DETROIT - The Tigers avoided what manager Jim Leyland said could have been a "disastrous day."

Ryan Raburn's three-run double in the eighth inning capped a four-run rally that carried injury-depleted Detroit to a 6-5 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays and a split of their day-night doubleheader Sunday.

In the opener, Lyle Overbay hit a two-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning to snap a tie and send Toronto to a 5-3 win.

That came after the Tigers, already missing injured third baseman Brandon Inge, placed outfielder Magglio Ordonez and second baseman Carlos Guillen on the 15-day disabled list Sunday morning. Ordonez broke his right ankle and Guillen strained his right calf in Saturday's night's 3-2 loss to Toronto.

"That was impressive, losing both of those guys last night and coming back to get a split in the second game," Leyland said.

Miguel Cabrera hit an RBI double into the right-field corner on an 0-2 pitch from Jason Frasor (3-3) with one out in the eighth inning of the nightcap, cutting Detroit's deficit to 4-3. It scored Austin Jackson, who led off with a single, and sent pinch-hitter Ramon Santiago, who was hit by a pitch, to third.

Brennan Boesch was intentionally walked to load the bases and Raburn ripped Frasor's pitch into left-centre.

"I don't know what to say," Frasor said. "He went down and cracked a slider."

Phil Coke (6-1) pitched an inning of scoreless relief to get the win in a makeup of Friday night's rainout. Jose Valverde allowed Dewayne Wise's home run leading off the ninth but earned his 21st save in 22 chances.

The third-place Tigers moved within two games of AL Central-leading Chicago.

Toronto took a 1-0 lead in the fifth on Fred Lewis' two-out RBI triple. The Blue Jays added three runs in the sixth, chasing starter Jeremy Bonderman.

Jose Bautista hit the first pitch of the inning to left for his major league-leading 27th homer. Bonderman was replaced by Brad Thomas after a two-out walk to Edwin Encarnacion put runners on first and second. Wise's infield single brought in one run. Thomas was replaced by Eddie Bonine, who allowed an RBI single to John McDonald. Wise was tagged out between second and third to end the inning.

The Tigers scored twice in the bottom half to make it 4-2.

Johnny Damon's one-out infield single drove in Jackson, who led off with a triple. Cabrera followed with a single of his own, which sent Damon to third and starter Jesse Litsch to the showers. Brian Tallet came on and allowed Boesch's sacrifice fly.

Litsch allowed two runs and five hits in 5 1-3 innings. Bonderman gave up four runs and eight hits in 5 2-3 innings, striking out six.

"It's going to take a team effort for us to win ball games," Bonderman said.

Toronto, which leads the majors with 148 homers, scored all its runs in the first game on long balls. Jose Molina and Vernon Wells also homered, along with Overbay.

"That just seems to be what this club is all about," manager Cito Gaston said. "That seems to be the way we win."

Danny Worth went deep for Detroit in the first game and Jackson had three hits.

Scott Downs (4-5) escaped an eighth-inning jam to earn the win and Kevin Gregg pitched the ninth for his 23rd save in 27 opportunities.

Valverde (1-2) allowed Overbay's tiebreaking homer.

With Wells on first following a leadoff single that went off Valverde's left knee, Overbay took an 0-1 pitch to the opposite field and just over the left-field fence, beyond the glove of a leaping Raburn. It was Overbay's 11th home run.

"Honestly, I was just trying to get something in the gap and let Vernon do all the work," Overbay said. "He threw a lot of splitters and he hung one."

It was only the second home run Valverde has allowed his season.

"He likes the fastball out over the plate, so we were just trying to get over a splitter and he left it up," Tigers catcher Gerald Laird said. "It's a good piece of hitting."

Cabrera's run-scoring single in the bottom of the eighth tied it 3-3. Shawn Camp relieved starter Brett Cecil and yielded a leadoff triple to Jackson. Camp walked Santiago before getting Raburn to pop out. Cabrera then looped a single to centre to score Jackson and send Santiago to third.

Camp was replaced by Downs, who walked Boesch on a 3-2 pitch but struck out Scott Sizemore swinging and Jeff Larish looking to end the inning.

Wells broke a 2-2 tie when he led off the seventh with his 20th home run and first since June 27.

Molina's two-run shot in the sixth gave Toronto a 2-0 lead.

Detroit came back to tie it in the bottom half when Worth hit his second homer and Raburn hit a run-scoring double with two outs.

Cecil scattered six hits over seven innings, walked one and struck out six.

Tigers starter Armando Galarraga gave up three runs and six hits in seven innings. He didn't walk a batter and struck out five.