NEW YORK -- The Yankees hit five home runs in an inning for the first time in franchise history.
Brett Gardner, DJ LeMahieu and Luke Voit homered on consecutive pitches in the fourth inning from the Toronto Blue Jays' Chase Anderson on Thursday night. Voit's home run was his major league-leading 20th.
Aaron Hicks struck out, and Giancarlo Stanton and Gleyber Torres followed with home runs that gave the Yankees a 9-2 lead and chased Anderson. They went on to beat the Blue Jays 10-7.
The Yankees are the seventh team in MLB history to hit five home runs in an inning. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, they're the second team to do so off one pitcher; the Washington Nationals did it in 2017 against Michael Blazek and the Milwaukee Brewers.
Gary Sanchez hit a solo shot in the seventh to give the Yankees six homers on the night and 19 homers in the three-game series. According to Elias Sports Bureau data, that's the most in a series of any length in MLB history, passing the 1963 Minnesota Twins, who hit 17 homers in a four-game series against the Washington Senators.
The 19 homers also is the most in any three-game span in MLB history, according to Elias data.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.