TORONTO — Bobby Valentine drummed his fingers angrily on his desk, frustrated at a pitching change he hadn’t made. More than any defeat in a disappointing April, this one was gnawing at the Red Sox manager.

Kyle Drabek won for the first time since June, Edwin Encarnacion homered and the Toronto Blue Jays beat Boston 7-3 on Tuesday night, spoiling right-hander Daniel Bard’s first Red Sox start and dropping the Red Sox to 1-4, another slow start for a team that opened last season with six losses.

Valentine was upset, not for the way he handled Bard’s rotation debut but for failing to take reliever Justin Thomas out when the Blue Jays loaded the bases with no outs in the sixth.

“I should have brought in (Matt) Albers there with the bases loaded,” a frustrated Valentine said. “It might have still been a 3-1 game if we get a great ground ball there, and maybe we would have won that game.”

Instead, Toronto catcher J.P. Arencibia drove in two runs with a broken-bat single and Colby Rasmus followed with a sacrifice fly, putting the Blue Jays up 6-1.

So, why did Valentine decide to stick with Thomas?

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“Just a dumb move,” he said. “I don’t like being dumb. I like doing what I’m supposed to do.”

Making his first career start after 192 relief appearances, Bard saw his first pitch laced through the left side for a single by Toronto shortstop Yunel Escobar. Two outs later, Escobar advanced to third when Adam Lind grounded a double down the third-base line, then scored on Encarnacion’s infield single.

Toronto tacked on two in the third. Escobar and Kelly Johnson led off with back-to-back singles, Jose Bautista struck out and Lind lined an RBI single to center. One out later, Brett Lawrie chopped a single through the right side, scoring Johnson.

Bard (0-1) allowed five runs and eight hits in five-plus innings, walked one and struck out a career-high six.

“He pitched good enough to win if we scored runs,” Valentine said. “Not quite the results we were looking for and I know he’s a little disappointed but you take that 30 times a year, you’re going to get a lot of wins out of it. I’d bet anything on that.”

Seven of the eight hits off Bard were singles, and most were grounders that scooted through the infield on the artificial turf.

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“I feel good about how I threw,” Bard said. “The results obviously stunk, I recognize that and I’m frustrated with it, but I wouldn’t change the way I threw.”

Drabek (1-0) struggled in two starts against Boston last season, allowing 12 runs and 15 hits and taking the loss in a 14-1 home defeat on June 12, his last start before being demoted to Triple-A.

Drabek was much sharper this time, giving up one run and three hits in 51/3 innings and setting down nine straight in one stretch. He walked three and struck out four.

“Tonight was another step and sign of his maturity as a pitcher,” Blue Jays Manager John Farrell said of Drabek.

Kevin Youkilis of Boston noticed Drabek’s control.

“He was commanding the zone,” Youkilis said. “He kind of went in and out and knew where the ball was going a little bit more than he used to. He got ahead and stayed ahead.”

Jason Frasor and Luis Perez each worked 11/3 innings, and Casey Janssen gave up a two-run double to Adrian Gonzalez in the ninth before David Ortiz was caught looking at strike three, stranding runners at second and third.

 


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