The Oklahoman

Overreacti­ons from opening weekend

- Gabe Lacques

It’s no time to raise the flag nor wave a white one.

Nonetheles­s, the four glorious days that marked the return of Major League Baseball still offered its viewers myriad chances to freak out over suboptimal performanc­e or conflate a nice couple of games with greatness.

And we’re here for you.

With just three or four games down and six months remaining, it’s premature but also harmless to kick around what mattered most as the curtain was slowly raised on the 2022 season. With that, here’s five overreacti­ons from MLB’s return after a 99-day lockout and abbreviate­d spring training finally gave way to an opening weekend:

•The Astros may never slow down.

You can distribute the protagonis­ts of their dynasty around the league – George Springer to Toronto, Carlos Correa to Minnesota – and still, nothing changes in Houston. The Astros’ dismantlin­g of the Angels over three of four games was an early sign that the machine will just keep rolling, even if AllStars and nefarious means of achievemen­t are taken away.

Behold Jeremy Peña, who was rarely spoken of as Correa’s replacemen­t because it was presumed the Astros would go big to replace Correa or even bring him back. Instead, the job went to Peña, seemingly by default, but the rookie was smooth in his first weekend on the job.

Peña homered Friday and had three hits Sunday, all while playing a steady and plenty competent shortstop. Meanwhile, old pal Justin Verlander looked a lot like his old self in losing a Saturday duel to Noah Syndergaar­d, two days after Framber Valdez proved more than worthy of an opening-day assignment. Deep lineup? On a day Yuli Gurriel was out on paternity leave, their best hitter, Kyle Tucker, batted sixth. Yeah, they can still bang with the best of them.

Check back Friday, when their first meeting with the upstart Mariners takes place in Seattle.

•The Dodgers’ biggest enemy? Paper.

There’s no conceivabl­e way adding Freddie Freeman to your lineup is a curse. Yet if you’re the Dodgers, it will certainly serve to set expectatio­ns in a most unattainab­le way.

L.A.’s latest rendition of a super team lost two of three games at Colorado, this with a lineup featuring seven former AllStars and three former MVPs in Freeman, Mookie Betts and Cody Bellinger.

Yet it was a weird weekend in the Mile High City – the Dodgers were shut out for 23 of 27 innings, with five- and four-run innings and nothing else in a win Friday and a loss Sunday. There will be times like these where the Dodgers’ offense is skittish, even streaky, and the immediate comparison won’t be the scoreboard but rather their own, eye-opening credential­s. Best team on paper, easily.

It’s not an easy way to live, even if – theoretica­lly – there’s still nobody in the NL West that can match up with them over the next 159 games.

• Go crazy for Mets-Philly, JaysYankee­s.

Narratives are whatever you want them to be, so why bother checking back in October to see how crucial this week’s Beasts of the Easts showdowns were? Let’s bang the drum right now.

Apologies to Atlanta, which has a championsh­ip ring to admire, and Tampa Bay, which can still rest comfortabl­y on 100-win laurels from a year ago. No, the expectatio­ns are through the roof in Flushing and Philly and Toronto and the Bronx, so why not freak out a bit over the two biggest series this week?

Minus Jacob deGrom, and facing an emaciated, retooling team in Washington, the Mets nonetheles­s looked fantastic in taking three of four from the Nationals. They’ll stuff their roster – total payroll, nearing $300 million – into an Acela car and steam into Philadelph­ia, where the lone team in their division similarly unafraid of the luxury tax awaits.

The beauty of the Mets and Phillies is that both teams are undeniably flawed, with New York in need of some tightening up on defense and a healthy deGrom return. Philadelph­ia is relying on a handful of what-ifs in its rotation and bullpen, even if adding Kyle Schwarber and Nick Castellano­s to the Bryce Harper-led core is daunting. Their first series of the year wraps up with a Max Scherzer-Aaron Nola duel on Wednesday afternoon.

It’s just one game but close your eyes a minute and imagine a similar matchup with even greater stakes – say, in September.

Same deal in the Bronx, where the expectatio­ns are high yet the chances of finishing fourth are also way too real. That’s because the Blue Jays have massive aspiration­s of their own, which were hardly tempered during an offensive bacchanal against Texas to open the season at a bonkers Rogers Centre.

Now, it’s time for La Gente del Barrio to get down to business. The Jays fell just one game shy of the Yankees’ and Red Sox’s 92-win wild card total last year, but come better armed for the haul. And they’ll trot ‘em all out for this four-game set: Gargantuan second-year righty Alek Manoah, $36 million fifth starter Yusei Kikuchi, Jose Berrios drawing Gerrit Cole and finally, Kevin Gausman taking on

Luis Severino in Thursday’s finale.

Can Gausman’s two-pitch repertoire hold up in the AL East? The Blue Jays bet $110 million that it will, and now he can test that against Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and the beguiling dimensions of Yankee Stadium.

•The Padres, strangely, are slept on.

It’s almost impossible to imagine, but hardly a soul is talking about the San Diego Padres.

Arguably the most hyped third-place team in history a year ago, the Padres did away with first-time manager Jayce Tingler and replaced him with one of the steadiest hands in the business, Bob Melvin. They promptly steamrolle­d the woeful Diamondbac­ks in three of four games (blowing a ninth-inning lead in the other.

A handful of players told the San Diego Union-Tribune that something is in the works, or that perhaps the old chain is in the shop. Either way, there was plenty of substance in their first three victories as they chart a first-half path without star shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr., still out with a wrist injury suffered in a motorcycle mishap.

Tatis is the MVP-caliber eye candy that gets fans and media alike almost irrational­ly fired up about this team. Yet they made some nice tweaks – most notably adding potential ace Sean Manaea, shedding the erratic Chris Paddack and fortifying the bullpen with Taylor Rogers.

• A mic can’t solve replay’s problems.

Lots of rave reviews for the new onfield umpire announceme­nts and it’s probably to be expected, this in a time where the populace turned Gene Steratore into an NFL celebrity and added “football move” neatly to its vernacular.

Sure, it’s nice that umpires will now explain if a play was overturned or not. At the same time, if a replay review is butchered in New York, the poor crew chief on the field can do nothing more but regurgitat­e the error. “Sorry folks,” he might say, “New York screwed this one up, too.”

Such candor, of course, is but a dream. And while the added transparen­cy is nice, it still can’t cut down on annoyingly long replay reviews that, at times, are erroneous, anyway.

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO/AP ?? Astros shortstop Jeremy Pena hits a double against the Angels on Sunday in Anaheim, Calif.
ALEX GALLARDO/AP Astros shortstop Jeremy Pena hits a double against the Angels on Sunday in Anaheim, Calif.
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