Monday brings Bo Bichette back to Rogers Centre, and the timing isn’t exactly rosy for either side. The Mets arrive at 35-49, stuck in last place in the NL East and 7.5 games out of fourth, while both clubs are dealing with plenty of injuries. Marcus Semien won’t be in this series either, sidelined for awhile with a hip flexor strain.
Bichette’s season has been uneven overall, with a .245/.300/.388 line and 10 home runs, but June has looked much better. He’s hit .337/.358/.574 this month, and he’s also been moving between shortstop and third base over the past couple of weeks.
FanGraphs has liked the defense more at third, where he’s at +2 OAA, than at short, where he’s sitting at -2. Plenty of attention will be on how he handles the tribute video, too.
The expectation is a wave and then back to business, though there’s at least hope he takes in the cheers.
For Toronto, the early innings feel like the first real test. Getting through the first couple of frames, or even the first couple of outs, without surrendering a run would go a long way.
The pitching matchups set up a full three-game run before Thursday’s off-day. Tonight has Sean Manaea, 1-2 with a 4.87 ERA, against Trey Yesavage at 3.56.
Tuesday brings Nolan McLean, 4-5 with a 4.03 ERA, opposite Kevin Gausman, who is 4-6 with a 4.36 ERA. Wednesday’s day game has Freddy Peralta, 5-6 with a 4.53 ERA, facing Patrick Corbin, 2-4 with a 5.09 ERA, with first pitch at 3:00 Eastern.
Gausman’s June has been rough, with a 7.62 ERA, and the last two starts were effectively decided early. He came into the month with a 3.13 ERA, which makes the drop even starker. The hope is simple: keep the Mets off the board early and give the Jays something to build on.
The weekend away from the club didn’t feel much better, either. Three one-run losses came and went, though most of them never really had the feel of tight games. The lone exception was the loss on the wild pitch, which was about as ugly a way to lose as you’ll find.
There’s also a Canada Day ticket giveaway in play. The Jays are giving away 500 tickets for that game, with 225 pairs handed out in person across three surprise locations on Tuesday, June 30, each appearing at a different time during the day.
Another 25 pairs will go out on Instagram, and Rogers says details on timing and locations will be posted starting at 7 a.m. ET.
To qualify, customers need to show a wireless device on the Rogers network, a Rogers Red Mastercard, the MyRogers app logged into an active account, or a hard copy of a Rogers bill along with photo ID.
On the roster front, there’s interest in seeing Sean Keys get into all three games. The hope is that he doesn’t just get called up and sit. Same goes for Piñango, who would be a welcome sight in every game of the series.
As for Addison Barger, the club says he’s dealing with soreness they’re calling “normal soreness” tied to rehab. That said, he’s still being projected for a return sometime in mid-July. For now, the wait continues.
In Other News...
Blue Jays May Be Headed For A Trade Fans Dread
With the Blue Jays sitting below .500 and still clinging to a postseason chase, the next few weeks are starting to feel like a crossroads rather than a sprint. Toronto has enough time to turn things around, but not enough to ignore the reality that a disappointing July could change the front offices thinking before the August 3 trade deadline.
If the standings do not improve, the organization may have to decide whether to keep pushing for this season or begin looking ahead to 2027 by dealing players who are getting closer to free agency. That is the kind of pivot fans dread because it usually means sacrificing present hope for future value, and it would signal just how quickly the Blue Jays year can tilt from buyer to seller. [Read more 🡒]
Blue Jays May Be Reaching A Breaking Point With Vladimir Guerrero Jr
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.s season has reached an uneasy stretch for a Blue Jays team that still needs his bat to look like the middle-of-the-order force it was supposed to be. Over his last 15 games, he has been stuck at .213, and the broader picture has been just as troubling, with his production sliding hard from the start of the year and the at-bats around him beginning to look heavier with each passing night.
The concern is not only the numbers, either. Guerrero has also drawn scrutiny for grounding into double plays and for not consistently hustling out of the box, the kind of lapses that tend to push a slump from temporary to structural. If this continues, the Blue Jays may have to decide whether a short benching or a move down the lineup is the best way to get him right, even as the organization works around the reality that there are limits to how far it can go in handling the situation. [Read more 🡒]
Blue Jays Rotation Problem Is Starting To Force A Bigger Conversation
The Blue Jays rotation has gone from concern to conversation starter after a rough stretch against the Rangers, where Kevin Gausman, Patrick Corbin and Dylan Cease each had trouble keeping Texas in check. Toronto has been leaning on its starting staff to set the tone, but the group has instead helped fuel a week in which the Blue Jays have allowed 22 earned runs and gone 1-5, a slide that makes every turn through the rotation feel more urgent.
Shane Bieber is back in the mix, which gives Toronto at least one more proven arm to work with, but it has not been enough to quiet the bigger questions around the staff. General manager Ross Atkins has already pointed to starting pitching as a possible trade deadline priority, and if the current run of instability continues, the Blue Jays may have no choice but to look outside the organization for help. [Read more 🡒]
