The Telegram (St. John's)

Jays pondering pitching plans

- ROB LONGLEY POSTMEDIA NEWS

DUNEDIN, Fla. — Even when things are running smoothly and camp is quiet, manager John Schneider and pitching coach Pete Walker are two of the busiest men at Blue Jays spring training.

There are meetings stacked upon meetings, drills upon drills, roster decisions to be made and most importantl­y in the present, piecing together the team’s complicate­d pitching puzzle.

With four injuries altering plans – two to starters and two to significan­t arms in the bullpen — there’s plenty of moving parts with the season opener now just five days away.

It certainly made for an interestin­g split squad Saturday for the Schneider-walker tandem, who were at TD Ballpark to oversee Yusei Kikuchi’s shaky final spring start and had pondered a post-game drive south to see Yariel Rodriguez make his second start of the pre-season in Sarasota.

The pair ultimately opted not to make the trip south on a busy Saturday on the Gulf Coast highways and will rely on a detailed report from their staff. But the larger point, according to Schneider, is that the Jays haven’t ruled the Cuban free agent signee as a possibilit­y to start on the opening weekend and depending on how things play out, Rodriguez could be required sooner than later.

That in itself is the bind they find themselves in after a bumpy exhibition run for the pitching staff.

“There’s a lot going on between the bullpen and rotation,” Schneider said on Saturday morning. “It’s not so much performanc­e, it’s how everything lines up in the next couple of days.”

Here’s what the Jays know definitive­ly thus far:

Jose Berrios, who pitched an intra-squad on Friday as his final tune up gets the opening day start at the Trop.

Chris Bassitt, who is expected to start against the Phillies on Sunday in Clearwater on Sunday gets the ball for Game 2.

Kikuchi, who struggled with his command on Saturday in a 10-7 loss to the Tigers, makes his 2024 debut in the third of four games in the opening series. Kikuchi was rocked hard by Tigers hitters, allowing eight runs on six hits through 3.1 innings.

Sure there was a hefty wind at

TD Ballpark, but the Japanese lefty still surrendere­d three home runs.

The final known spot goes to Bowden Francis, one of the good-news stories of the spring, rounds out the Trop stop.

After that, it gets, well, complicate­d. Kevin Gausman is the front runner, if he’s ready, but behind him are a list of contingenc­ies, including Rodriguez.

“I think just executing,” Schneider said, when asked what he’d be looking for from the newcomer’s outing against the Orioles.

“We know what his stuff is. It’s just (seeing how) he’s executing against a pretty good lineup.”

Should the team decide Gausman isn’t ready — a distinct possibilit­y — that is where the numerous contingenc­ies start coming into play.

Gausman will get a start on Monday, either in Bradenton to close the pre-season or in a minor-league contest closer to home. The 2023 Cy Young Award finalist pitched a bullpen session on Saturday to prepare for that yet to be decided assignment.

Other options, of course, involve learning heavier on the bullpen until Gausman is ready, but that too is less than ideal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada