Blue Jays Coach Sees One Troubling Issue Behind Vladdys Slump

As Vladimir Guerrero Jr. grapples with timing issues and a nagging back problem, the Blue Jays' batting coach reveals why a resurgence at the plate is crucial for the team's faltering offense.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s slump has become one of the Blue Jays’ biggest problems, and Toronto’s coaches think the issue starts with the swing itself.

Batting coach David Popkins told Rogers Sportsnet’s Hazel Mae that Guerrero’s mechanics are out of sync, and that the first baseman is either pounding the ball into the ground or expanding the zone and chasing pitches. That’s a rough combination for any hitter, and it helps explain why Guerrero’s power has been so muted this season despite the fact that he was still hitting .354 with a .907 OPS back in March and April.

“Some of the timing aspects of the swing are obviously a little off.. his swing is more like an orchestra, where you need every instrument to play at the right time, and it's been a little harder for him this year.”

The numbers have backed up the eye test. Guerrero entered Wednesday hitting .263/.345/.344 with a .689 OPS in 87 games.

Since May 1, the decline has been even sharper: his batting average fell from .232 in May to .198 in June, while his OPS dropped from .623 to .498. His slugging percentage stayed below .300 in both months, sitting at .284 in May and .264 in June.

The lack of damage has been glaring. Guerrero has only 14 doubles and five home runs, and none of those homers have come at Rogers Centre.

There was at least a small jolt on Wednesday in Toronto’s 10-0 win over the San Francisco Giants. Guerrero launched a 419-foot, two-run homer to left-center in the ninth inning, his first home run since Jun. 18 in Boston and his fifth of the season. The ball came off his bat at 108.3 mph as a line drive, a much cleaner result than the weak contact that has too often defined his year.

Guerrero’s own comments point to a hitter trying to simplify things. He told Rogers Sportsnet’s Shi Davidi that he needs to “let the pitcher come to him,” and not try to “hit the ball before they throw it.” He has also been spending a lot of time in the batting cage.

The chase numbers tell the same story. Guerrero’s chase rate has climbed to 31.1 percent from 21.5 percent a year ago, while his barrel rate has dropped to 6.8 percent from 12.2 percent. His 43.9 percent hard-hit rate is the lowest of his career since his rookie season in 2019.

There may be a physical piece to this as well. Guerrero has dealt with a back issue at times this year, and he will skip the All-Star Game to give himself time to heal, even though he was elected to start at first base for the American League.

Even in a down year, his popularity hasn’t gone anywhere. That All-Star nod says plenty about his standing as the face of the Blue Jays.

Toronto, though, needs more than star power. The offense has been stuck all season, with the club sitting in the bottom five in the majors in runs scored at 376 and carrying a .688 team OPS in 93 games. The Blue Jays have also hit only 93 home runs.

Popkins told MLB.com that the group has made adjustments, but he doesn’t want the lineup to overthink things. What they need, he said, is to “throw a haymaker and see what happens.

Land one punch, that's all we need. We need one shot,”

Whether Wednesday’s breakout against San Francisco is the start of that kind of spark remains to be seen. But if Toronto is going to climb out of this offensive rut, Guerrero will almost certainly have to be at the center of it.

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