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Out with a bang

The Blue Jays blasted a few more home runs as a send off present for their retiring manager Cito Gaston.
Citoo Gaston
Retiring Toronto Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston waves to fans as he leaves the baseball field after the Blue Jays defeated the Minnesota Twins 2-1 on Sunday in Minneapolis.

Blue Jays 2 Twins 1

MINNEAPOLIS — The Blue Jays blasted a few more home runs as a send off present for their retiring manager Cito Gaston.

Edwin Encarnacion and Adam Lind both went deep, adding to Toronto’s major league-leading total, to lift Toronto to a 2-1 victory Sunday in the regular-season finale over the playoff-bound Twins.

“It was nice to see him win and ride off into the sunset,” Lind said.

This was the last game for Gaston, who accepted a $2,500 donation from the Twins on his behalf to the Blue Jays’ charity fund.

Two of Gaston’s former players who are also former Twins, Paul Molitor and Jack Morris, joined Twins manager Ron Gardenhire and Minnesota second baseman Orlando Hudson, himself a former Blue Jays player, at home plate to honour Gaston.

Gaston finished 211-201 in his second stint with the Blue Jays — no World Series titles, but a competitive stint in arguably baseball’s toughest division. He had a 913-851 regular-season record in 12 seasons, plus 18-16 in post-season play.

Toronto finished with eight wins in its last 10 games to reach 85-77.

“I really think the theme they came up with for this year — heart and hustle — has really been appropriate,” Gaston said. “They never quit. We lost some tough ones this year.”

Encarnacion finished with 21 homers this season, seven against the Twins and five in this four-game series. The Blue Jays went deep 10 times this weekend at Target Field, so far one of the hardest ballparks to hit one out of.

The Blue Jays went deep 257 times this season, matching the 1996 Baltimore Orioles for the third-most in history. The 1997 Seattle Mariners have the record, with 264 homers.

Minnesota learned minutes after the game its opening-round opponent is the New York Yankees.

Minnesota is 2-9 against New York in the post-season, losing the division series in 2003, 2004 and 2009.

“We know what we’ve got ahead of us,” centre fielder Denard Span said. “I know you guys are going to make a big deal about the past and how we played against those guys, but we’re just going to strap ’em up and go out there and try to do what we’ve done all year.”

The Twins lose eight of their last 10 games, not the way they wanted to enter the post-season, but at least healthier than when they clinched the AL Central on Sept. 21. Only Canadian first baseman Justin Morneau is missing, his post-concussion recovery still not far enough along to include him. Despite losing all-star closer Joe Nathan in spring training and Morneau for the last half of the season, Minnesota went 94-68 and won the division for the sixth time in the last nine years.

“We gave ourselves a chance, putting ourselves in this position, and we know what we have in our clubhouse,” catcher Joe Mauer said. “We’re capable of going the whole way.”

Nick Blackburn (10-12), expected to be the starter if there’s a Game 4 next week, gave the Twins seven innings and six strikeouts. He allowed only three hits and one walk, rebounding from a rough start last week.

Blue Jays starter Marc Rzepczynski (4-4) was a little bit better, allowing only one unearned run in seven innings while striking out six. The Twins trotted out THE lineup, as Gardenhire put it before the game, his batting order for the playoffs. Most of the regulars were gone by the middle innings, including as a precaution right fielder Jason Kubel, who fouled a ball off his foot.

Afterward, some players downplayed the significance of the rematch with the Yankees, but Blackburn expressed a bring-it-on attitude.

“I think at first there was a little bit of shock for us to be playing the Yankees, you know, but they’re a beatable team,” Blackburn said, recalling last year’s series. “We can go out there and beat ’em, and there’s no reason we shouldn’t.”