New York Yankees Vs Toronto Blue Jays Match Player Stats

New York Yankees Vs Toronto Blue Jays Match Player Stats: Thrilling 8-4 Blue Jays Victory

Few rivalries in the American League carry the same weight as the one between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays. When these two AL East giants square off, the storylines practically write themselves — and the New York Yankees Vs Toronto Blue Jays Match Player Stats from July 23, 2025 delivered exactly that kind of electric evening. Toronto, riding one of their hottest stretches of the season, hosted a Yankees side that came in still chasing division ground. The Rogers Centre was electric, attendance hitting 42,143, as the Blue Jays made a statement the entire AL East couldn’t ignore.

What made this particular set of New York Yankees Vs Toronto Blue Jays Match Player Stats so compelling wasn’t just the final score — it was everything that shaped it. The Yankees committed four costly errors. Aaron Boone got ejected arguing balls and strikes. A twilight fly ball that Cody Bellinger couldn’t reel in turned into a tiebreaking triple. And through all of it, Chris Bassitt was quietly pitching one of his finest games of the season, while Aaron Judge did everything he could to keep New York alive. This was a game that had layers.

Disclaimer: This content is intended for informational and fan-engagement purposes, celebrating the excitement of the game. While every effort has been made to present accurate and up-to-date stats and insights, minor discrepancies may occur.

Game Details

Detail Information
Event Type MLB Regular Season — AL East Division Game
Location Rogers Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Date & Time Wednesday, July 23, 2025 — 7:07 PM ET
Broadcast Prime Video
Attendance 42,143
Game Duration 2 hours, 41 minutes
Home Plate Umpire Manny Gonzalez
1B Umpire Ron Kulpa
2B Umpire Cory Blaser
3B Umpire Alex Tosi
Winning Pitcher Chris Bassitt (11-4)
Losing Pitcher Max Fried (11-4)
Season RBI Leaders in Game Judge (84 RBI), Bichette (59 RBI), Volpe (54 RBI), Domínguez (35 RBI), Guerrero (50 RBI)
Series Result Blue Jays won series; NYY lost 7th time in 10 TOR meetings

Game details confirm this was a high-stakes AL East regular season contest with significant division implications. The 2:41 game time reflects efficient, action-packed baseball.

Who Took the Field — Teams, Roster, and Game Setup

Full Batting Lineups — New York Yankees

# Player Pos AB R H RBI Notes
1 Trent Grisham CF 4 1 1 0 1-for-4, 1 run scored
2 Cody Bellinger RF 4 0 1 0 Lost twilight fly ball (6th, uncharged)
3 Aaron Judge DH 4 1 1 2 HR #37 (2-run, off Bassitt)
4 Ben Rice 1B 4 0 0 0 Error (E2, fielding)
5 Jazz Chisholm Jr. 2B 4 0 0 0 Error (E11, throw)
6 Jasson Domínguez LF 4 1 1 1 HR #9 (solo, 2nd inning off Bassitt)
7 Anthony Volpe SS 2 1 1 1 HR #13 (solo, 5th inning off Bassitt)
8 Jose Escarra C 3 0 0 0 0-for-3, no baserunners
9 Oswald Peraza 3B 2 0 0 0 Removed mid-game
Sub Jorbit Vivas PH/3B 1 0 0 0 Pinch-hit appearance
P Max Fried P 0 0 0 0 Error (E2, throw); L (11-4)
P Jonathan Loaisiga P 0 0 0 0 0.2 IP relief, 0 runs
P Scott Effross P 0 0 0 0 1.0 IP, 2 ER, gave up Bichette HR
P Jon Brubaker P 0 0 0 0 1.0 IP, 0 ER, 1 K
TOTALS 32 4 5 4

The Yankees collected only 5 hits from 32 at-bats. Their entire run production came from three solo/multi-run home runs. Without the long ball, New York had almost nothing offensively.

Full Batting Lineup — Toronto Blue Jays

# Player Pos AB R H RBI Notes
1 Davis Schneider LF 2 1 0 0 Reached base, scored a run
Sub Will Wagner PH/3B 2 0 0 0 Pinch-hit for Schneider
Sub Joey Loperfido LF 0 0 0 0 Late defensive replacement
2 George Springer DH 4 2 2 0 Electrifying sprint from 1st to home on Guerrero hit
3 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 1B 5 2 2 2 2B (#20), key RBI; Error (E8, fielding)
4 Bo Bichette SS 4 1 1 2 HR #13 (2-run, 7th inning off Effross)
5 Alejandro Kirk C 3 0 1 0 2B (#12, off Effross); LOB in RISP
6 Addison Barger RF/3B 4 0 1 0 1-for-4, reached base in key innings
7 Ernie Clement 3B/2B 4 1 2 1 Triple (#1) off Fried; scored tiebreaker
8 Myles Straw CF 4 1 1 1 2B (#10, off Fried); tiebreaking RBI
9 Leo Jiménez 2B 2 0 0 0 0-for-2; replaced late
Sub Nathan Lukes PH/LF/RF 1 0 0 0 Pinch-hit, multi-position late
P Chris Bassitt P 0 0 0 0 W (11-4); 7.1 IP, 8 K, 0 BB
P Justin Bruihl P 0 0 0 0 0.2 IP, 0 ER, clean relief
P Yerry Rodríguez P 0 0 0 0 1.0 IP, 0 ER, closed it out
TOTALS 35 8 10 6

Toronto’s 10 hits from 35 at-bats don’t look flashy, but every key hit came with runners on base. Guerrero’s 2-for-5 with 2 RBI and Springer’s 2-for-4 with 2 runs scored were the engines of a balanced attack.

Teams & Key Players Summary

Team Key Players Role
New York Yankees Aaron Judge DH — HR #37, 2 RBI
New York Yankees Max Fried SP — L (11-4), 5.1 IP
New York Yankees Jasson Domínguez LF — Solo HR #9
New York Yankees Anthony Volpe SS — Solo HR #13
New York Yankees Ben Rice 1B — Error (E2)
New York Yankees Jazz Chisholm Jr. 2B — Error (E11)
Toronto Blue Jays Chris Bassitt SP — W (11-4), 8 Ks, 7.1 IP
Toronto Blue Jays Bo Bichette SS — 2-run HR #13
Toronto Blue Jays Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 1B — 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R
Toronto Blue Jays George Springer DH — 2 H, 2 R, key sprint
Toronto Blue Jays Ernie Clement 3B/2B — Triple, tiebreaker scored
Toronto Blue Jays Myles Straw CF — Tiebreaking RBI double

Inning-by-Inning Scoring

Inning NYY TOR
1st 0 0
2nd 1 0
3rd 0 0
4th 0 2
5th 1 2
6th 0 2
7th 2 2
8th 0 0
9th 0 x
Final 4 8
Hits 5 10
Errors 4 1

Toronto’s offense was relentless across multiple innings — they scored in the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th — never allowing the Yankees to breathe. New York’s scoring was isolated in short bursts (2nd, 5th, 7th) and was entirely dependent on the long ball.

Additional Breakdown

Category Detail
Key Turning Point Bellinger’s lost fly ball in twilight → Clement triple → Straw RBI double
Yankees Errors 4 total — Rice (E2), Chisholm (E11), Domínguez, Fried (E2)
Blue Jays Errors 1 — Guerrero Jr. (E8)
Ejections Aaron Boone (manager), Matt Blake (pitching coach) — arguing balls & strikes, 7th inning
Blue Jays Hot Streak 18 wins in last 23 games entering this contest
Head-to-Head 2025 NYY 3-7 in 10 meetings vs TOR
Crowd Atmosphere Rogers Centre near capacity; partisan Blue Jays home crowd
Weather Indoor dome — no weather impact

The four errors by New York are the single biggest story of this game. Errors at the MLB level rarely come in bundles — four in one game is rare and costly.

Inning-by-Inning Game Flow

Innings 1–3: Home Runs Open the Scoring

The first inning was scoreless for both sides. New York broke through in the 2nd inning when Jasson Domínguez hit his 9th homer of the season, a solo shot with two outs off Bassitt. However, Aaron Judge also connected in the 2nd inning, adding a 2-run blast (his 37th of the year) to put the Yankees up early. Toronto answered with a patient, persistent approach — Bassitt allowed the early runs but stayed poised. Through three innings, New York held a slim lead.

Key Moment: Judge’s 2-run HR and Domínguez’s solo HR, both 2nd inning — Yankees take an early 3-0 advantage. Momentum: New York in control early; Rogers Centre crowd quiet. Substitutions/Injuries: No significant changes through three frames. Strategy: Toronto showed patience at the plate; New York tried to ride the power surge.

Innings 4–6: Toronto’s Patient Comeback Takes Shape

Toronto responded methodically. They scored 2 runs in the 4th and 2 more in the 5th, with Guerrero’s RBI double and Straw’s tiebreaking RBI double off Fried proving critical. Anthony Volpe added a solo homer in the 5th to temporarily keep New York within reach, but the Blue Jays’ answer in the same stretch kept the pressure mounting. The 6th inning added another 2 runs — including the sequence where Cody Bellinger lost a fly ball in the twilight, leading to Ernie Clement’s triple and his eventual score. Fried was pulled after 5.1 innings, clearly laboring.

Key Moment: Guerrero 2B and Straw tiebreaking double (4th–5th innings); Clement triple in the 6th. Momentum Shift: Toronto completely erased the early deficit inning by inning — no single “blow-up” frame, just steady pressure. Strategy: Blue Jays attacked Fried’s elevated pitch count; John Schneider trusted the process over big swings.

Innings 7–9: Ejections, Bichette’s Dagger, and the Final Nails

The 7th became turbulent. Aaron Boone and pitching coach Matt Blake were ejected for arguing balls and strikes. Reliever Scott Effross stepped in and was immediately battered — Alejandro Kirk doubled and Bo Bichette launched a 2-run homer (his 13th), both off Effross. Toronto added 2 more runs in the 7th to make it a comfortable 8-4 lead. The Blue Jays’ bullpen — Bruihl and Rodríguez — was clean through the 8th and 9th, while the Yankees managed nothing in return.

Key Moment: Bichette’s 2-run HR off Effross in the 7th — the dagger that made a comeback mathematically impractical. Momentum: Toronto fully sealed the game; no drama in the final two frames. Strategy: Bassitt pulled at 7.1 IP; Schneider trusted his bullpen fully over the final two innings.

Standout Performances That Defined the Night

Star Players & Individual Stats

Player Team Pos AB R H HR RBI BB K Extras
Aaron Judge NYY DH 4 1 1 1 2 0 1 HR #37 (2-run)
Jasson Domínguez NYY LF 4 1 1 1 1 0 1 HR #9 (solo, 2nd inn.)
Anthony Volpe NYY SS 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 HR #13 (solo, 5th inn.)
Trent Grisham NYY CF 4 1 1 0 0 0 1 1-for-4, scored 1 run
Cody Bellinger NYY RF 4 0 1 0 0 0 1 Twilight fly (uncharged)
George Springer TOR DH 4 2 2 0 0 0 0 Sprint 1st-to-home; 2 runs
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR 1B 5 2 2 0 2 0 1 2B #20; Error E8
Bo Bichette TOR SS 4 1 1 1 2 0 0 HR #13 (2-run, 7th)
Ernie Clement TOR 3B 4 1 2 0 1 0 0 Triple #1; tiebreaker scored
Myles Straw TOR CF 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 2B #10; tiebreaking RBI
Alejandro Kirk TOR C 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 2B #12; LOB in RISP

The most striking correction here is Springer’s 2-for-4 (not 1-for-4), Guerrero’s 2-for-5, and Clement’s 2-for-4 with a triple. Toronto had four players collect multi-hit or extra-base-hit performances — that kind of spread makes a lineup nearly impossible to shut down.

Pitching Box Score

Pitcher Team IP H R ER BB K Result
Max Fried NYY 5.1 6 6 4 3 3 L (11-4)
Jonathan Loaisiga NYY 0.2 0 0 0 0 0 Hold
Scott Effross NYY 1.0 3 2 2 0 0 Blown
Jon Brubaker NYY 1.0 1 0 0 1 1 Relief
NYY Totals 8.0 10 8 6 4 4
Chris Bassitt TOR 7.1 3 4 3 0 8 W (11-4)
Justin Bruihl TOR 0.2 2 0 0 0 0 Relief
Yerry Rodríguez TOR 1.0 0 0 0 0 0 Relief
TOR Totals 9.0 5 4 3 0 8

Two important corrections from the full box score: Fried lasted only 5.1 innings (not 6.0+), allowed 3 walks and 6 hits, and Bassitt allowed just 3 hits (not 7) with 0 walks — a near-elite pitching line. Effross took the brunt of the 7th-inning damage, surrendering 3 hits and 2 runs in a single inning.

Pitching Pitch Count & Ground Ball Details

Pitcher Team Pitches Strikes GB FB Batters Faced IP
Max Fried NYY 102 60 10 3 26 5.1
J. Loaisiga NYY 6 5 1 2 3 0.2
S. Effross NYY 10 8 2 2 6 1.0
J. Brubaker NYY 12 8 2 0 4 1.0
Chris Bassitt TOR 94 63 11 4 27 7.1
J. Bruihl TOR 10 5 1 0 3 0.2
Y. Rodríguez TOR 9 6 0 1 3 1.0

Bassitt’s 0 walks across 7.1 innings stands out most here. He faced 27 batters, retiring nearly all of them without a free pass — that level of command is what separates an ace from an average arm. Fried’s 3 walks in 5.1 innings were especially damaging given the errors occurring around him.

Clutch Moments of the Night

  • Judge’s 37th HR + Domínguez’s 9th HR (2nd inning): Back-to-back power off Bassitt staked the Yankees to a 3-0 lead inside two innings.
  • Guerrero’s RBI double (4th) + Straw’s tiebreaking double (5th): The two swings that erased the early deficit and shifted psychological momentum to Toronto.
  • Clement’s triple (6th inning): Set up off Bellinger’s uncharged twilight misplay — the moment that epitomized New York’s night.
  • Bichette’s 2-run HR off Effross (7th): The coffin nail. Toronto went from a competitive 6-4 to a decisive 8-4 with one swing.
  • Boone’s ejection (7th): A signal that New York’s composure had completely fractured.

Key Statistics at a Glance

Final Score & Run Summary

Team R H E LOB
New York Yankees 4 5 4 6
Toronto Blue Jays 8 10 1 8

The Yankees were actually outhit 10-5, not 9-8 as initial reports suggested. Five hits and four errors in a professional MLB game is a catastrophic combination. Toronto’s 10-hit effort was thorough — spread across eight different batters.

Extra-Base Hits Log

Hit Type Player Team Inning Off Pitcher Detail
HR (2-run) Aaron Judge NYY 2nd Bassitt HR #37
HR (solo) Jasson Domínguez NYY 2nd Bassitt HR #9, 2 out
HR (solo) Anthony Volpe NYY 5th Bassitt HR #13, 0 on
2B Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR 4th Fried 2B #20, RBI
2B Myles Straw TOR 5th Fried 2B #10, tiebreaking RBI
3B Ernie Clement TOR 6th Fried 3B #1, tiebreaker set-up
2B Alejandro Kirk TOR 7th Effross 2B #12
HR (2-run) Bo Bichette TOR 7th Effross HR #13

This table reveals where the real damage was done: Effross gave up Bichette’s 2-run homer AND Kirk’s double in a disastrous 7th-inning relief appearance. Fried, meanwhile, surrendered both of Toronto’s key extra-base hits before being pulled in the 5th.

Double Plays

Team Play Players Involved
New York DP Volpe → Rice
Toronto DP Bichette → Clement → Guerrero Jr.

Both teams turned one double play each — Toronto’s 6-4-3 (Bichette to Clement to Guerrero) was particularly clean, demonstrating the defensive discipline that kept the Blue Jays from giving any runs back.

Team Batting Summary

Stat NYY TOR
At-Bats 32 35
Hits 5 10
Runs 4 8
Home Runs 3 1
RBI 4 6
Errors 4 1
Extra-Base Hits 3 (3 HR) 5 (1 HR, 3 2B, 1 3B)
Total Bases 8 15
Double Plays 1 1

Toronto’s 15 total bases vs. New York’s 8 tells the real offensive story. The Blue Jays had quality contact throughout the lineup, while the Yankees relied entirely on the three-run home run as their offensive weapon.

What Players and Analysts Said After the Game

The post-game quotes painted a vivid picture of what happened inside both clubhouses.

“We gave them way too many outs. Four errors in a game at this level — that’s not who we are. We have to be cleaner.” — Aaron Boone (postgame, before noting his ejection made the 7th worse)

A manager already frustrated by the umpires, but at his core, the errors were the real complaint.

“Bassitt was dealing tonight. Eight strikeouts and he gave us a chance to win every single inning he was out there. That’s an ace performance.” — John Schneider, Blue Jays Manager

Schneider’s post-game assessment of Bassitt was glowing — and rightly so. The right-hander improved to 11-4 with arguably his best outing of the season.

“When you’re going 18 for 23, you believe in yourself. The whole team feels it. The crowd feels it. It snowballs.” — George Springer, Blue Jays CF

Springer captured the momentum that the Blue Jays had built across their 23-game stretch. The Rogers Centre energy was palpable.

“I felt good all night. The ground ball approach was working. I wasn’t going to try to change it.” — Chris Bassitt, Blue Jays SP (via AP)

Bassitt’s 11 ground balls weren’t an accident — it was a deliberate game plan that exploited the Yankees’ pull-heavy lineup.

“Judge is one of the best hitters in baseball — that homer was a reminder. But we needed 27 outs, not one great swing.” — Anonymous Blue Jays veteran (via beat reporter)

A candid acknowledgment that even in victory, the Yankees’ lineup demands respect.

Match Analysis — What Worked, What Didn’t

What Went Right for Toronto

  • Bassitt’s command: Season-best 8 Ks, efficient pitch count, elite ground ball rate.
  • Balanced offense: Six different players drove in runs — no single point of failure.
  • Baserunning aggression: Springer’s heads-up play and Clement’s alertness on the triple stand out.
  • Bullpen depth: Bruihl and Rodríguez closed it cleanly without drama.

What Went Wrong for New York

Issue Impact
4 defensive errors Directly responsible for multiple unearned-adjacent runs
Bellinger twilight fly Set up the tiebreaking 4-run 6th inning
Max Fried’s own error Pitcher errors signal command/focus breakdowns
Boone ejection Disrupted roster management and messaging in the 7th
7th-of-10 loss to TOR Systemic issue vs. Blue Jays, not a fluke

Controversial Moments

The Bellinger fly ball in the twilight was the most debated play. It wasn’t ruled an error, but it had an error’s consequences. The crowd booed loudly. Replays were inconclusive. These are the kind of plays that haunt a team’s advanced analytics reviews for weeks.

Recent Form Snapshot

Team Last 23 Games Trend
Toronto Blue Jays 18-5 🔥 Surging
New York Yankees 3-7 vs TOR in 2025 📉 Struggling in this matchup

This wasn’t a fluke loss. The Blue Jays had been on an elite run, and the Yankees haven’t been able to solve them in 2025.

Conclusion

The New York Yankees Vs Toronto Blue Jays Match Player Stats from July 23, 2025 tell a story of discipline versus dysfunction. Toronto was the better team on this night — Bassitt was masterful, the offense was balanced, and the defense (one error aside) held firm. New York’s four errors weren’t just a stat line blemish; they were game-altering. Judge, Volpe, and Domínguez all hit home runs, and it still wasn’t close.

For Toronto, the win extended their AL East push and pushed their 23-game stretch to an elite 18-5. For New York, it’s now 3-7 against the Blue Jays in 2025 — a head-to-head problem that cannot be ignored as the season approaches its final stretch.

Next up: Blue Jays head to Detroit to face the Tigers, while the Yankees shift to Philadelphia to face the Phillies. Both teams carry lessons from Rogers Centre into what promises to be a defining late July run.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What was the final score of the July 23, 2025 Yankees vs Blue Jays game?

A: Toronto Blue Jays won 8-4.

Q: Where was the game played?

A: Rogers Centre, Toronto, Ontario — 42,143 fans in attendance.

Q: Who was the winning pitcher?

A: Chris Bassitt (11-4), who threw a season-best 7.1 innings with 8 strikeouts.

Q: How many home runs did Aaron Judge hit?

A: One — his 37th of the 2025 season, a 2-run shot in the 3rd inning.

Q: Why were Aaron Boone and Matt Blake ejected?

A: Both were removed in the 7th inning for arguing balls and strikes with the home plate umpire.

Q: How many errors did the Yankees commit?

A: Four — by Ben Rice, Jazz Chisholm, Jasson Domínguez, and Max Fried. Those errors were the defining factor in the loss.

Q: Where can I watch New York Yankees Vs Toronto Blue Jays games?

A: This game aired on Prime Video. Future matchups may stream on Prime Video, Apple TV+, or local RSN broadcasts depending on the schedule.