Sunday's matinee in Toronto is the back end of a 3-game set, and on paper it sets up as Will Warren for the Yankees against Patrick Corbin for the Blue Jays. Corbin has been a disaster in June (10.13 ERA over 2 starts, both losses), which is the kind of pitching line that makes a Yankees lineup missing its best 3 hitters still look dangerous. The bigger story is how the Bombers keep winning without Judge, Stanton, and Dominguez in the lineup. Aaron Judge is out 4-to-6 weeks with a stress fracture in his right rib, and Ben Rice has basically taken over the offense in his absence. Cody Bellinger and Trent Grisham are running the outfield, Spencer Jones is getting looks, and somehow the Yankees just took 3 of 4 from Cleveland on the road. Toronto has been the opposite of consistent. The Blue Jays took the first 2 from Baltimore last week, then traded punches with the Phillies (won 1, lost 2), and now sit at 33-36 — already 8 games back of New York in the division. Schneider's group is also navigating a banged-up roster, and the help isn't all the way back yet. There is a real glimmer for Toronto on the injury front: Alejandro Kirk (thumb) could be back from the 60-day IL as soon as Friday per Schneider, which would be a massive lineup upgrade in time for this series. Daulton Varsho's wrist is still a day-to-day question mark, and the rotation depth has been gutted with Berrios (Tommy John), Bieber (rehabbing), and Bowden Francis all out. Corbin is starting Sunday because the alternatives are worse. The Yankees' play through this stretch is the tell. They're 4-0-1 over their last 5 with their MVP on the shelf and an All-Star DH in street clothes, and the pitching staff has been carrying them the way the front office hoped it would when they invested in it. If Warren keeps the ball in the yard against a Toronto lineup that hasn't scared anybody all year, this should be a sweep waiting to happen. First pitch is 1:37 PM ET at Rogers Centre. Series wrap, getaway day, and a chance for New York to leave Canada with a sweep and a chokehold on the division.