“It was a frustrating night,” manager Scott Servais said. “It hasn’t been a good road trip. It hasn’t been a good start to the season.”
George Kirby (1-2) allowed five runs and eight hits in four innings to lose his second consecutive start. The right-hander hadn’t done that since road losses against the Yankees and Baltimore last June.
“Tonight I just thought I was a little bit too much in the zone,” Kirby said. “I just didn’t expand like I needed to.”
Kirby walked none and struck out three, and saw his ERA climb from 5.23 to 6.91. He hasn’t pitched past the fourth inning in either of his past two outings.
“They were up there swinging and he couldn’t miss the bat,” Servais said.
Bichette grounded into an inning-ending double play against Kirby in the first but hit a two-run drive into the second deck in the third. The 431-foot shot to left field was Bichette’s first homer of the season.
“Bo is one of the best hitters in the league,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “I think everyone knows that by now.”
Bassitt (1-2) allowed one run and five hits. He walked three and struck out a season-high eight. The right-hander won for the second time in 17 career games against Seattle.
“This lineup has given me a lot of trouble so I knew that I had to do things, I would say, off script,” Bassitt said. “I kind of mixed up how I pitched a little bit.”
Bassitt threw 115 pitches, one shy of his career high.
“He was in total command,” Schneider said.
Canzone ended Bassitt’s shutout bid with a two-out homer in the seventh, his third. Canzone also walked twice.
Haniger cut it to 5-3 with a two-out homer off right-hander Trevor Richards in the eighth.
Chad Green got four outs for his second save.
UP NEXT
Blue Jays LHP Yusei Kikuchi (0-1, 2.79 ERA) is scheduled to face his former team in Wednesday afternoon’s series finale. RHP Logan Gilbert (0-0, 3.55) goes for Seattle.