The Hamilton Spectator

JAYS STRUGGLE

- GREGORY STRONG

TORONTO — It perhaps speaks to the nature of the Blue Jays’ disappoint­ing year that arguably the team’s most memorable highlight was delivered by a prospect in a pre-season game.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a walk-off homer in a 1-0 win over St. Louis in March in Montreal, the city where his father played eight seasons of Hall of Fame ball. The magical moment left Toronto fans salivating for the future.

The Jays are struggling in most areas of their game and Tuesday start a sixgame homestand with a record of 26-33, good for fourth place in the AL East.

It’s still early in the 162-game season, but teams usually have a good idea of what they’re made of once the twomonth mark rolls around.

At the moment, Toronto looks like it has a better chance of finishing in the league basement than it does of earning a wild-card spot.

The starting rotation that was expected to be the team’s strong point has largely been a bust. The bullpen already is showing signs of overuse. The bats have been way too quiet. Starter Aaron Sanchez has battled control issues, but at least had a promising start in a win in Detroit on Sunday. Meanwhile, Marcus Stroman is sidelined with shoulder woes and both Marco Estrada and Jaime Garcia have bloated earned-run averages.

Only J.A. Happ is enjoying a decent campaign among the full-time starting staff, fuelling speculatio­n he could be on the move as the trade deadline approaches.

The Blue Jays looked like potential contenders after posting a 15-10 record in April. Most of that optimism was snuffed by a dismal 9-19 May. Toronto, 1-6 on its last homestand, is coming off a 3-6 road swing and has a key stretch of games against American League East rivals on tap.

The powerhouse Yankees will visit Rogers Centre for a pair of games, followed by Baltimore for four games and then a three-game visit to Tampa. The lowly Orioles and slumping Rays could be just what Toronto needs to kick-start a return to form.

Entering Monday’s games, Toronto was 14th in the 15-team American League with a .229 team average. Only three AL teams have struck out more often than the Blue Jays (525), who are tied for 12th with a .309 team on-base percentage.

Off-season acquisitio­n Yangervis Solarte leads the club with 12 homers and 36 RBIs. Teoscar Hernandez looks like the real deal at the plate and Justin Smoak is on track for a solid year.

But too many players are underperfo­rming. Randal Grichuk has nine hits in 28 games and Devon Travis is batting .200. Kendrys Morales has four homers this season and Russell Martin is batting .174. Josh Donaldson’s contract year started with a stint on the disabled list for a shoulder problem and he’s back on the DL now with a calf issue. The veteran slugger has five homers in 36 games along with a .234 average.

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 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Vladimir Guerrero Jr. celebrates his walk-off home run that beat the St. Louis Cardinals, 1-0, in spring training in Montreal.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Vladimir Guerrero Jr. celebrates his walk-off home run that beat the St. Louis Cardinals, 1-0, in spring training in Montreal.

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