Blue Jays Suddenly Face A Bigger Test Than Just Gausmans Start

Kevin Gausman aims to bounce back and lead the Blue Jays to a series win against the Mets, with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. unexpectedly missing from the lineup.

The Blue Jays finally stopped the bleeding Monday night, beating the Mets and ending a six-game skid that had shoved Toronto further down the AL East and AL Wild Card races. But with the first half winding down, there’s no time to enjoy it for long. The next assignment falls to Kevin Gausman, and the Blue Jays are banking on their veteran ace to help them finish June on a high note.

That’s the hope, anyway. Gausman has hit a rough patch at the worst possible time, carrying a 7.62 ERA in June into his start Tuesday night against New York.

The damage has come fast and hard over his last two outings, when he gave up 13 runs in eight innings while striking out seven. Those two starts sent his season ERA climbing from 3.41 three starts ago against the New York Yankees to 4.36 entering the matchup with the Yankees’ cross-town rivals.

Toronto has leaned on Gausman before, and when he’s right, he changes the tone of the whole team. With 2026 marked by more swings than the Blue Jays would like, a strong outing here would go a long way toward giving them some momentum heading into July.

The lineup, though, got a late shake-up. As Mitch Bannon of The Athletic reported, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. was scratched, forcing Toronto to shuffle the infield. Sean Keys moved to first base, Ernie Clement slid over to third, and Luis Urias was inserted at second.

The reason for Guerrero Jr.’s scratch was unknown at publishing time.

Toronto’s batting order for the 7:07 PM EST first pitch looked like this: George Springer at DH, Nathan Lukes in right, Sean Keys at first, Ernie Clement at third, Alejandro Kirk catching, Daulton Varsho in center, Luis Urias at second, Yohendrick Pinango in left, and Andres Gimenez at short.

The Blue Jays managed only two runs in the series opener against the Mets, so they’ll likely need more offense if they want to back up Gausman. Kazuma Okamoto gets the night off, giving rookie Sean Keys another chance to make his mark in front of the home crowd.

There’s one more wrinkle: no Toronto hitter in the starting lineup has faced McLean in his MLB career. That leaves the matchup with plenty of uncertainty, for better or worse.

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