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HIS CONFIDENCE BEAMED, even as his aura faded.

“In my mind,” Vladimir Guerrero Jr. said earlier this month, “I’m the best in the world.”

Guerrero firmly believes this now, while reemerging as one of the game’s best hitters. But he also believed it in 2022, when his numbers dipped in the wake of a breakthrough season. In 2023, when his production fell even further. At the end of this past April, when his batting average stood at just .229. And a month later, when he was stuck on five home runs through the Toronto Blue Jays‘ first 56 games.

“I never really lost sight of the type of ballplayer I am and the type of potential I have within me,” Guerrero said in Spanish. “It’s just a process you have to go through. Thankfully I was able to get through it.”

Guerrero has been incredible since the start of June and otherworldly since the All-Star break. His overall numbers — a .320/.395/.557 slash line, a 33-homer pace and 167 weighted runs created plus — nearly mirror what he attained in 2021, when only Shohei Ohtani prevented him from becoming the American League’s Most Valuable Player at 22 years old. If not for the transformative seasons of Aaron Judge and Bobby Witt Jr. this year, Guerrero, still just 25, might be in the thick of the MVP discussion once more.

And as the Blue Jays flail toward a lost season that has placed them at a crossroads, one certainty seems to have emerged: Guerrero needs to be the face of whatever comes next.


BLUE JAYS OUTFIELDER George Springer likes to call Guerrero a “one-percenter,” a term that applies specifically to the types of pitches he confronts.

One of the more recent examples occurred on Aug. 12 against Los Angeles Angels right-hander Davis Daniel. Daniel throws changeups to opposing right-handed hitters less than 3% of the time and didn’t throw any in that situation through the first two innings that night. Guerrero came up again with one out in the third inning and ran the count full. Daniel thought he’d surprise him by going away from his fastball-slider combination and unveiling a changeup. He placed it perfectly, low and in and on the very edge of the strike zone — and Guerrero hit it 113 mph for a double.

“If you watch the swing, if you watch the at-bat, there’s no way he’s looking for it,” Springer said. “It’s just something in his brain and in his swing that made him see it and hit it. For me that’s hard to explain. It’s something you can’t really coach. He just has it in him.”

Springer became Guerrero’s teammate three years ago and noticed the trait almost instantly. In his mind, it was a separator. From there, he watched Guerrero’s OPS dip from an AL-leading 1.002 in 2021 to .818 in 2022 to .788 in 2023. He was still good — still a yearly All-Star, still producing more than 15% above league average, still the cover athlete for a popular video game — but he was far enough removed from excellence to make one wonder if it was still attainable.

Like Guerrero himself, though, Springer remained bullish.

“I didn’t think,” he said when asked if he thought Guerrero could someday return to his 2021 levels. “I knew.”

Seeing him now, Springer believes Guerrero is “just beginning to scratch the surface of the player he’s gonna be.”

“I think it gets lost on a lot of people how young he actually is,” Springer said. “At 25 years old I was basically in my second season in the big leagues. He’s, in my opinion, a top-five player in this game, and he’s gonna be for a long time. I think once he kinda discovers that next level, he’s gonna be unbelievable.”

Guerrero believes he was too hard on himself last year and has since learned to “control what I can control and let the rest go.”

It’s a mindset rooted in discipline.

Guerrero went into the offseason focused on establishing a routine he wouldn’t waver from. He’d go to the gym every day, no matter how he was feeling. Food outside the regular season was cut off at 6 p.m., with no exceptions. Rather than fixate on the results, he drowned himself in the monotony of the work. It offered him security. And when things went wrong — when the results weren’t there early, when the outside world kept talking about how he might never be great again — Guerrero found comfort in the dependability of his process.

It kept him positive, and it only strengthened his confidence.

“Ultimately if you don’t believe in yourself, nobody’s gonna believe in you,” Guerrero said. “I’m the one who goes out there on the field to play. Nobody goes out there for me. If you put negativity in your mind, things aren’t going to turn out well, no matter what kind of talent you have. But if you stay positive and stay with the process, staying with it every day, the same routine, happy, things are going to change.”


JOHN SCHNEIDER, WHO is winding down his second season as the Blue Jays’ full-time manager, has coached Guerrero dating back to his days in the lower minor leagues. What he’s seeing now is someone with a clear understanding of the pitches he wants to do damage on. It’s evident through his hard-hit percentage, which sits at 55.6%, a career high that places him within the top 1% of his sport. Guerrero has never been more efficient.

“That’s kind of the next step of a great hitter,” Schneider said. “He can cover the entire zone, but I think he’s just really doing a good job right now of focusing on pitches that are really, really ones he can do damage on.”

A comparison of Guerrero’s tendencies between the season’s first two months and the ensuing 12 weeks reveal drastic inconsistencies. Since the start of June, he’s striking out less but also walking less. He’s displaying patience by letting pitches travel deeper to drive them into the opposite field, but impatience by seeing fewer pitches per plate appearance. He’s making more contact, but he’s swinging less often within the strike zone and more often outside of it. To Schneider, it all paints the picture of someone who’s secure, relaxed, willing to be unconventional for the sake of his own comfort. It’s evident in the movement of Guerrero’s hands.

Early in the year, Guerrero’s hands were upright and stiff as he began his pre-pitch load. Now they’re loose, fluid, shifting up and down in perfect sync with the toe-tap he utilizes before his swing. The kinetic chain, as hitters call it, is harmonious.

Guerrero’s launch angle is still comically low for a power hitter — 7.2 degrees, down from 10.5 degrees last year and ranked 129th among 136 qualified players — but it hasn’t mattered. He’s homering at a 7% rate since the start of June, tied with Juan Soto for sixth-highest in the majors in that stretch.

“It sounds really simple,” Schneider said, “but when you start thinking about getting the ball in the air, when you start thinking about hitting home runs, I think it can be a little bit more rigid. He hits the ball so damn hard, he doesn’t have to get it in the air. It’s just him realizing that what he does is enough.”

Guerrero is OPS’ing 1.081 since the end of May and 1.354 since the end of the All-Star break. He hit safely in 22 consecutive games from July 14 to Aug. 10, during which he slashed .494/.558/1.025 with 10 home runs. Right around then, he put together a 25-game stretch that is up there with some of the best in history, with 11 home runs and 12 doubles. He probably won’t match the 48 home runs and 111 RBIs he accumulated in 2021, but he’s on pace to set a career high with 43 doubles. His baserunning has been bad and his first-base defense has been, by some metrics, dreadful, but his offensive production still has him on pace for 5.4 FanGraphs wins above replacement.

Guerrero noticed around late April that his hands had become too stiff (Schneider believes it was the result of trying too hard to elevate pitches). He went about fixing it then, but it took weeks.

“Day by day, I kept working at it and I knew I was gonna get there again,” Guerrero said. “I knew what I was doing was wrong, but I also knew it wasn’t going to change from one day to the next. It’s a process. And within a week, two weeks, I was starting to get them where I needed them to be. In three weeks, they got there. After three weeks, it’s there. ‘Now that it’s there, let’s maintain it there.’ And that’s when things started going the way they should. It’s been like that for three months.”


GUERRERO’S RESURGENCE COULDN’T prevent the Blue Jays from floundering. After a full-throated pursuit of Ohtani this offseason, one in which they agreed to match the significantly backloaded $700 million contract he ultimately signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Blue Jays’ front office didn’t pivot to another impact player. By the All-Star break, the Blue Jays found themselves 44-52 with a minus-66 run-differential. Guerrero’s name — like Bo Bichette‘s, another superstar scheduled for free agency after the 2025 season — was suddenly bandied about in trade rumors, though rival executives sensed the asking price would be exorbitant.

Guerrero was never assured he wouldn’t be traded, but he never asked.

“I knew they weren’t going to,” Guerrero said. “I’m the type of person who feels like if a team has the thought of staying with you, has the thought of having you for many years, they would never think of trading you. If they have long-term plans with you, they’re gonna stick with you. There’s always gonna be rumors. They traded a bunch of my teammates, but you already knew they were going to. With me, that was never talked about.”

The Blue Jays engineered eight present-for-future trades before the July 30 deadline, most notably acquiring two high-end Houston Astros prospects — right-handed pitcher Jake Bloss and left-handed hitter Joey Loperfido — for starting pitcher Yusei Kikuchi. But only two of the players dealt, reliever Nate Pearson and utility man Isiah Kiner-Falefa, were controllable beyond this season. The team’s core remained intact.

On the seventh day of August, Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro held a rare media availability and pointed to those who didn’t move — namely Guerrero, Bichette and two of his core starting pitchers, Kevin Gausman and Chris Bassitt — as proof they will attempt to compete again next season.

“We haven’t said the word ‘rebuild’ once,” Schneider told ESPN a week later. “And that’s been pretty clear from everyone.”

The Blue Jays are guaranteed only one more year of Guerrero and Bichette, the once-heralded prospects who only a half-decade ago represented the start of a potential dynasty in Toronto. They’re expected to explore extensions with both this offseason but remain open-minded about potential trade opportunities. In all likelihood, though, both will be back in some form next season.

“I think because we’re so familiar with those guys,” Schneider said, “you wanna kinda owe it to them and you wanna kinda follow through with what our goal was.”

So they’ll bank on a Bichette bounceback, look to free agency to augment a lineup that could use significantly more punch, overhaul a bullpen that is suddenly in shambles and hope to squeeze at least one more shot from a group that might not have many more shots left.

What comes next could hinge entirely on whether they can lock up Guerrero, whose re-emergence has put him back on a path to great riches.

“I’ve always said it — I’d love to stay here,” Guerrero said. “But it’s a business. Let’s see what happens.”

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Sale, Crochet named comeback players of year

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Sale, Crochet named comeback players of year

LAS VEGAS — Left-handers Chris Sale of the Atlanta Braves and Garrett Crochet of the Chicago White Sox won Major League Baseball’s Comeback Player of the Year awards on Thursday.

Cleveland right-hander Emmanuel Clase won his second AL Reliever of the Year award and St. Louis righty Ryan Helsley won the NL honor.

Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani joined David Ortiz as the only players to win four straight Outstanding Designated Hitter awards. Ohtani and the New York YankeesAaron Judge won Hank Aaron Awards as the outstanding offensive performers in their leagues.

Major League Baseball made the announcements at its All-MLB Awards Show.

Sale, 35, was 18-3 with a 2.38 ERA and 225 strikeouts in 177⅔ innings for the NL’s first pitching triple crown since the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw in 2011. He earned his eighth All-Star selection and first since 2018.

Sale helped Boston to the 2018 World Series title but made just 56 starts from 2020-23, going 17-18 with a 4.86 ERA, 400 strikeouts and 79 walks over 298⅓ innings. He was acquired by Boston from the White Sox in December 2016 and made nine trips to the injured list with the Red Sox, mostly with shoulder and elbow ailments. He had Tommy John surgery on March 30, 2020, and returned to a big league mound on Aug. 14, 2021.

Sale fractured a rib while pitching in batting practice in February 2022 during the management lockout. On July 17, in his second start back, he broke his left pinkie finger when he was hit by a line drive off the bat of the Yankees’ Aaron Hicks. Sale broke his right wrist while riding a bicycle en route to lunch on Aug. 6, ending his season.

Crochet, 25, was 6-12 with a 3.58 ERA over 32 starts for a White Sox team that set a post-1900 record of 121 losses, becoming a first-time All-Star. He struck out 209 and walked 33 in 146 innings.

He had Tommy John surgery on April 5, 2022, and returned to the major leagues on May 18, 2023. Crochet had a 3.55 ERA in 13 relief appearances in 2023, and then joined the rotation this year.

Sale and Crochet were chosen in voting by MLB.com beat writers.

Clase and Helsley were unanimous picks by a panel that included Hall of Famers Trevor Hoffman, Mariano Rivera, Dennis Eckersley and Rollie Fingers, along with John Franco and Billy Wagner. The AL award is named after Rivera and the NL honor after Hoffman.

A three-time All-Star, Clase was 4-2 with a 0.61 ERA, 66 strikeouts and 10 walks in 74⅓ innings, holding batters to a .154 average. The 26-year-old converted 47 of 50 save chances, including his last 47.

Voting was based on the regular season. Clase was 0-2 with a 9.00 ERA in the playoffs, allowing three home runs, one more than his regular-season total.

Helsley, a two-time All-Star, was 7-4 with a 2.04 ERA and 49 saves in 53 chances. He struck out 79 and walked 23 in 66⅓ innings.

Ohtani became the first player with 50 or more homers and 50 or more stolen bases in a season. A two-way star limited to hitting following elbow surgery, Ohtani batted .310 and led the NL with 54 homers and 130 RBIs while stealing 59 bases.

Ortiz won the DH award five years in a row from 2003-07.

The DH award, named after Edgar Martinez, is picked in voting by team beat writers, broadcasters and public relations departments. MLB.com writers determined the finalists for the Aaron awards, and a fan vote was combined with picks from a panel of Hall of Famers and former winners to determine the selections.

Judge led the major leagues with 58 homers and 144 RBIs while hitting .322.

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QB Castellanos exits after losing BC starting job

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QB Castellanos exits after losing BC starting job

Boston College quarterback Thomas Castellanos, who lost his starting job earlier this week, will not be returning to the team, he announced Thursday night.

Castellanos, who started 12 games last season and retained the top job under new coach Bill O’Brien, wrote on X that “unfortunately, all good things come to an end, even though it’s sooner than I would like.” He did not mention the transfer portal in his departing message and has not officially entered it. The junior from Waycross, Georgia, started his career at UCF and appeared in five games in 2022.

O’Brien said Tuesday that Grayson James, who replaced Castellanos in last week’s win against Syracuse, will start Saturday when Boston College visits No. 14 SMU. Castellanos “wasn’t real thrilled” with the decision, O’Brien said, adding that the quarterback decided to step away from the team for several days.

Castellanos had 2,248 passing yards and 1,113 rushing yards last season under coach Jeff Hafley, passing for 15 touchdowns and adding 13 on the ground. He had 18 touchdown passes and only five interceptions this season, but his accuracy dipped in recent weeks, and he completed only 2 of 7 passes against Syracuse before being replaced.

In his statement, Castellanos thanked both coaching staffs he played for at Boston College and wrote that he had “some of the best experiences of my life in the Eagles Nest and I will truly cherish these memories forever.”

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Gators’ Lagway ‘ready to play,’ will start vs. LSU

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Gators' Lagway 'ready to play,' will start vs. LSU

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida quarterback DJ Lagway is “ready to play,” coach Billy Napier said Thursday on his weekly radio show.

Napier removed Lagway from the team’s injury report and penciled him in to start against No. 21 LSU in the Swamp on Saturday.

Lagway practiced every day this week while progressing from a strained left hamstring. The highly touted freshman was carted off the field against Georgia on Nov. 2. Tests revealed a “less significant” injury than initially feared, and now he’s back in time to face the Tigers.

The Gators (4-5, 2-4 Southeastern Conference) need him. They have to win two of their final three regular-season games to become bowl eligible.

LSU (6-3, 3-2) has struggled mightily against dual-threat QBs, including Alabama’s Jalen Milroe, who ran for 185 yards and four touchdowns last week.

Lagway returns after walk-on and Yale transfer Aidan Warner started in his place against Texas. Warner threw two interceptions and was 12-of-25 passing for 132 yards in a 49-17 loss.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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