Adrian Houser hurls another gem as White Sox halt Blue Jays' 10-game win streak

The veteran right-hander got sick in the dugout but recovered superbly to lower his ERA to 1.56.

Adrian Houser delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays during the fourth inning at Rate Field on Wednesday.

Adrian Houser delivers a pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays during the fourth inning at Rate Field on Wednesday.

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The heat and humidity got to right-hander Adrian Houser on a stifling Wednesday afternoon at Rate Field, but the red-hot Blue Jays did not.

The White Sox’ top trade chip vomited in the dugout after escaping a first-inning jam, then settled in for six more innings of bend-but-don’t-break ball that improved his record to 5-2 and lowered his ERA to a dazzling 1.56.

“Puke and rally,” Houser laughed in the clubhouse after the Sox’ 2-1 victory. “Once I get it out, it’s all good. Ready to rock and roll.”

The midseason signing has sparkled in nine starts, the latest one ending Toronto’s 10-game winning streak with the help of rookie catcher Edgar Quero, who went 2-for-3 with two doubles and an RBI, and second baseman Lenyn Sosa, who added an RBI single.

First baseman Tim Elko — called up Wednesday after utility player Brooks Baldwin went on the injured list — struggled at the plate in his third taste of the majors, going 0-for-3 with three strikeouts.

But he flashed some leather, nabbing a hard liner off the bat of Jays second baseman Leo Jimenez and doubling Myles Straw off second base to help Houser escape a bumpy second inning with only one run surrendered. Elko turned a double play to get Houser out of a sixth-inning jam, too.

Rookie flamethrower Grant Taylor shut down the heart of the Jays’ potent offense in the eighth inning, and reliever Jordan Leasure sealed his second save of the season.

Not Teeling it

The injury to Baldwin, the team’s emergency catcher, means fans likely won’t be seeing Quero and fellow prized rookie backstop Kyle Teel, 23, in the lineup together anytime soon.

That only has happened five times since Teel, the Sox’ No. 2 prospect, joined Quero, 22, on the big-league squad with his call-up last month.

Manager Will Venable said he’ll usually keep them separated to avoid getting caught in a roster pickle.

“It’s much easier to have one of them on the bench,’’ he said. ‘‘You do get into some binds if you DH one of them, but that’s something that we’re open and willing to do if the time is right. It can handcuff you there a little bit.”

Both young catchers have shown promise at the plate. Quero (.275/.353/.474) has been a heart-of-the-order mainstay as one of the team’s best contact hitters since his April debut. He hit his first career home run last weekend at Colorado and also has picked off three baserunners.

Teel (.246/.390/.311) still is looking for his first homer to go with four doubles and four RBI.

Honoring Jenks

Before the game, the Sox unveiled a sign with a comic-book-style image of late closer Bobby Jenks on the wall behind home plate adjacent to their dugout.

Sox players will wear No. 45 patches on their uniforms in Jenks’ honor starting with the game Thursday against the Guardians, entering the 2005 World Series reunion weekend at Rate Field.

Jenks, who died last week after a battle with stomach cancer, was laid to rest Wednesday after funeral services in Portugal.

A new sign honoring late closer Bobby Jenks was placed next to the Sox' dugout at Rate Field.

A new sign honoring late closer Bobby Jenks was placed next to the Sox’ dugout at Rate Field.

Mitchell Armentrout/Sun-Times

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