TORONTO — The complete José Caballero experience was on full display Sunday.Caballero played three different positions (second base, third base, left field), hit a three-run home run 420 feet to ice the game in the ninth inning and spent several minutes arguing with home plate umpire Steven Jaschinski, which earned him an “intentional delay” warning over the PA system.Of all that, it was the intentional delay that irked Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider.In the sixth inning of the New York Yankees’ 8-3 win, Jaschinski stopped the game when there were nine seconds left on the pitch clock and with Caballero in the batter’s box. Caballero was still looking at the dirt and lifted his head to acknowledge Blue Jays reliever Spencer Miles with eight seconds remaining.By rule, batters must be in the box and alert to the pitcher by the eight-second mark or they’ll be charged with an automatic strike.So Caballero did nothing wrong. That caused the Yankees’ utilityman to get in a prolonged argument with Jaschinski.“There’s a lot of major league players in this league,” Schneider said. “There seems to be one guy that has an issue with it. It sucks that a pitcher like Spencer Miles has to sit out there for as long as he did. Seems like it could have been handled a lot quicker and a lot more efficiently than it was. But, again, that’s not why we lost, but it’s Major League Baseball, everyone knows the rules.”