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| WORK YELLING |
Two months into the season, Spencer Miles remains a very encouraging Rule-5-draftee of a guy—that is to say, someone who was added to our roster because he was not super duper wanted elsewhere, but who must remain on the roster all year lest he be returned from whence he came, or the rights to his contract otherwise negotiated. But yesterday, he was quite uncharacteristically shelled for six runs (each as earned as the last!) in just three innings, and, as the Orioles continued to pile it on against young (indeed jueng) Hayden Juenger, things got truly out of hand. The only Blue Jays bright spot on the day was the Yohendrick Piñango three-run shot to right that landed on Utah Street, between the stadium proper and the (incomparably æsthetic) warehouse behind it. Piñango had entered the game as a defensive replacement (words never uttered before, never to be uttered hence) after a (sur)passing(ly) strange incident in which a young fan in the right field stands, confused by the affable Jésus Sanchez's chompy-chompy motion in that general direction with his glove (the universal sign to indicate you are ready to play catch), really rifled one in there just as Sanchez was returning his attention towards home plate. The ball struck him strangely on the wrist, and though x-rays revealed no fractures, our man was contused, and left the game. It was all a misunderstanding, Sanchez explained afterwards, and it is a pity (though an understandable one) that the young fan was asked to leave the game. I feel bad for everyone involved. Perhaps the young fan had seen those enormously compelling clips of Aaron Judge and Mike Trout (and others, I'm sure) playing catch with fans during pitching changes and the like? It is a charming feature of the contemporary game (seemingly unthinkable to the baseball of my youth), and it would be very easy, I think, for a kid to get locked in on that idea. And, again, in that young fan's defense, even though video footage of the incident is distant and limited, Jésus' great big glove can clearly be seen to make the chompy-chompy motion, and gloves only do that when they are hungry for the ball. This is foundational to gloves.
Anyway, so ends the Blue Jays' fairly arduous stretch of seventeen games in as many days. That's tough on the bullpen! Especially when you're down a couple starters! And yet, on the whole, just about everybody did a really good job, and the Blue Jays went ten-and-seven over the course of these two-and-a-bit weeks, which might not sound like any great shakes, but that's actually .588 baseball, which over a full season would be a ninety-five-win pace, or one win better than our AL East Championship total last season (the margins in baseball are nuts, both on the micro and macro levels). It was a rare 2026 pleasure to be back at .500 after Friday's game (the first time this season since we were four-and-four!), and though it is a minor drag to be two games under after Saturday's implosion and Sunday's shellacking (two of the main kinds of losses, I suppose), we enter June—very much a baseballing month—in sole possession of the third and final Wild Card spot. All things considered (or also actually none of them considered even passingly) this is a really good place to be! If we follow Billy Beane's maxim that the first two months of the season are to find out what you've got, the next two are to try to improve it, and the final two are to see if it worked (tenets by which I organize my own baseball simming [both intellectually and emotionally]), we are entering the second of those phases with a good deal of internal improvement to be reasonably expected, setting aside any hope of external improvement through canny trades: surely (if I may call you that) some combination of Max Scherzer, Shane Bieber, and Dylan Cease will be back in the rotation soon? It doesn't even have to be all three! I would gladly take two! Or even one, if it's Dylan Cease! And as good as Brandon Valenzuela has been in his first look (a league-average bat at catcher will extremely play), wouldn't it be something to have Alejandro Kirk back? I have less riding on Addison Barger's return, I suppose, not because I do not wish him good health, but because we are getting credible production already from our other left-handed-batting corner outfielders (Piñango, Sanchez, and Lukes [the best defender of those three by about a squillion miles, of course]), and the upgrade there might be more about flexibility (in that Barger can play third, too) than overall production. But nevertheless! On to June! Let us say "white rabbit" (or indeed "rabbit rabbit") to welcome the new month! Here we go! It is a shame we're in Atlanta after the off day in that that is where the best team in baseball this season plays! But what can you do!
KS

























