TORONTO — Corey Koskie hit a three-run homer in the first inning and Torii Hunter also had three RBIs as the Minnesota Twins won their third straight, beating the Toronto Blue Jays 10-6.
Dustan Mohr and David Ortiz also homered for the Twins, who won three of four against Toronto.
Chris Woodward and Raul Mondesi homered for the Blue Jays, who had won their first two games of the season.
Staked to a 4-0 lead in first, Brad Radke (1-0) didn't allow a hit until Carlos Delgado hit a bloop double with one out in the fourth.
Brian Cooper (0-1) started in place of Scott Eyre, moved up in the rotation to fill in for the injured Chris Carpenter. Cooper allowed seven runs and six hits in five innings.
INDIANS 5, TIGERS 1: At Detroit, C.C. Sabathia's no-hit bid was stopped by Randall Simon's single leading off the eighth inning, and the Cleveland Indians went on to beat the winless Detroit Tigers.
After Simon lined a clean single to center on the first pitch of the eighth, Jose Macias hit into a double play. Wendell Magee reached on an infield single and Andres Torres had an RBI triple for his first major league hit.
Bob Wickman got his third save, completing Cleveland's first sweep at Detroit since 1996.
Sabathia (1-0), who struck out two and walked two, was trying to be the first Cleveland pitcher to throw a no-hitter since Len Barker's perfect game against Toronto on May 15, 1981.
At 0-6, the Tigers are off to their worst start since 1992. The team record for losses at the start of a season is 13, set in 1920.
ROYALS 9, WHITE SOX 2: At Kansas City, Mo., Chuck Knoblauch snapped an 0-for-16 skid with a two-run double in the seventh inning, sending Jeff Suppan and the Kansas City Royals over the Chicago White Sox.
A day after Kansas City lost 14-0 to the White Sox, Suppan (1-0) held them to one run on six hits and no walks in seven innings. The only run he allowed came on Frank Thomas' broken-bat homer in the first.
The Royals took a 3-1 lead into the seventh before breaking it open against three relievers.
White Sox starter Todd Ritchie (0-1), who pitched a one-hitter against the Royals last July while with the Pittsburgh Pirates, had retired 12 straight batters entering the sixth.