#VladimirGuerrero #Jrthree #homeruns #TorontoBlue NEW YORK — Vladimir Guerrero Jr. shrugged off a bloody wound on his right ring finger to hit three home runs, including two from ace Gerrit Cole, against the Yankees. The Toronto Blue Jays beat New York 6-4 on Wednesday night. George Springer hit a tied single in the seventh, Toronto held off the Yankees despite homers from Anthony Rizzo, Aaron Judge and Gleb Torres, and in the eighth , Flanker Giancarlo Stanton was stuck in the warning lane. Guerrero played an important role in this. The AL MVP runner-up hit Cole for a home run in the first inning, accidentally hit first base in the second, then drove a two-run save on Cole in the third to save Toronto to a 3-0 lead. He doubled for Cole in the sixth -- prompting the pitcher to put on a show for the 23-year-old by flipping -- and then launched a 443-foot lead homer against Jonathan Loisiga in the eighth Hit to lead 5-3. It was Guerrero's second career triple and hit a career-high on April 27 against Washington. He was already on deck when teammate Bobby Chet entered the finals in ninth place, giving him no chance of hitting a major league record of four home runs in a single game. Guerrero leads the majors with four homers in six games after leading the majors with 48 homers last season. Jordan Romano was ninth in his fourth saves of the season. He has converted 27 chances in a row. Even he got help from Guerrero -- in the final, with a sharp inside glove from Josh Donaldson on his left hand. Blue Jays outfielder Tesco Hernandez left the field in pain and discomfort on the left wing after a sixth-round exit. Guerrero appeared to have to play in the second inning when base runner Aaron Hicks stepped on his bare thrower. Guerrero had to go over his body to catch Bichette's pitch and put his right hand behind the first basebag for balance. Hicks stepped on it and threw an infield single. The fourth-year major leaguer immediately started waving, then walked toward the Toronto dugout, spattering blood on his uniform and lawn. In a show of tenacity sure to please Toronto hockey fans, Guerrero put a piece of coaching tape on his wound, and he jogged back to first base a few minutes later. With a bloodstain on the right thigh of his pants, he hit the top of the 3-pointer again, turning Cole's 98-mile fastball into a 427-foot, two-barrel hom