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Blue Jays use long ball for walkoff victory

TORONTO – Like a golfer admiring a drive, Blue Jays slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. crushed a home run on Tuesday and couldn’t help but hold the pose for an extra second to watch the ball fly over the wall.
Teammate Addison Barger provided some theatre of his own with a no-doubt blast — complete with a bat flip — in the ninth inning that gave Toronto a walkoff victory.
Bo Bichette also flashed some power with a game-tying solo homer before Barger ended it as the Blue Jays topped the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-4 for their 22nd comeback win of the season.
“Huge swing from him, huge swing from Bo, both with two strikes,” said Blue Jays manager John Schneider. “I love the way they went about it.”
It was the fifth time in franchise history that Toronto walked off a game with back-to-back homers. Barger also hit the game winner the last time it happened on Aug. 23 against the Los Angeles Angels.
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“I just don’t want to play extras,” Barger said with a laugh. “I don’t think anybody wants to play extras, so that’s all the motivation I really need.”

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Toronto (39-33) ended its three-game losing skid and improved to 23-13 at Rogers Centre.
Jeff Hoffman (6-2) threw an inning of relief for the win. Blue Jays right-hander Chris Bassitt had a quality start, allowing three earned runs and six hits over six frames.
Guerrero set the early tone with an RBI double that scored Barger in the first inning before delivering a majestic blast in the third that travelled 448 feet, a team best on the season.
“If you get the top of the order rolling, I think we’re pretty dangerous,” Schneider said.
The announced crowd of 38,537 roared as Guerrero casually dropped the bat to begin a slow trot around the bases. He was 3-for-4 on the night — his 22nd multi-hit game of the season — and had three RBIs.
Schneider moved Barger up a spot to No. 2 in the lineup between Bichette and Guerrero with Alejandro Kirk in the cleanup position.
The move paid dividends as the top third of the order scored five runs had seven of Toronto’s nine hits.
“I think Vladdy being comfortable in the three hole is real,” Schneider said. “The numbers are what they are and conversations with him are what they are.
“I’m glad it worked out today, but I think you have to have people around him to make it work.”
Diamondbacks reliever Shelby Miller (3-2) shouldered the loss as Arizona (36-36) fell back to the .500 mark. Josh Naylor of Mississauga, Ont., had two hits and a run for the Diamondbacks.
The Blue Jays had four outfielders — Will Robertson, Jonatan Clase, Myles Straw and Alan Roden — play in centre field over the course of the game.
Clase got the start but left the game after the fourth inning when he was hit by a pitch in the right knee area. He was replaced by Straw, who suffered a right ankle sprain in the next frame.
The three-game series continues on Wednesday night.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 17, 2025.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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Police in Ontario border town warn of TikTok door-kicking challenge

Police in LaSalle, Ont., say that residents of the community may have become the latest victims of a disturbing TikTok door-kicking challenge.
According to police, a number of people living in the Ramblewood neighbourhood had to deal with attempted break-and-enter and mischief incidents between 11:30 p.m. on Friday to 2 a.m. on Saturday.
In each incident, police say the front doors to the homes were kicked in before suspects fled the area.
“The incidents may be part of a TikTok challenge where participants kick the front doors of homes and then run away while filming the incident,” a release from police read.

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“The acts may cause undue distress on the home residents and can result in criminal charges for those who choose to participate.”
Police in LaSalle — which lies on the Canada-U.S. border just south of Windsor — join a growing list of services across Canada that have been forced to issue warnings about the challenge in which individuals bang, kick or damage a home’s door and run away, while documenting the incident on the social media platform.
Over the past few years, there were incidents in Cobourg and Port Dover in Ontario, as well as an incident in Squamish, B.C., which escalated into an altercation that sent two people to hospital.
In that incident, a homeowner who’d been dealing with the issue for a number of years, placed fishing wire outside his front door to catch the alleged culprits in the act.
The man told Global News that he and his wife landed in hospital as a result of the ensuing melee.

© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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Man fatally stabbed in Toronto’s east end, suspect sought – Toronto

Toronto police say a man has died after he was stabbed by another man in the city’s east end on Tuesday night.
Emergency crews were called to Danforth and Hillingdon avenues at around 11:03 p.m. for reports of a stabbing.
Police said a man in his 20s was found with stab wounds and rushed to hospital with life-threatening injuries.
In an update to Global News, police said the man died from his injuries.
The homicide unit has now taken over the investigation.

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Investigators are looking for one suspect, a man described as about five-foot-five with a thin build and he was wearing a grey hoodie and dark pants.
Anyone with information is asked to contact police.
Toronto Police block off the area where a man was fatally stabbed.
Global News
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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Indigenous Wellness Centre opens at Toronto’s St. Michael’s Hospital

As a patient, Jessica Demeria knows first hand how challenging the medical system can be for First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples.
“We may be looked at in a certain way with our underlying Indigenous history informing the way that we are cared for,” Demeria said. “A trauma-informed approach is absolutely one-on-one necessary.”
While Demeria is a patient, she is also part of the team at Unity Health Toronto that is working to change that experience for Indigenous patients.
Thanks to an $11-million investment from The Krawcyzky Family Foundation, a transformed space at St. Michael’s Hospital in downtown Toronto is set to become a new Indigenous Wellness Centre.
Roberta Pike is the director of Indigenous Wellness, Reconciliation and Partnerships at Unity Health Toronto.
“This gift has expanded our ability to have more patient-facing supports on the ground in the inpatient units and in the emergency department,” Pike said.
A significant milestone for Indigenous health:
Kevin Goldthorp, president and CEO of St. Michael’s and Providence Foundation, said to the hospital’s knowledge this donation represents the largest gift in Canada specifically earmarked for Indigenous wellness.
Goldthorp said it is a critical piece of the their ongoing commitment to reconciliation.

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“We are a hospital that cares about the Indigenous communities,” Goldthorp said, “We’re here for you, we care about how you’re cared for, we care for your care outcomes.”
This week, construction crews have been working around the clock for the ceremonial opening of the Indigenous Wellness Centre, scheduled for Wednesday, June 18, at St. Michael’s Hospital.
With Indigenous art, a specialized HVAC system to allow ceremonial smudging, and more space for families, Pike hopes people feel at home when they walk into the newly-renovated space.
“A lot of people have intergenerational trauma associated with places or environments, and hospitals seem to be one of those leading examples of spaces that might be triggering for people,” Pike said.
This centre marks the first phase of the many projects this donation will support. There are also plans for another wellness centre at Providence Healthcare.
According to the foundation, that site will include a medicine garden, sweat lodge, and sacred fire. The donation will also support an additional staffing position, support education and community engagement, and help expand patient access to elders and traditional care providers.
A national perspective on providing care:
Dr. Alika Lafontaine served as the president of the Canadian Medical Association in 2022. He was the first Indigenous physician and the youngest doctor to lead the organization.
Lafontaine said he believes centres like this improve health outcomes for Indigenous patients.
“You really have a huge opportunity to either mitigate past harm that’s happened and create a more welcoming environment, or to prevent the possibility of people experiencing that new harm.”
“Having these spaces is actually a really, really big part of why people end up going to a location or choosing to stay” Lafontaine said. “The health system hasn’t always been the best place for people who are First Nation, Inuit or Métis to receive care. Creating Indigenous-specific spaces, I think, is one of the ways that we create greater warmth and greater inclusion for folks who’ve had bad experiences in the past.”
Data from Statistics Canada shows between 2019 and 2022, about half of First Nations adults living off reserve reported having at least one chronic health condition compared with 40.6 per cent of non-Indigenous adults.
“The patients we see are coming to us, they’re very complex,” Pike said. “They have many layers of hurt, many layers (of) trauma, many layers (of) joy in their lives. And so we’re trying to kind of work through all of those different aspects.”
Pike hopes the services offered at this new wellness centre will provide more options to meet the needs of the patients she sees and serve as an example for other hospitals.
“We see the people that we interact with in the hospital as an extension of our own families,” Pike said. “The ways in which we would want to treat our own family members is exactly the same way in which want to serve the people who are here.”
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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