Sacramento A’s game wrap: Langeliers’ Late Heroics Stolen in Blue Jays Walk-Off Thriller 3-2

Sacramento A’s Shea Langeliers (23) celebrates his home run with Tyler Soderstrom (21) as the Toronto Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk (right) looks on at Rogers Place in Toronto on Fri Mar 27, 2026 (Canadian Press via AP)

Langeliers’ Late Heroics Stolen in Blue Jays Walk-Off Thriller 3-2

By Mauricio Segura

For much of Friday night’s Season Opener, it felt like a pitching clinic wrapped in a tense, low-scoring chess match as the Toronto Blue Jays edged the Sacramento A’s at Rogers Place 3-2 to open the regular season between both clubs. Then the late innings arrived, and everything flipped.

The A’s and Blue Jays spent the early innings trading zeros, with Kevin Gausman and Luis Severino setting the tone. Gausman was sharp from the outset, striking out the side in the first inning and piling up swings and misses with his splitter. Through three innings, the Green and Gold had little to show but strikeouts and weak contact, unable to solve his mix of velocity and late movement.

Severino matched him pitch for pitch early on. Toronto’s lineup, featuring George Springer and Vladimir Guerrero Jr., struggled to generate anything beyond a walk starting out. Balls were put in play, but rarely with authority, as Severino worked efficiently and kept the Blue Jays off balance through the first four innings.

The game’s first crack came in the top of the fourth, and it came with catcher finesse. Shea Langeliers stepped in and launched a 375-foot home run to left field, breaking the scoreless tie and giving the Athletics a 1-0 lead. It was a moment that briefly shifted momentum, especially given how dominant Gausman had been to that point.

Toronto, like a good poker hand saw the A’s single run and raised it in the fifth. After a walk and a double set the table, Andrés Giménez delivered the biggest swing of the night to that point, ripping a triple to left field that brought in two runs. In a blink, the Blue Jays had flipped the game, taking a 2-1 lead and energizing their dugout.

From there, the game tightened again. The A’s bullpen held firm, with Scott Barlow and Hogan Harris combining to keep Toronto off the board over the next few innings. At the same time, the Athletics offense struggled to mount a response. A promising seventh inning fizzled when a double play erased a potential rally, and by the eighth, the sense of urgency was unmistakable.

Still, baseball has a way of saving its drama for the final act.

In the top of the ninth, down to their last outs, the Athletics turned once again to Langeliers. With one out, he delivered in stunning fashion, crushing a 414-foot home run to center field to tie the game at 2-2. It was his second homer of the night, a solo blast that breathed life back into the Athletics and silenced the Toronto crowd, at least momentarily.

The inning had a brief flicker of more. Tyler Soderstrom reached first after striking out on a wild pitch, but the rally stalled there as the next two hitters went down swinging. Still, the damage was done. The game was tied, and momentum had swung.

That set the stage for a tense bottom of the ninth.

After two quick outs, it looked like the Athletics might force extra innings. But the Jays wanted to shut the cage and fly coop for the night. Masataka Okamoto kept the inning alive with a single, and Ernie Clement followed with a clutch double to left, putting runners at second and third and bringing the winning run just 90 feet away.

Giménez, already responsible for Toronto’s earlier breakthrough, stepped in again with a chance to end it. He did not miss. Lacing a single to right field, he drove in Okamoto from third, sealing a 3-2 walk-off victory for the Blue Jays and completing a night where timely hitting made all the difference.

For the Athletics, the loss stung, especially after Langeliers’ heroics gave them a second life. His two home runs accounted for all of the team’s scoring and were easily the standout performance of the night. But outside of those swings, the offense struggled to sustain pressure against Gausman and Toronto’s bullpen.

On the other side, the Blue Jays leaned on situational hitting and patience. Giménez’s triple and walk-off single highlighted a lineup that capitalized when opportunities finally appeared, even in a game dominated by pitching.

Costa Rican-born Mauricio Segura has covered sports in the Bay Area since 2001 for various magazines and newspapers, as well as his own publication, The Golden Bay Times. 2026 marks his 15th season covering Athletics baseball.

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