Toronto Blue Jays Salvage Season With Game 3 ALCS Win
Sometimes baseball just hits different. Wednesday night at T-Mobile Park, the Toronto Blue Jays didn’t just win Game 3 of the ALCS—they put on an absolute clinic, demolishing the Seattle Mariners 13-4 in a performance that had everything except mercy.
You know that feeling when your favorite team finally clicks? When months of frustration suddenly transform into pure baseball poetry? That is exactly what happened as the Blue Jays turned what looked like a series-ending scenario into their most complete game of October.
Vladdy Goes Full Video Game Mode
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. didn’t just have a good night—he had the kind of night that makes highlight reels for decades. The man went 4-for-5 with three extra-base hits, becoming just the second player in postseason history to reach base in all five plate appearances while collecting nine total bases with his team’s backs against the wall.
But here’s where it gets wild: Guerrero smoked four hits at over 102 mph, joining Kerry Carpenter as the only players to accomplish that feat in a single postseason game. His exit velocities read like a car speedometer on the highway—102.8, 104.9, 106.4, and 108.0 mph. The baseball gods were definitely listening.
The secret? Guerrero made a crucial adjustment after struggling in Games 1 and 2. His swing, normally the flattest in baseball at just 1°, had dropped to a devastating -6° in his previous outs. He was swinging down on everything, making contact five inches deeper than usual. Wednesday night, he fixed it, focusing on pitches middle-down and in the zone. The results speak for themselves.
The Blue Jays’ Offensive Explosion Changes Everything
This wasn’t just Vladdy’s show, though. The Blue Jays hit five home runs total, with Andrés Giménez sparking a five-run third inning with a two-run blast. George Springer, Alejandro Kirk, and Addison Barger also went yard, turning T-Mobile Park into their personal launching pad.
Credit where credit’s due—Hitting Coach David Popkins has transformed this lineup. The Blue Jays went from 19th in batting average last season to first this year, and from 23rd in runs to fourth. That’s not luck; that’s systematic improvement.
Seattle’s Championship Window Still Cracked Open
For the Mariners, this stings more than a fastball to the ribs. They’ve now lost all five ALCS games in franchise history when sitting just two wins away from the World Series. George Kirby, who dominated Detroit in the Division Series, got absolutely shelled, surrendering 8 in 4+ innings. The Blue Jays aren’t done yet. Sometimes, a team needs one game to remember who they really are.
