Aaron Sanchez's 4th-inning meltdown proves costly for Blue Jays
Alonso, Anderson homer in 5-run frame, leading White Sox to series victory

One bad inning has become a recurring storyline in Aaron Sanchez's season.
"You just gotta make pitches. That's what it all comes down to," he said. "The damage in the inning and this one just got away."
Sanchez (3-4) struck out five in a row over the first two innings, giving up nine hits and a pair of walks over six innings of work in his third straight loss. Daniel Hudson, Tim Mayza and Joe Biagini each pitched a scoreless inning of relief for Toronto.
"It always seems like of his nine starts, there is that one inning. Other than that he's been outstanding," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said of Sanchez. "He had good stuff today and just that one bad inning that he had. 11 strikeouts. He was really good."
Rowdy Tellez had an RBI single in the first inning for the Blue Jays (16-24), who have lost 10 of their last 12 games and have scored two or fewer runs six in their previous seven games.
"It's just that everyone is struggling at the same time, "Montoyo said. "I was looking at our lineup and the last five guys are hitting .200, .206, .170, so it's tough to get the lineup around again because it's too many guys struggling at the same time. When you are down by four it seems like 10. It's not a good feeling."
The run support has been particularly problematic for the Blue Jays, who fell to eight games below .500 with the loss, a new season low.
Manager knows bats will come around eventually
Despite the lack of support, Montoyo isn't planning on making any changes to the lineup
"The guys on the bench are also hitting .200. Somebody's going to have to get hot," Montoyo said. "I mean, [rookie sensation Vladimir Guerrero Jr.] is getting hot right now so hopefully that follows. I keep saying that but that's what's going to have to happen. I don't think these guys are hitting .200 all year. I just know who they are."
Yonder Alonso and Tim Anderson had home runs for the White Sox (18-21). All of Chicago's offence came in the fourth inning.
Lucas Giolito (4-1) was solid over seven innings. He allowed just one run on four hits. He struck out eight batters and walked one. Ryan Burr and Aaron Bummer were flawless in their respective innings out of the bullpen.
Freddy Galvis scored from third base on Tellez's single in the first inning. Guerrero had put Galvis into scoring position with a double earlier in the inning.
Sanchez looked dominant until the fourth inning when Alonso hit a two-run homer off a 2-2 fastball over the centre-field wall for a 2-1 Chicago lead.
The Toronto starter then gave up a pair of back-to-back singles after the home run, prompting a visit to the mound by Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker. That chat didn't help, as Sanchez gave up a three-run homer to Anderson after for a 5-1 White Sox lead.
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