Blue Jays 7, Angels 5
After consecutive strong starts, Ervin Santana struggled against the Toronto Blue Jays.
Adam Lind hit two home runs, Yunel Escobar had a tiebreaking double in the seventh inning, and the Blue Jays beat the Los Angeles Angels 7-5 on Friday night.
''We just didn't set the tone early enough on the mound,'' Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. ''Ervin got through the first couple of innings and in the fourth just missed with some spots.''
Santana beat Arizona with a one-hit shutout on June 16, then came away the hard-luck loser after striking out 10 and allowing two earned runs in eight innings against the Dodgers last weekend.
But he wasn't at his best north of the border, giving up five runs and seven hits in five innings, walking three and striking out two.
''To me, when you give up five runs it's not a good outing,'' said Santana, who dropped to 0-2 against Toronto this season and saw his three-game winning streak at Rogers Centre end.
Promoted from Triple-A Las Vegas last Monday after spending more than a month in the minors, Lind hit a three-run homer off Santana in the third inning, then added a solo drive to left off Hisanori Takahashi in the eighth.
''It's definitely a relief to hit a home run and help the team win,'' Lind said. ''This is the team that I belong with.''
Lind's fourth and fifth homers of the season ended a drought dating to May 9 at Oakland, giving him his first multihomer game this season and the eighth of his career.
''He's just in a better place mentally,'' Blue Jays manager John Farrell said. ''The struggles that he had earlier in the year were well documented, he needed to get a little bit of a breather to kind of free some things up. The swings we saw tonight are those that we've been accustomed to seeing for a long time.''
Escobar went 3 for 4 with two RBIs as the Blue Jays snapped a three-game losing streak and halted Los Angeles' winning streak at four games.
''Yunel had an outstanding game,'' Farrell said.
The Angels lost for just the second time in their past 16 road games, and have dropped five of their past 19 overall.
Francisco Cordero (3-4) worked two-thirds of an inning for the win and Casey Janssen finished for his ninth save in 10 chances.
The Angels opened the scoring in the third on Torii Hunter's RBI single, then added one more in the fourth on Erick Aybar's sacrifice fly, a drive to deep center that Colby Rasmus caught up against the wall.
Toronto took the lead with a five-run fourth. Jose Bautista doubled and scored on Edwin Encarnacion's single, with Encarnacion taking second on the throw. Kelly Johnson sacrificed Encarnacion to third and Escobar hit an RBI single. Rajai Davis doubled and Lind followed with a home run off the facing of the second deck in center.
Los Angeles cut it to 5-3 on an RBI double by Albert Pujols in the fifth, then threw out a runner at the plate in the bottom half. Encarnacion was hit by a pitch with two outs and stole second, then tried to score when third baseman Alberto Callaspo couldn't handle Escobar's grounder. Aybar, the shortstop, covered and made a strong throw to the plate, where catcher John Hester tagged out a sliding Encarnacion for the third out.
The Angels tied it in the seventh when Hester drilled a two-run homer off reliever Scott Richmond, his third of the season.
One out later, consecutive singles by Hunter and Pujols put runners at the corners, but Cordero came on and got Kendrys Morales to ground into a double play.
Toronto reclaimed the lead in the bottom half off Jordan Walden (2-2). Encarnacion hit a two-out single and stole second, Johnson walked and Escobar lined a ground-rule double to right.
''It's frustrating, especially to get through Bautista,'' Walden said. ''They have a good lineup.''
Lind added a leadoff drive to left in the eighth.
Making his first start of the season and his first since August 2011, Toronto right-hander Carlos Villanueva gave up three runs and seven hits in five innings. He walked one and struck out six.
NOTES: Davis stole second base on Hester's return throw to the mound in the sixth. ''(Davis) picked their pocket,'' Scioscia said. ... Angels RHP Jerome Williams (respiratory) will start for Triple-A Salt Lake on Sunday. Williams went on the DL June 19 after suffering an asthma attack following a start against San Francisco. ... Jamie Moyer, the 49-year-old LHP, made his debut with Toronto's Triple-A Las Vegas affiliate Thursday and earned the win by allowing three runs and seven hits in five innings, striking out six. Moyer will start for Las Vegas again next Tuesday, after which the Blue Jays must decide whether to promote him or release him. ... Police and emergency personnel filled the aisle in a section behind Toronto's third base dugout while the Angels batted in the third inning, providing CPR to an elderly male fan. A Blue Jays spokesman said the fan was revived before being carried away on a stretcher.