Bautista return not enough for Jays in 5-2 loss
Jose Bautista and Aaron Hill returned. Bautista even homered.
It still wasn't enough for the slumping Toronto Blue Jays.
Bautista went deep after missing five games with a sore neck, but that was all the Blue Jays managed against Detroit right-hander Brad Penny in a 5-2 loss to the Tigers.
''We could have done a better job, myself included, with some other at-bats,'' Bautista said. ''We didn't get a lot of baserunners today so it was hard to score runs.
''Our pitching has done a great job giving us chances but on the offensive side we've got to pick it up a little bit.''
Toronto has lost six of eight to fall a season-high four games under .500, and is averaging fewer than three runs a game in that span.
One day after being no-hit by Justin Verlander, the Jays had seven hits but went just 1 for 5 with runners in scoring position.
Hill returned to the lineup after missing 16 games with a strained right hamstring, going 1 for 3 with a single.
Austin Jackson hit a tiebreaking home run, Jose Valverde struck out the side in the ninth for seventh save and the 200th of his career, becoming the 41st player in major league history to reach the mark.
Valverde kept a ball, the lineup card and his spikes to give to his mother as a gift.
Penny (3-3) responded to Bautista's third-inning shot by retiring 10 straight batters and 14 of the next 15. The right-hander allowed two runs and seven hits in a season-high 7 2-3 innings, walked none and struck out one.
''What you saw today is exactly the reason we wanted to get him,'' Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. ''He gave us some innings and gave us a chance to win the game. He pitched a good game his last start and he pitched a good game today. Hopefully he can get on a little bit of a roll.''
Penny is 3-1 with a 1.95 ERA in his past three starts, allowing just six earned runs in 27 2-3 innings.
''He was just spotting his fastball in and out, the two-seamer in, the four-seamer out there,'' Hill said. ''When you've got a locating them, no matter how hard he throws, it's going to be tough on the hitters.''
Jackson went 3 for 5, his second straight three-hit performance, and is batting .368 (14 for 38) over his past 10 games.
Detroit won for the fifth time in six games to move within one game of .500.
Jackson broke a 2-2 tie with a two-run homer to left in the seventh, his second. The Tigers have hit at least one homer in 10 of their past 11 games in Toronto, dating to April, 2008.
The drive came off Blue Jays left-hander Jo-Jo Reyes (0-3), who has gone 25 starts since his last win. Reyes' last victory came June 13, 2008, against the Los Angeles Dodgers, when he was pitching for Atlanta.
Reyes allowed five runs and eight hits in seven-plus innings. He walked one and struck out one.
Bautista returned with a bang, drilling a two-run homer off the facing of the second deck in left in the third. The homer was his 10th of the season.
''He's a time bomb,'' Leyland said. ''That's just the way it is. There's no question about it. He can go yard at any time.''
Detroit tied it in the fourth. Scott Sizemore drew a leadoff walk and, two outs later, scored on Victor Martinez's double to center. The Blue Jays looked to have Martinez out at the plate on Jhonny Peralta's single to left. But after making the tag, catcher J.P. Arencibia dropped the ball when his glove hit the ground, and plate umpire CB Bucknor ruled Martinez safe. Manager John Farrell came out to argue, but the call stood.
''That was a huge play,'' Leyland said.
Detroit took the lead with another two-out rally in the seventh. Brandon Inge singled to right and Jackson followed with a homer to left.
The Tigers tacked on an insurance run in the eighth. Magglio Ordonez chased Reyes with a leadoff double and was replaced by pinch-runner Don Kelly. Miguel Cabrera greeted Jason Frasor with an RBI single to center.
NOTES: Bautista started at DH but Farrell said he could return to the outfield on Monday. ... Blue Jays 1B Adam Lind, who left Saturday's game with tightness in his lower back, did not start Sunday but said he hopes to return Monday. ... Detroit's Max Scherzer (5-0) faces Toronto's Brandon Morrow (1-1) in Monday's series finale.