Cooper's single gives Jays 3-2 win over White Sox
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Moises Sierra was so excited, he wrapped up his postgame media scrum by shaking hands with every reporter gathered around his locker.
As introductions go, Sierra is having a superb one with the Toronto Blue Jays.
David Cooper singled home the winning run in the 11th inning, Sierra hit his first career homer and the Blue Jays beat Chicago 3-2 on Monday night, handing the AL Central-leading White Sox their 16th loss in 19 games in Toronto.
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Sierra went 2 for 3 with a walk, boosting his average to .375 in 11 games since being promoted from Triple-A on July 31, including four multi-hit games.
"It's hard right now, it's hard because it's my first time here," Sierra said. "I'm not very experienced and a little nervous."
Hard? Sierra is making it look easy.
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"The one thing he's shown in the short time he's been here is he's got good plate coverage," manager John Farrell said. "The bat stays in the zone and he's able to hit some pitches away from him, as we've seen a number of times."
Rajai Davis popped out to open the 11th before left-hander Leyson Septimo came on to replace Jesse Crain. After Septimo (0-2) walked Johnson on four pitches, Ventura brought in Nate Jones to face Edwin Encarnacion, whose single moved Johnson to third. Cooper followed with a liner that bounced just in front of a hard-charging Alex Rios in right, scoring Johnson easily.
The White Sox have lost four of six, but Detroit's loss at Minnesota kept Chicago's two-game lead atop the Central intact.
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"Tough night," White Sox All-Star right-hander Jake Peavy said. "You want to win. We need a win coming down the stretch and at the start of a road trip like this."
Chicago's Adam Dunn hit two home runs, including a game-tying shot in the ninth inning, boosting his major league-leading total to 33. It was his 32nd career multihomer game and second this season.
"Besides Adam, we didn't really get anything going, didn't look fluid or anything," White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. "We have to get something else going besides waiting for home runs."
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Steve Delabar (3-1) struck out six batters in two innings to earn the win.
Delabar struck out four in the 10th, the first time a Blue Jays pitcher has accomplished the feat and the first time in major league history it has happened in extra innings. White Sox catcher Tyler Flowers, the second batter of the inning, struck out swinging but reached on a passed ball.
With Chicago trailing 2-1 to begin the ninth, Dunn tied it by swatting Casey Janssen's first pitch over the wall in left, giving him 1,000 career RBIs.
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For Janssen, the blown save was his first since April 14 against Baltimore, snapping a streak of 15 successful conversions.
Dunn's first homer was a mammoth 469-foot shot off the roof of the restaurant in center field in the fourth.
"Dunn makes the park look like a Little League field every time up," Farrell said.
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The drive was the longest home run at Rogers Centre this season. Encarnacion hit a 467-foot homer against Cleveland on July 14.
Toronto opened the scoring in the third when Anthony Gose was hit by a pitch, moved to second on Johnson's two-out walk and scored when Encarnacion followed with a single to right.
Sierra restored Toronto's lead when he opened the seventh with a homer to left-center off Peavy, the first of his career.
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"It was a good pitch, changeup down and away," Flowers said. "Sometimes they guess right and I think that's what happened.
Toronto right-hander Carlos Villanueva allowed one run and five hits in a season-high seven innings. He walked one and matched his career-high with eight strikeouts.
Peavy allowed two runs and five hits in eight innings, lowering his ERA to 3.04. He walked two and struck out six. But the All-Star right-hander lost for the eighth time in his past 11 starts, largely because he seldom gets enough offensive support.
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Chicago has scored just 26 runs in Peavy's past 11 starts.
"This is kind of the underlying theme with my season," Peavy said.
Chicago's Kevin Youkilis returned to the lineup after sitting out Sunday's win over Oakland with soreness in his left arm and right knee. He went 0 for 4 and struck out twice.
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NOTES: White Sox 1B Paul Konerko cleared a battery of post-concussion tests Monday and will resume physical activity Tuesday. ... Chicago recalled LHP Donnie Veal from Triple-A Charlotte. He replaces OF Jordan Danks, who was optioned to Triple-A Sunday. ... Toronto OF Jose Bautista (left wrist) swung the bat and hit off the tee before the game. For Bautista, it was his first activity since Aug. 1, when he was shut down with lingering pain. ... Flowers caught for Chicago, with A.J. Pierzynski starting at DH. ... Blue Jays RHP Brandon Morrow (strained muscle in his left side) will make two more minor league rehab starts before rejoining the team, Farrell said. Morrow has already made three rehab starts and will make his fourth on Tuesday at Double-A New Hampshire. ... The White Sox have hit 20 homers in their past 10 games.