Vancouver Sun

Jays’ Pearce finding his ‘comfort zone’

- ROB LONGLEY rlongley@postmedia.com

Before the calf injury that sent him to the disabled list back in May, Steve Pearce was struggling to get settled with his new team.

A slow start to the pre-season because of off-season elbow surgery was part of it for the utility fielder, but he never found momentum in the early going of the regular schedule, either.

Before the injury that kept him out of the lineup for 27 games, Pearce was batting .205 with six extra-base hits. Since returning to the lineup on June 15, Pearce is hitting .375 with seven extra-base hits, including a solo home run in Monday’s 4-3 win over the Red Sox.

“I’m just finding a comfort zone, that’s really it,” Pearce said of his recent surge at the plate.

“Mechanical­ly, you can do whatever you want but when you feel comfortabl­e, you can almost find a way to slow the game down.”

Jays manager John Gibbons said that Pearce is just now starting to realize the potential the club saw in him when he was a free agent signee last November.

“What happened to him was what happens to a lot of guys when they go to a new spot,” Gibbons said.

“You want to do well. You press and that was affecting him. Then he had the calf issue.

“It just like he’s settled in. He looks like those years watching him play for Baltimore. I think he’s a little more discipline­d now. He’s still aggressive, but he’s swinging at good pitches.”

HAPP-Y DAYS

Like many of his teammates, Tuesday’s starter J.A. Happ has been getting some prominent traction as possible trade material.

The 20-game winner from 2016 has rounded into form recently after an early-season stint on the DL. While Gibbons sees the appeal other teams would see in Happ, he doesn’t see the sense in the Jays moving him. “Really, he’s turned into one of the better pitchers in the league in the last couple of years in my opinion,” Gibbons said. “I don’t get involved in it, but he’d be a tough guy to trade.”

POMPEY SETBACK

Reports out of Buffalo indicate that the rehab efforts of injured Jays outfielder Dalton Pompey have hit another setback.

Pompey, who was recovering from a knee injury with the triple-A Bisons, hasn’t played in 10 days and the Jays have placed the hardluck Canadian on the 60-day DL.

QUICK HITS

Francisco Liriano threw a bullpen session before batting practice on Tuesday afternoon and came out of it feeling strong and not bothered by the neck issues that forced him out of Saturday’s game in Detroit. With that in mind, Gibbons expects him to be ready on Thursday’s finale of the Red Sox series.

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