Guerrero Jr.’s all-star dominance a sign of his growing importance to MLB

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Guerrero Jr.’s all-star dominance a sign of his growing importance to MLB

DENVER – Major League Baseball decked out the Colorado Convention Center in downtown Denver for the all-star week’s fan festivities, plastering massive decals of its brightest talents on the building’s glass exterior. Staring down from one of the main entrances were four players – Fernando Tatis Jr., Tim Anderson, Jacob deGrom and Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

That the Toronto Blue Jays superstar was featured so prominently in the league’s marketing at its central hub for fans, and on banners hanging from light posts all around Coors Field and the downtown core, is a clear demonstration of his growing importance to the sport.

Between his ruthless power, deliberate discipline and infectious joy on the field, Guerrero is everything the sport wants to highlight. Both commissioner Rob Manfred and union boss Tony Clark shouted out his emergence as a key development during their conversations with the BBWAA on Tuesday morning, and in an all-star game largely built around two-way wonder Shohei Ohtani, the 22-year-old demonstrated why he’s a transcendental talent, too.

Whether it was disarming the usually snarling Max Scherzer with a hug on the mound after nearly decapitating the Washington Nationals ace, launching a 468-foot home run off Corbin Burnes or professionally cashing in Teoscar Hernandez with a groundball to the right side, Guerrero’s imprints were all over the American League’s 5-2 win over the National League.

In doing so, he became the first Blue Jays player named all-star game MVP.

His Toronto teammates delivered a similarly strong showing, as Marcus Semien’s infield single in the second brought home Aaron Judge with the game’s first run, while Hernandez doubled and scored in the fifth, as the Blue Jays brought home the game’s first three runs. Bo Bichette, subbing in for Xander Bogaerts in the bottom of the fifth, made a nice play on a deflected Adam Frazier grounder to end that inning and then took his trademark big swings against Mark Melancon in the eighth in a strikeout.

Ohtani went 0-for-2 on a pair of groundouts at the plate but considering that he became the first player ever to start an all-star game on the mound and as a hitter, his night was still remarkable. Roughly 24 hours after an electric showing at the home run derby, when Juan Soto eliminated him after an extra round and a swing-off, the Los Angeles Angels superstar topped out at 100.2 m.p.h. and averaged 98.1 on seven fastballs during a clean 14-pitch first.

Just awe-inspiring stuff.

“The demands on your body to be a pitcher are intense to say the least, I can definitely speak to that,” said Scherzer. “So to be able to shoulder those workloads and also be able to hit as well, that’s just absolutely incredible. It takes an unbelievable athlete to be able to accomplish that and that’s what he is. … He’s must-watch baseball any time he’s on the field.”

So too is Guerrero, who ripped a fastball down and in right back up the middle, with Scherzer barely whipping his head away from the 111.1 m.p.h. rocket that went for a groundout to second. On his way back to the dugout, Guerrero turned wide toward the mound and warmly hugged the fiery righty, his amiability on display the moment the competitor shut down.

“I’m alive and I didn’t get hit by a ball, that’s the success story,” Scherzer said of the exchange. “That’s a pitcher’s worst nightmare … I’m just grateful I still have a blue eye and a brown eye.”

The home run the next inning was majestic, unloading on a lazy 1-1 slider that hung middle-middle and launching it deep into the darkening Rockies sky at 110.2 m.p.h. As he skipped up the line he cracked a smile, revelling in his accomplishment before throwing down his bat and circling the bases.

Waiting for him outside the dugout was Bichette for the pair’s traditional post-homer hug before his elaborate handshake with Hernandez.

In the fifth, he made it 3-0 with his chopper to second allowed Hernandez to scoot home, delivering a productive out on a 98.8 m.p.h. fastball at the top of the zone from Trevor Rogers after swinging through a pair of heaters in similar spots the previous two pitches.

Guerrero came out of the game after the inning but hung around until the end, being among the first players to greet Jared Walsh after he made a sliding catch on a Kris Bryant liner to bail Matt Barnes out of a bases-loaded jam in the eighth and preserve a 5-2 lead.

Major League Baseball can definitely sell that, and the fact there were 42 first-time all-stars in the game and so many compelling young talents – even in the absence of the recently injured Ronald Acuna Jr. – speaks to the opportunity the game has in the years ahead.

Leveraging that, of course, will require labour peace beyond the expiration of the current collective bargaining and more labour talks are upcoming. Both Manfred and Clark were especially tight-lipped about how much, if any, headway was being made but the lack of sniping after last year’s disconcerting back-and-forth is surely better than the alternative.

While there’s certainly lingering distrust, Manfred chafed at the notion of there being any spillover, saying “this whole relationship thing gets overplayed and misinterpreted.”

“If you’re in a collective bargaining relationship, you’re going to have points in time where you have disagreements and sometimes they get public,” he continued. “I don’t think that’s a good thing but it happens, OK? It just is the way of the world. Agreements get made or not made based on the substance of what’s out there. The fact that you have a period of time, which we admittedly had last spring, where we had serious disagreements that became public, I don’t think is really an indicator of whether you’re going to get an agreement.”

A labour stoppage just as the sport is re-emerging from the pandemic would seem asinine, but there are fundamental issues in both the game’s economic structure and the way it’s played that are up for debate.

Manfred essentially said seven-inning doubleheaders and runners on second to begin extra innings won’t be back once health and safety concerns ease, saying “they are much less likely to be part of our permanent landscape,” than non-radical rules that tweak play.

Among them could be regulating defensive shifts by stipulating that two infielders must begin on either side of second base, something he said “is not change, it’s restoration.”

No matter how it’s spun, implementing any adjustments is better done in conjunction with players, especially with the opportunity to reset the sport for rapidly changing times.

At the forefront of it all is a remarkable collection of generational talent taking control of the game, and on a night for baseball’s best to shine, Guerrero outshone them all.

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