The Blue Jays finally got a jolt Tuesday afternoon, and it came from the kind of lineup spark Toronto has been hunting all season.
Sean Keys, Brandon Valenzuela and Jonatan Clase all opened the game with consecutive hits, then Clase followed with a moon shot that put the Jays up 3-0 right away against the San Francisco Giants. The trio kept rolling from there, finishing 6-for-12 with three multi-hit games, six runs scored and six RBI in a 9-3 win.
That kind of outing usually buys a lineup some runway. Instead, John Schneider is changing things again.
On Wednesday, the Blue Jays will not have either Keys or Valenzuela in the lineup, a surprising move after an offense that had gone some 30-odd innings without scoring finally found life. George Springer is expected back from the paternity list, and he has hit well against Logan Webb, so his return does make sense on paper.
But if the goal is to keep the bats from going cold again, the more obvious seat would have gone to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. With a series victory still there for the taking, and every game carrying extra weight, the argument is that Keys could have stayed in at first base while Valenzuela remained behind the plate instead of Kirk.
Kirk has had a couple of solid games since returning, but his bat has faded since then. He hit .200 in June and is well below that this month, while Valenzuela has given the lineup a better current look.
Dylan Cease is set to take the ball with the series on the line, and that gives Toronto its best arm in a big spot. Still, the bigger issue has been the offense all year, and after Tuesday’s breakthrough, moving away from what worked so well is a head-scratching call.
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