![]() |
| our most beloved position player, after Vladdy? arguably? everybody sure loves George Springer and Alejandro Kirk, too, though, so there is much to consider here |
A three-run homer, a triple, and one great play up the middle to go along with a couple of good ones is all Ernie Clement—your American League leader in both hits broadly (seventy-six) and also doubles specifically (nineteen)—managed on this lovely but unusually breezy day (you could see it in the home-plate umpire's pants immediately; they were just whipping around out there). Pretty good! Okamoto, Giménez and Sanchez all had a pair of hits each, and switch-hitting rookie-catcher Brandon Valenzuela (who has been just great!) had three, two of them doubles. It's a little weird, isn't it, that the Blue Jays' twelve hits only amounted to six runs? But that ended up being slightly more than we even needed, even, given how well things went generally on this Spencer-Miles-heavy bullpen day with Braydon Fisher as the opener, and, after Miles' stout four-and-a-third, Hoffman, Fluharty, Rogers, and finally Louis Varland, who has appeared in thirty of the Blue Jays' sixty-five games, and has so far allowed just the one (literally just one!) earned run this season, for an ERA of 0.27, which is, obviously, insane. That Mason Fluharty allowed a home run in his inning was surprising; that Jeff Hoffman did, too, was, alas not. The man remains a true puzzle: his swing-and-miss rate is in the top-ten-percent of the league, but, not only does our guy have a homer problem, but his BABIP continues to hover around .500, which is very close to impossible (over time these things tend to settle out to something within a standard deviation, give or take, of league-average BABIP, which this year is around .290), unless the homer problem and the BABIP problem are in fact the same problem, which, sadly, they very plainly are, and it is this: except for his (many) pitches that are producing whiffs (that's what makes this so complicated!), batters are squaring just about everything else up just about perfectly, and the result is straight rockets in all directions. I feel for the guy! It won't surprise you to learn that there are people being very tiresome about it all. There's no sense (there's none) paying attention to stray Fan590-call-in level comments one encounters on the boards, but one I scrolled past today while sighing lightly was something to the effect of, "We're never going to win anything with this guy," which is a wild thing to say coming off a year where we won the American League East, the ALDS over the Yankees (in Yankee Stadium on a bullpen day, no less, as my dear friend Harpo likes to point out to underscore the flex of it all), and the literal, honest-to-goodness American League pennant (I honestly still feel kind of bad for the Mariners). Guess who was striking guys out at the end of a whole bunch of those games! I know you know, gentle reader. I also know that you know that, right after the Miguel Rojas home run in Game Seven—and hey, I didn't care for it either! not one bit!—Hoffman got Ohtani next, and then caught (eventual WS-winning-home-runnist) Will Smith looking to end the inning, and give the Blue Jays every chance to walk it off in the bottom-half. That they did not is a genuine pity—there is nothing I could grant you more freely—but it is no grounds for revisionism: Hoffman pitched twelve innings over ten games in the 2025 postseason, and allowed two runs. Two. Jeff Hoffman pitched better in the 2025 postseason than Mariano Rivera pitched in the postseason for the 2000 New York Yankees (a Subway Series win over the Mets, ultimately) or the 2001 New York Yankees (when Luis Gonzalez walked Rivera and the Yankees off in their own Game Seven). "Say what you will about Baseball Feelings," I hope the people will say about our efforts here, when it's all said and done, "but they were never revisionist about Jeff Hoffman's 2025 postseason."
KS


























