The Peterborough Examiner

As Jays struggle, Guerrero closer to Bisons

- RICHARD GRIFFIN Baseball Columnist

If a picture was worth a thousand words, then the image of Blue Jays manager John Gibbons leaning helplessly over a rail in the dugout Thursday night at Fenway Park, as all-star lefthander J.A. Happ tried to extricate himself from a messy fourth inning would be all that this column needed.

Truly, managing this ragtag Jays group is like solving a Rubik’s Cube that has only seven blue squares.

Meanwhile, the good news. The crown jewel of the Jays’ prospects, 19-year-old third baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr., is completing the final steps of recovery from a left knee injury suffered in a baserunnin­g incident at Double-A New Hampshire. He has turned heads all season, making a case at the age of 19 for already being in the majors. He is in Florida at the moment, on hold with a .407 average and a 1.124 OPS, with 11 homers and 55 RBIs in 204 Fisher Cats at-bats.

A Jays source has confirmed that instead of going straight to Triple-A Buffalo after he is activated, the almost-healthy young Dominican slugger will play in a few league games at Class-A Dunedin and with the rookieleve­l Blue Jays in the Gulf Coast League.

Guerrero is being encouraged by the Jays to attend the July 27-29 Hall of Fame induction of his father, Vladimir Sr., at Cooperstow­n, a gem of a village that is coincident­ally about a threehour drive from Buffalo.

The Bisons are on a road trip to Louisville and Indianapol­is that week and return to Coca-Cola Field for a four-game series July 30. Depending on how the Jays feel about his progress, his promotion may be earlier. The Bisons are on a one-week homestand from July 16-22, as the MLB All-Star Game takes place in D.C.

Turning attention back to the Jays, the big-league club is crawling toward the all-star break without starters Aaron Sanchez (bruised finger), Jaime Garcia (left shoulder) and Marco Estrada (glute), and minus closer Ryan Tepera (right elbow). On the position player side, they are still without Josh Donaldson (left calf ) and, of course, shortstop Troy Tulowitzki (double bone spurs), who is close to resuming baseball activities, but not close to resuming baseball.

Happ remains the biggest trade chip for the Jays, but if the return in prospects or major-league players was simply based on “what have you done for me lately,” then GM Ross Atkins would be in trouble.

Happ needed 98 pitches to record 11 outs Thursday, leaving after a fabulous 13-pitch at-bat by leading MVP candidate Mookie Betts that turned a 2-1 lead into a 5-2 deficit. In the month of July, in three starts surroundin­g his all-star nod, Happ has allowed 18 runs in 12 innings. He has given up 19 hits, eight walks and four home runs, with a 9.75 ERA and a 1.074 OPS. The all-star left-hander has thrown 279 pitches to record 36 outs, which works out to 7.8 pitches per out.

The Jays, in the situation in which they find themselves, need almost perfect defence in order to win and they are not getting it. Facing a grinding Red Sox lineup in the fourth inning of Game 1, Happ induced a ground ball to short with one out, a runner on first base, and a two-run lead. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. shovelled the Brock Holt grounder to Devon Travis, but he rocked back on the relay and took his foot off the base with the ball still in the air. The call was overturned on review.

From there it was all downhill for the Jays. Happ contribute­d by slow-playing a chopper in front of the plate that loaded the bases. After a forceout produced the first run, he had a chance to escape with the lead, but turned a two-strike advantage into a base on balls to Jackie Bradley Jr., setting up the Betts slam.

Could life get any worse for the Jays heading toward the break? After Gibbons watched first baseman Justin Smoak clutch at his left hamstring legging out a double in the eighth, he was forced to pinch-run for him. By the end of the game, trailing by just two runs, the Jays were left with a makeshift infield of Yangervis Solarte at first, Travis at second, Gurriel at shortstop and Russell Martin at third.

What has happened? As a Jays fan, just take yourself back to the middle of spring training. The discussion at the time had the Jays as a top-five rotation in the AL.

Three of those starters are on the shelf right now, while Marcus Stroman, three months in, is just now rebounding to form.

In terms of competing with the rest of the AL moving forward, consider that the Jays’ pitching staff has a better batting average (. 278) than the position players (. 237) and that the top 10 hitters, heading into Friday’s contest at Fenway, range in average between Martin at .179 and Teoscar Hernandez at .259.

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