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Flying High: Toronto Blue Jays on upswing entering home series against Phillies

Flying High: Toronto Blue Jays on upswing entering home series against Phillies

TORONTO - A visit by the woeful Athletics came at an ideal time for the Toronto Blue Jays.
Canada's lone big-league team was in a tailspin before finding its form last week. Toronto has won five in a row and sat a half-game out of an American League wild-card spot entering Monday's games.
The Blue Jays, who were idle Monday, will continue their homestand Tuesday night against the 36-23 Philadelphia Phillies, a team they will play six times over the next fortnight.
OFFENCE CLICKING
After managing just six runs over a six-game road trip, the Blue Jays kicked off their current homestand by scoring a whopping 39 runs over a four-game sweep of the A's.
Addison Barger homered in three straight games over the weekend as Toronto went deep 11 times over the series.
The Blue Jays have been getting contributions up and down the lineup of late. Bo Bichette, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., George Springer and Alejandro Kirk have anchored the top half of the batting order.
Barger, Ernie Clement, Nathan Lukes, Myles Straw and Jonatan Clase — all hitting at least .267 — have helped turn the lineup over with timely hitting.
However, two of Toronto's big-ticket acquisitions have struggled this season. Andres Gimenez and Anthony Santander, both on the injured list, have sub-.200 averages with OPS marks under .600.
BULLISH BULLPEN
One of Toronto's most-improved areas is the bullpen, which is ranked ninth in the major leagues with a 3.47 earned-run average.
That's down significantly from the bullpen's 4.82 ERA in 2024, the second-worst mark among the 30 teams.
With setup man Yimi Garcia on the injured list, Brendon Little (3-0, 1.37), Mason Fluharty (3-1, 3.33), Chad Green (1-1, 3.91) and Yariel Rodriguez (0-0, 2.73) have stepped up in his absence.
Closer Jeff Hoffman has earned 13 saves in 16 opportunities. His three blown saves have boosted his ERA to a rather bloated 5.81.
SO-SO STARTERS
Injuries and middling performances have led to a starting rotation that has been serviceable but capable of much more.
Veterans Jose Berrios, Kevin Gausman and Chris Bassitt have been steady with the three right-handers posting remarkably similar numbers (all between 3.80-3.90 ERA, 66-70 IP and 65-70 strikeouts).
Bowden Francis (2-6, 5.04) has been unable to duplicate his strong second half from 2024, and Max Scherzer has pitched only three innings due to a thumb issue.
Scherzer's absence has forced manager John Schneider to turn to spot starters and openers, often for so-called bullpen games.
The good news for the Blue Jays is Scherzer is throwing live bullpen sessions now, and Alek Manoah (elbow surgery) could make his season debut this summer.
INJURED VARSHO
After missing the first few weeks of the season as he built up after shoulder surgery, Daulton Varsho delivered an immediate spark to the lineup when he returned.
The Gold Glove centre-fielder provided stellar defence and hit eight homers with 20 RBIs over 24 games before landing back on the injured list.
Varsho strained his left hamstring over the weekend while trying to stretch a double into a triple. He's out on a week-to-week basis.
Utilityman Davis Schneider was recalled from Triple-A Buffalo to fill in.
NUMBERS GAME
It's early days with almost two-thirds of the season still to go, but the 31-28 Blue Jays appear to be a coin flip to make the post-season.
Baseball Prospectus' PECOTA standings peg Toronto's playoff chances at 48.6 per cent, slightly ahead of FanGraphs' projections at 43.1 per cent.
Cleveland started the day in the American League's first wild-card spot at 32-26. Toronto was one of five teams within 2 1/2 games of the Guardians.
The Blue Jays made the playoffs in three of four years before finishing last in the East Division standings in 2024. Toronto hasn't won a playoff game since 2016.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 2, 2025.

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Shaikin: Dodgers have lots of stars. Why Zach Neto should be Angels' lone All-Star
Shaikin: Dodgers have lots of stars. Why Zach Neto should be Angels' lone All-Star

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Shaikin: Dodgers have lots of stars. Why Zach Neto should be Angels' lone All-Star

The fans packed Angel Stadium last week, erupting when the star emerged from the dugout during pregame warmups, chanting 'M-V-P' in his honor during the game. Aaron Judge and the New York Yankees had arrived in Anaheim, and the old ballpark was abuzz. Advertisement 'Anywhere we play,' Judge said, 'it's a playoff atmosphere.' Angels fans haven't seen a playoff game in 11 years, so there were plenty of good seats available for Yankees fans. In the top of the first inning, Judge grounded out. In the bottom of the first, the Angels' star strutted into the spotlight. Zach Neto led off the inning by launching a 440-foot home run — the longest of his career — and flipping his bat so dramatically that Major League Baseball celebrated on social media. The Angels lost the game, but their shortstop rose to the occasion in a way his team so often has not. We would say Neto is a star in the making, with pop in his bat and swagger in his game, but he already is a star. Advertisement Read more: Mike Trout has three hits, including a 454-foot homer, in Angels' win over Red Sox An All-Star. 'One hundred percent. For sure. No doubt,' said Angels closer Kenley Jansen, himself a four-time All-Star. Baseball turns its All-Star ballot live Wednesday, and there is no shortage of Dodgers players worthy of votes. If Judge does not get the most votes overall, Shohei Ohtani should. Freddie Freeman entered play Tuesday batting .368, and he leads National League first basemen in WAR. Will Smith is batting .331 and leads NL catchers in WAR. Shortstop Mookie Betts and outfielder Teoscar Hernández figure to attract some votes, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto should be one of the pitchers selected. Advertisement The Dodgers had six All-Stars last year. The Angels had one: pitcher Tyler Anderson. This year, Neto ought to be that guy. His 10 home runs lead American League shortstops. Among all major leaguers, only Ohtani has more leadoff homers than Neto. 'It's a no-brainer he is our All-Star this year,' Jansen said. Angels shortstop Zach Neto high-fives a fan before a game against the Marlins at Angel Stadium in May 24. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times) Neto is one of seven major leaguers with 30 home runs and 30 stolen bases in their last 162 games. The others: Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr., Corbin Carroll, Francisco Lindor, José Ramírez and Kyle Tucker. Lindor is the only other shortstop in the group. That makes Neto a star in a rather bright constellation. Advertisement 'He's a superstar in the making,' Jansen said. Neto almost certainly would need to be voted in by his peers, or selected by the league office. Even his manager admits Neto has virtually no chance to be voted in by the fans. Angels manager Ron Washington said Neto is 'definitely' an All-Star but suggested Bobby Witt Jr. of the Kansas City Royals, the runner-up to Judge as AL most valuable player last season, would be voted the starting shortstop. 'I think he is going to be the guy,' Washington said. And Neto? 'They need some backup,' Washington said. 'It doesn't matter if you make the All-Star team as a backup. You made the All-Star team. Advertisement 'I think he's got the opportunity to do just that.' Angels shortstop Zach Neto gives the safe sign as he slides on his belly across home plate ahead of the tag during a game against the Giants in April. (Wally Skalij / Associated Press) Gunnar Henderson of the Baltimore Orioles started at shortstop for the AL last season. Jeremy Peña of the Houston Astros has a better WAR than anyone in the AL except Judge, according to Baseball Reference. Jacob Wilson of the Athletics has a better OPS than Witt, and he is batting .355 — better than anyone in the majors besides Judge and Freeman. 'With all the shortstops out there, he is just going to have to bide his time,' Washington said of Neto. 'Hopefully, he gets chosen.' The fans select the starters, and the players in the AL and NL select the backups in their respective leagues. If the fans vote Witt, do enough AL players appreciate Neto's game? Advertisement 'Yeah,' Washington said, laughing, 'because he bust their [butt].' Said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts: 'Love him. Certainly, his skill set plays. And, for him to be — what, a couple years removed from college? — I just love that he just has that feel for leadership. He's already a leader. I can see it from the other side. 'He's sort of like that old-school gritty ballplayer. He can beat you a lot of ways. He's quickly going higher on the list of players I love to watch.' The league office completes the All-Star rosters, in large part to ensure each team has at least one representative. It is not a given that Neto would be the Angels' representative. Advertisement If two or three other shortstops are chosen, the league office could opt for catcher Logan O'Hoppe or, if position players are fully stocked, pitcher Yusei Kikuchi. If Mike Trout stays healthy and gets hot, the league office could give fans across America the Angels player they would most want to see. Yet there is no question that Neto is the Angels' best player this year, and a star for years to come. 'This guy,' Roberts said, 'is going to be an All-Star for a long time.' That time should start now. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Jeff Hoffman's bond with Phillies endures: He'll always have a piece of Philly — literally
Jeff Hoffman's bond with Phillies endures: He'll always have a piece of Philly — literally

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

Jeff Hoffman's bond with Phillies endures: He'll always have a piece of Philly — literally

TORONTO — This is Jeff Hoffman's home now, the result of a $33 million deal he scored after resurrecting his career as a late-inning revelation with the Phillies. He golfed with some of his former teammates Monday afternoon before they all took their wives to a sushi dinner. The Phillies miss Hoffman, and he misses them, too. That's how it works. Advertisement So, as he strolled into the luxurious Blue Jays' clubhouse Tuesday afternoon before facing the Phillies, he laughed. There it was — a ragged, green Philadelphia street sign. HOFFMAN AVE. It had hung for months in a hallway adjacent to the Phillies' clubhouse at Citizens Bank Park. It was still there last weekend, long after Hoffman had departed via free agency. No one from the Phillies said a word about the street sign during their daylong reunion with Hoffman. He assumed it was gone. 'It was in my locker this morning,' Hoffman said. He grinned. 'I don't know.' Hoffman has said he'll always carry a piece of Philadelphia with him — he holds no grudges for the Phillies never coming close to the various contract offers he received last offseason — but he meant that figuratively. Not literally. The sign's origin is why Hoffman felt a kinship in the city where he tossed 118 2/3 innings with a 2.28 ERA. A few Phillies people accidentally discovered Hoffman Ave. — a small road in West Philly near Cobbs Creek Park — early in the 2024 season. Someone dared someone else to procure a sign for Hoffman. But he had to do something to earn it. They all settled on this: If Hoffman made the National League All-Star team, it would happen. He did it. The sign soon appeared last summer in the Phillies' clubhouse. Hoffman, 32, can be petty. Sassy, even. Phillies personnel used to joke that he had to pitch whenever they were facing a team that Hoffman felt had slighted him in some manner. He felt none of that this week as the Phillies came to Canada. 'I'm really thankful and grateful for the opportunity they gave me,' Hoffman said. 'That allowed me to do what I have done, come here and make some money, and put my family in a great position to be successful moving forward. I owe a lot of that to them. I definitely wouldn't be here without that.' He could have still been here. Hoffman made it clear he preferred to return to the Phillies. But he wanted to be paid, and it was evident from the beginning of the offseason that the Phillies were not in the same ballpark. 'We tried to sign Hoffman, very aggressively, right?' said Dave Dombrowski, the club's president of baseball operations, in April. Hoffman did not characterize the discussions like that. He had a hint during last season, when Hoffman said his agency 'asked a couple of different times' about an extension with the Phillies, and the talks led nowhere. Advertisement 'I did definitely want to be back, and the offseason was kind of crazy,' Hoffman said. 'It was a lot of negotiating and not negotiating and down periods, and then getting back into it with a different team. Every step of the way, (the Phillies) were pretty light. It was pretty clear early on that they weren't going to be in the right type of competitive market that we were looking for.' There was no communication between the sides, multiple league sources said in April, after the Phillies signed Jordan Romano to a one-year deal on Dec. 9. Hoffman had multiple offers — one with the Atlanta Braves and another with the Baltimore Orioles — that fell apart because of issues with his physical examinations. The Phillies had opportunities to re-engage. Hoffman did not sign with Toronto until Jan. 10. His first two months with the Blue Jays were inconsistent. He posted a 1.10 ERA with 23 strikeouts and two walks in a dominant 16 1/3 innings to begin the season. But he's allowed five homers in 10 innings since, giving him a 5.81 ERA in 2025. Toronto has continued to use Hoffman as its closer. The Phillies lack swing-and-miss stuff in their bullpen and will assuredly be shopping for another reliever at the trade deadline in July. Maybe a long-term deal with Hoffman was too risky. Nevertheless, the Phillies must use prospect capital this summer to fix the bullpen. Maybe they would have been doing that even if Hoffman were still around. Matt Strahm, Hoffman's closest friend on the Phillies, said the two had a long discussion after last October's disappointing National League Division Series exit. That was the last time Strahm intervened on Hoffman's free agency. 'That's a big life decision, so I stayed away from it,' Strahm said. 'That's for him and his family to decide. You earn the right to be able to do what he was doing last offseason. … I know he wanted to be here, but at the end of the day, he's got four kids to take care of. That's part of it.' Strahm wasn't among Monday's golf and sushi crew, so on Tuesday morning, he texted Hoffman. 'I asked,' Strahm said, 'if we were playing catch in center field at 4 o'clock.' The two were inseparable as Phillies; Strahm and Hoffman were catch partners who parlayed tremendous 2024 seasons into All-Star nods. They have continued to talk a lot despite no longer sharing a clubhouse. Advertisement 'It was bittersweet seeing him leave,' Strahm said. 'But he got paid, so that's good.' Orion Kerkering, who considered Hoffman a mentor, said he was excited to talk trash. 'Of course,' Hoffman said. 'There's never a dull moment with him.' Phillies manager Rob Thomson said he sent Hoffman a message as soon as the news of his signing broke. 'Thanked him for everything he did and wished him all the best,' Thomson said. 'He's a good man.' Hoffman said this whole thing was 'weird' because there wasn't much reconnecting he had to do with the Phillies in town. 'We've stayed pretty close,' he said. He'll check the box score every night to see who pitched and what they did. It is easy, Hoffman said, to stay in touch with guys he liked. 'It's part of this game,' Strahm said. 'I've been in it long enough now. Jeff's one of those true friends. Ten years from now, when I'm driving through Florida, I'm going to have to pick up the phone and see what Jeff and Marissa (his wife) are doing.' It is Strahm's 10th season in the majors. He could count on one hand how many guys he's had that sort of relationship with. They did not know each other before Hoffman came to the Phillies on a minor-league deal and morphed into one of the better relievers in baseball. They will always have that. 'It's good to see him,' Strahm said. 'Sucks that he's gone.'

Dodgers have lots of stars. Why Zach Neto should be Angels' lone All-Star
Dodgers have lots of stars. Why Zach Neto should be Angels' lone All-Star

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Dodgers have lots of stars. Why Zach Neto should be Angels' lone All-Star

The fans packed Angel Stadium last week, erupting when the star emerged from the dugout during pregame warmups, chanting 'M-V-P' in his honor during the game. Aaron Judge and the New York Yankees had arrived in Anaheim, and the old ballpark was abuzz. 'Anywhere we play,' Judge said, 'it's a playoff atmosphere.' Angels fans haven't seen a playoff game in 11 years, so there were plenty of good seats available for Yankees fans. In the top of the first inning, Judge grounded out. In the bottom of the first, the Angels' star strutted into the spotlight. Zach Neto led off the inning by launching a 440-foot home run — the longest of his career — and flipping his bat so dramatically that Major League Baseball celebrated on social media. The Angels lost the game, but their shortstop rose to the occasion in a way his team so often has not. We would say Neto is a star in the making, with pop in his bat and swagger in his game, but he already is a star. An All-Star. 'One hundred percent. For sure. No doubt,' said Angels closer Kenley Jansen, himself a four-time All-Star. Baseball turns its All-Star ballot live Wednesday, and there is no shortage of Dodgers players worthy of votes. If Judge does not get the most votes overall, Shohei Ohtani should. Freddie Freeman entered play Tuesday batting .368, and he leads National League first basemen in WAR. Will Smith is batting .331 and leads NL catchers in WAR. Shortstop Mookie Betts and outfielder Teoscar Hernández figure to attract some votes, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto should be one of the pitchers selected. The Dodgers had six All-Stars last year. The Angels had one: pitcher Tyler Anderson. This year, Neto ought to be that guy. His 10 home runs lead American League shortstops. Among all major leaguers, only Ohtani has more leadoff homers than Neto. 'It's a no-brainer he is our All-Star this year,' Jansen said. Neto is one of seven major leaguers with 30 home runs and 30 stolen bases in their last 162 games. The others: Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr., Corbin Carroll, Francisco Lindor, José Ramírez and Kyle Tucker. Lindor is the only other shortstop in the group. That makes Neto a star in a rather bright constellation. 'He's a superstar in the making,' Jansen said. Neto almost certainly would need to be voted in by his peers, or selected by the league office. Even his manager admits Neto has virtually no chance to be voted in by the fans. Angels manager Ron Washington said Neto is 'definitely' an All-Star but suggested Bobby Witt Jr. of the Kansas City Royals, the runner-up to Judge as AL most valuable player last season, would be voted the starting shortstop. 'I think he is going to be the guy,' Washington said. And Neto? 'They need some backup,' Washington said. 'It doesn't matter if you make the All-Star team as a backup. You made the All-Star team. 'I think he's got the opportunity to do just that.' Gunnar Henderson of the Baltimore Orioles started at shortstop for the AL last season. Jeremy Peña of the Houston Astros has a better WAR than anyone in the AL except Judge, according to Baseball Reference. Jacob Wilson of the Athletics has a better OPS than Witt, and he is batting .355 — better than anyone in the majors besides Judge and Freeman. 'With all the shortstops out there, he is just going to have to bide his time,' Washington said of Neto. 'Hopefully, he gets chosen.' The fans select the starters, and the players in the AL and NL select the backups in their respective leagues. If the fans vote Witt, do enough AL players appreciate Neto's game? 'Yeah,' Washington said, laughing, 'because he bust their [butt].' Said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts: 'Love him. Certainly, his skill set plays. And, for him to be — what, a couple years removed from college? — I just love that he just has that feel for leadership. He's already a leader. I can see it from the other side. 'He's sort of like that old-school gritty ballplayer. He can beat you a lot of ways. He's quickly going higher on the list of players I love to watch.' The league office completes the All-Star rosters, in large part to ensure each team has at least one representative. It is not a given that Neto would be the Angels' representative. If two or three other shortstops are chosen, the league office could opt for catcher Logan O'Hoppe or, if position players are fully stocked, pitcher Yusei Kikuchi. If Mike Trout stays healthy and gets hot, the league office could give fans across America the Angels player they would most want to see. Yet there is no question that Neto is the Angels' best player this year, and a star for years to come. 'This guy,' Roberts said, 'is going to be an All-Star for a long time.' That time should start now.

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