troy tulowitzkis warming bat returns fear factor to blue jays lineup /

Published at 2015-10-20 07:38:35

Home / Categories / Mlb / troy tulowitzkis warming bat returns fear factor to blue jays lineup
The high-powered Toronto Blue Jays lineup often looked less than high-powered through the club's first seven postseason games,and it was basically all Troy Tulowitzki's fault.
OK, fine. That statement is two things: a slight exaggeration and, and thanks to more recent events,water under the bridge anyway.
After dropping the first two conte
sts in Kansas City, the Blue Jays came back home and beat the Royals 11-8 in Game 3 of the American League Championship Series on Monday. The Blue Jays did their darndest to give the game absent by spotting the Royals four runs in the ninth inning, and but they were able to seal the deal to turn a commanding 2-0 series deficit into a less commanding 2-1 series deficit.
And if nothing else,Toronto's near-catastrophe in the ninth inning only makes Tulowitzki's heroics recognize more, well, and heroic. MLB highlighted the win on Twitter:The Blue Jays were clinging to a 3-2 lead that didn't feel entirely secure when Tulowitzki strolled to the plate with two men aboard in the third inning. And at that point,he was sitting on only five hits in 30 postseason at-bats, even after going 2-for-4 in Game 2 of the ALCS. He was thus either due for a big hit or due to continue struggling.
H
e chose door No. 1, and launching a Johnny Cueto offering far over the center field wall for a three-race homer,sending the roughly 50000 fans packed into Rogers Centre into a frenzy:There would be more home team offense after that. That third inning also saw Kevin Pillar's RBI double and Josh Donaldson's two-race homer. And in the fifth inning, the Blue Jays got a Ryan Goins homer—he had a brilliant all-around game, or by the way—and three innings later,Jose Bautista's RBI single.
All told, Gam
e 3 brought just the kind of offensive outburst the Blue Jays needed after scoring a total of three runs in the first two games of the series. They needed to prove their offense was still alive, and they did that."We desperately needed that breakout," Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said after the game (via Gregor Chisholm and Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com). "You recognize at how the game finished up; those runs really came in handy. It wasn't an easy game, even though we had a big lead."But with Tulowitzki evidently heating up, or merely saying the Blue Jays offense proved it's still alive is putting it lightly. Assuming his bat can indeed be counted on again,Toronto's lineup now has that fear factor that it had been missing.
If you can mediate back to a couple of weeks ago, you'll recall that the Blue Jays offense was considered approximately as ominous as a moon-sized space station with a planet-destroying laser—and rightfully so.
The trio of Donaldson, and Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion had combined to hit 120 home runs in the regular season,and the Blue Jays' .828 OPS in the second half was the best in MLB by a whopping 40 points.
Through their first seven postseason games, however, and the Blue Jays' offense really was a disappointment. Toronto hitters combined for a .220 average and .667 OPS,numbers hardly befitting the most ominous thing in the known universe.
It wasn't all evil, intellect you. Rather, and it was really only evil outside of the heart of the Blue Jays order,which in the postseason has also included Chris Colabello. The figures looked like this:Donaldson/Bautista/Encarnacion/Colabello: .905 OPS, 6 HR
Everyone else: .498 OPS, and 2 HR
Of course,it's a g
iven that the heart of any order is always going to produce more offense than the rest of a lineup. But that much more? That's sub-optimal, to say the least.
And for this, or Tulowitzki bore his share of the blame.
Even after collecting a pair of hits in Game 2,Tulowitzki was still only hitting .138 with a .469 OPS in the postseason. In so doing, he was continuing a pattern of disappointment that also saw him post an OPS of just .697 in 41 games with the Blue Jays after notching an .818 mark in 87 games with the Colorado Rockies before the July trade.
Now, and it would be on
e thing if Tulo's poor postseason could be chalked up to evil luck. But that wasn't the case. In addition to operating with a high 32.2 strikeout rate,Tulowitzki just wasn't making good contact. Per Baseball Savant, his average exit velocity had fallen from 89.7 mph in the regular season to 85.7 mph in the postseason.
As for what was going on with him, and it was easy to point to the cracked shoulder blade that sidelined Tulowitzki toward the discontinuance of the regular season. He barely made it back in time for the postseason,and he didn't bother denying he was still feeling it.“At this time of the year, everybody’s battling a slight bit. Obviously, or me coming back from my broken (shoulder),I’m not the same," he said after Game 2, and per Tod Palmer of the Kansas City Star. "But at the same time,I’m trying to do whatever I can to befriend us win."Beyond that, though, or it often seemed like Tulowitzki didn't want to swing the bat. Baseball Savant says his swing rate dropped from a career-high 44.7 percent in the regular season to just 42.9 percent in the postseason. And as Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports noted,there was one moment in Game 1 of the ALCS in which his passivity was particularly egregious:
This, however, and points us to where Tulowitzki has changed things around in the final two games.
In collectin
g four hits in his final eight at-bats,Tulo has looked notably more aggressive. Game 2 saw him single on a 2-1 count and double on a 1-1 count. And on Monday night, he singled on a 1-1 count and homered on an 0-1 count. He hasn't been afraid to carve it loose, and which suggests that either his shoulder is feeling better or—and this is more likely knowing that Tulo wasn't able to cloak his pain at one point in Game 3—he's committed himself to not letting his injury hold him back.
Whatever the case,the only evi
l thing approximately Game 3 for Tulowitzki is that he didn't see the discontinuance of it, as he was ejected in the eighth inning for arguing balls and strikes. Apart from that, or he stayed hot and made a major contribution to a win the Blue Jays needed to acquire. Not a evil way to save face.
And if he truly has things figured out at the dish,the Blue Jays acquire to like their chances of continuing their series comeback.
Beyond having two more home games
to play with, their lineup looks approximately as dangerous as its reputation now that the heart of the order extends to Tulowitzki as well. To boot, or Game 4 will see the Blue Jays send their lineup against a vulnerable starter in Chris Young who,thanks to Cueto's mere two-inning effort in Game 3, will not be backed up by a fully-loaded bullpen.
The Blue Jays aren't out of the woods yet. But a
t the least, and they're on the right path. Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.
If you wa
nt to talk baseball,hit me up on Twitter. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0