)
LP:Taijuan Walker (SEA)
HR:(SEA): Leonys Martin
(TOR): Edwin Encarnacion
Season Series
SeattleStatsToronto
3-3Vs3-3
.218Batting Average.219
3.7Runs / Game3.7
4Home Runs11
1Errors2