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| Tyler Heineman in simpler times |
With the bases loaded in the top of the sixth, and the Blue Jays down 4-1, Tyler Heineman flied out to shallow left to end the inning (the top half of it, anyway). This was lightly disappointing, of course, but in no real way remarkable: Heineman, pressed into everyday duty with Alejandro Kirk out for weeks, has had just a brutal first month-and-a-bit of the season, making some particularly costly fielding errors early, and hitting just .176 en route to a stunningly negative bWAR of -0.8 already (to be fair, FanGraphs, which assesses catcher defense quite differently, has him at a comparatively balmy -0.2) and an OPS+ (in which one hundred is by definition league average) of literally twelve (FanGraphs has him at thirteen in the roughly equivalent [please do not @ me; I know how they are different {also it is always okay to @ me as we are all friends here} wRC+). It wouldn't have been surprising to see John Schneider elect to pinch hit in that situation, sending up a right-handed bat like Davis Schneider or Myles Straw against the lefty, and then replacing Heineman behind the plate with Brandon Valenzuela for the bottom half of the inning—or maybe you just skip the middle man, and send up the switch-hitting Valenzuela himself, after yesterday's nifty three-run homer in the Blue Jays' big eighth? That would have made sense, too. But what did not make immediate and apparent sense was for Tyler Heineman to first pop out, and only then be told to hit the pine (almost certainly not in those words, though I wonder if anybody actually still says that sometimes just to be lightly rude in an old-timey way?), as Brandon Valenzuela came out to start the bottom half of the sixth and take it the rest of the way. "Manager's decision," Schneider said after the game, which is not super helpful, in that they're sort of all manger's decisions, right? So no injury, then, you just took him out? "I’ll keep it to manager’s decision. Heineman’s in there." That doesn't sound great! Here's Heineman himself on it, as transcribed in the stalwart Keegan Matheson's article: "I think it’s just the situation, everything that’s been going on. I just didn’t get it done. It’s the manager’s decision. I stick by it. He’s one of the best managers in the game and the best manager I’ve played for. He has a reason for everything he does and I fully support it. That at-bat was pretty trash. I popped up on a pitch I should have drove. I've been pretty crappy the past ten games or so. He probably saw something he shouldn't have saw or that I did wrong. He made a decision." All pretty weird, I think! When Alejandro Kirk gets back, might that be the end of the line for the thirty-four-year-old Heineman? Valenzuela sticks with the team as the backup/catcher-of-the-fairly-distant-future, or do they want him back in Buffalo for developmental reasons? Much to consider! But all very much around the fringes of things, I suppose.
What else did we have here Sunday afternoon, let's see: Trey Yesavage, without the benefit of his best "stuff," nevertheless yielded just the one run in his four innings, after which Braydon Fisher got uncharacteristically cooked for three, though Mantiply, Nance, and Hoffman all pitched well after him, but the Blue Jays bats were relatively quiet despite Minnesota ace Joe Ryan leaving the game after just one batter and the Twins bullpen being no great shakes in general. Okamoto got another one, though, which was neat! The Blue Jays' ninth-inning rally fell short, and it's tough to end a one-run game on a double play with the go-ahead runner on base, but I will admit to mistakenly thinking there were already two outs when Lenyn Sosa hit that game-ending grounder, so my feelings at the end were muddled.
The difference between a four-game split and a three-to-one series win is weirdly enormous, and I would have of course much preferred the latter, but it is worth noting, I think, that everyone around us in the standings (to either side) didn't do a whole heck of a lot this weekend either, and so here we sit/stand (as you like it) in the Wild Card 3 position despite our sixteen-and-eighteen record! Pretty not that bad, kind of! The next stop on the road trip is, alas, the Trop, where the Tampa Bay Rays, after having taken a season off from their diabolical ways, have fully returned to them, and, at twenty-one-and-twelve, are just excellent. Our starter for the series opener is still listed as "TBD," but functionally that seems to end up being Eric Lauer, though I honestly half-expect Patrick Corbin to be pitching whenever I turn a game on at this point (not complaining!).
KS



























