By Tim Britton / MLB.com TORONTO -- Derek Jeter and Robinson Cano each delivered a pair of RBI doubles to the opposite field on Sunday in a four-run eighth inning that lifted the Yankees past the Blue Jays, 4-3, at Rogers Centre. Blue Jays starter Brandon Morrow had controlled the Yankees' bats through the first seven innings, but he departed after hitting Francisco Cervelli in the left shoulder with a fastball to lead off the eighth. The Toronto bullpen, which threw six scoreless innings on Saturday, couldn't pick up the six outs it needed on Sunday. Scott Downs replaced Morrow and promptly hit Brett Gardner on the right wrist. With the Yankees just 2-for-23 in the series with runners in scoring position entering Jeter's at-bat, the captain lined a double just inside the right-field foul line to cut Toronto's lead to 2-1. Jason Frasor then came in and struck out Nick Swisher, who thought he held up on a checked swing. So did manager Joe Girardi, who ran out of the dugout with his hat already off and proceeded to be ejected by home-plate umpire Bruce Dreckman. After an intentional walk to Mark Teixeira and with an 0-2 count on Alex Rodriguez, Frasor uncorked a wild pitch that tied the game. Rodriguez struck out looking with a pair of runners in scoring position, but Cano picked him up with a double down the left-field line that gave the Yankees the lead. The late-inning outburst made a winner out of deserving right-hander Javier Vazquez, who surrendered one hit in seven spectacular innings. Vazquez had a no-hitter through 5 2/3 inning before he walked Adam Lind and hung an 0-2 slider that Vernon Wells launched into the left-field seats to give the Jays a short-lived 2-0 lead. That was the lone blemish on the final line for Vazquez, who struck out a season-high nine in evening his record to 5-5 -- no minor accomplishment considering the way his season started. Vazquez mixed his fastball, slider and changeup to plow through the powerful Toronto order. The changeup was especially effective against Toronto's four left-handed hitters, whose five combined strikeouts all came swinging on the change.