Regina Leader-Post

It gets late early — just ask these five MLB clubs

After two weeks, would-be competitor­s are playing their way out of contention

- DAVE SHEININ

Two weeks into a baseball season, with roughly one-13th of your schedule played, is typically no time to panic. The 1991 Minnesota Twins, 2002 Anaheim Angels and 2011 St. Louis Cardinals, to name a few prominent examples, were 4-9, 4-8 and 5-7 at the two-week marks in their respective seasons, and all went on to win the World Series.

But two weeks is enough time to discern trends, identify problem areas and, in some cases, begin to acknowledg­e that teams might not be what we expected.

Two weeks into this season, four of the 10 teams that made the post-season just half a year ago — including the American League Championsh­ip Series combatants — find themselves under .500, as do the St. Louis Cardinals, who finished just a game out of the wild card in 2016. All five had designs on the playoffs this fall. (And this doesn’t even include the defending champion Chicago Cubs, who got off to a 6-6 start.)

Of particular note to St. Louis and Toronto: In the wild card era, which began in 1995, 53 teams have started the season 3-9 or worse after 12 games, and only three (2000 Giants, 2001 A’s and 2007 Phillies) reached the post-season, with all three losing their first series.

Here is a look at those five slowstarti­ng championsh­ip aspirants and what level of panic, on a scale of 1 to 10, each should be feeling heading into Monday’s games:

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

Last year: 89-73, second place in AL East, lost in ALCS

This year: 2-10, fifth place

The Blue Jays are a bona fide disaster, with the worst record in baseball and the worst 12-game start in franchise history. Two starting pitchers (J.A. Happ and Aaron Sanchez) went on the disabled list over the weekend, slugger Josh Donaldson is sidelined indefinite­ly with a strained calf and rival executives are already salivating over the talented pieces that could become available if — when? — the Blue Jays decide to punt on 2017.

The Jays thought they could absorb the free agency losses of slugger Edwin Encarnacio­n and reliever Brett Cecil, among others, this winter, but so far, their offence looks old and sluggish, scoring nearly two runs per game fewer than they did in 2016. Their pitching staff, which led the league in ERA in 2016, has dropped to 12th in 2017.

Panic level: 8

CLEVELAND INDIANS

Last year: 94-67, first place in AL Central, lost in World Series

This year: 5-7, fifth place

The Indians are 2-7 since sweeping their season-opening series against the Texas Rangers. (They also drew just 17,739 to Progressiv­e Field for their game Sunday against division rival Detroit, but that’s a story for another time.)

The Indians’ biggest problem thus far is the slow starts of some veteran hitters with solid track records — including Edwin Encarnacio­n (.622 OPS so far) and Carlos Santana (.672). Two-time all-star second baseman Jason Kipnis, their regular No. 2 hitter, is on a rehabilita­tion assignment and should be back within a matter of days. Panic level: 1

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS

Last year: 87-75, second place in NL West, lost in NLDS

This year: 5-9, fifth place

The Giants had an awful week, losing catcher Buster Posey (concussion) and outfielder Jarrett Parker (broken collarbone) to injuries, helping shortstop Brandon Crawford grieve the death of his sister-in-law and, almost inconseque­ntially, going 3-4 at home against Arizona and Colorado.

But Posey could return as soon as Tuesday and the unit that proved to be the Giants’ undoing in 2016 — the bullpen — has proven to be a strength. In the just-concluded Rockies series, Giants relievers combined to pitch 10 1/3 innings without allowing an earned run or an inherited runner to score.

Meanwhile, Madison Bumgarner, Jeff Samardzija and Matt Moore are a combined 1-7. There’s a good chance that won’t continue.

Panic level: 2

TEXAS RANGERS

Last year: 95-67, first place in AL West, lost in ALDS

This year: 4-8, fifth place

The culprit here is easy to identify: a leaky bullpen that has converted just one save out of six total chances — already blowing three leads of at least four runs — while pitching to a 6.27 ERA. As a result, the Rangers are 0-8 in games in which they score fewer than eight runs. They appear prepared to yank Sam Dyson out of the closer’s job and give it to Matt Bush, the flame-out shortstop prospect turned lights-out setup man. But that, of course, only serves to weaken the eighth inning while strengthen­ing the ninth.

Panic level: 4

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS

Last year: 86-76, second place in NL Central

This year: 3-9, fifth place

The Cardinals are off to their worst start since 1988, following a just-completed 1-5 road trip to Washington and the Bronx, and there are problems everywhere. In three starts, Adam Wainwright still hasn’t recorded an out in the sixth inning. New centre-fielder Dexter Fowler (.143/.222/.163) has been atrocious at the plate. The defence, a primary focus of the Cardinals’ off-season, committed six errors on their road trip. And the bullpen has a 7.34 ERA.

The Cardinals’ best reason for hope is that the Cubs haven’t run away with the division, or shown signs they’ll do so. But hoping for that to continue is not a smart bet.

Panic level: 5

So far, the Toronto Blue Jays offence looks old and sluggish.

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