Yohendrick Pinango’s misadventures in left field proved costly as Miami Marlins take advantage for 8-2 victory
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The look on Trey Yesavage’s face — and the harsh reaction directed to left field that followed — said everything that the official scoreboard did not on Monday night.
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The Blue Jays rookie was in his typical stellar form before another Rogers Centre sellout crowd of 41,137 on Monday night, holding the Miami Marlins to just two runs through 5 2/3 innings. He could have — and should have — cruised from there.
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Instead, some spectacular defensive blundering from wayward left-fielder Yohendrick Pinango conspired against Yesavage and the Jays in what quickly turned into one of the most frustrating losses of the season.
The lopsided 8-2 final wouldn’t have been anywhere near that grim weren’t it for Pinango’s tentative attempts, much to the frustration of the Jays’ 2024 first-round pick, who bore the brunt of it.
What should have been a relatively easy end to the sixth, while keeping plenty in the tank for the young starter, turned into disaster for him and ultimately the Jays.
Pinango, whose defensive play is kindly a work in process, hesitated in his charge for a blooping ball off the bat of the Marlins’ Kyle Stowers while eyeing shortstop Andres Gimenez.
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A poor break for the ball and broken communication and suddenly the ball was bouncing off the left leg of Pinango and Canadian Liam Hicks scored the Marlins’ third run of the game.
It was an inexcusable play that had to be made, while also reflective of some of the sloppiness that has found its way into the Jays’ game too often in 2026.
Worse for Yesavage, who let his frustrations be known both after the play and as he stomped into the dugout later, it extended a Marlins inning that resulted in three runs.
Sure enough, Javier Sanoja belted another shot Pinango’s way two batters later. Though a much more difficult out to make, the bad night continued as Pinango misjudged the trajectory of that shot and two more runs scored. Neither play was scored an error and suddenly an inning that should have ended with two earned runs on Yesavage’s tab had bloated to five.
No wonder he wasn’t amused.
Some takeaways from a frustrating loss that saw the Jays lose their second in a row and finish the first third of their season with a 25-29 record.
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What Yesavage has meant to Jays
After entering the night with a skimpy 1.07 ERA through his first five starts, Yesavage’s ERA more than doubled to 2.25 through minimal fault of his own.
His form through six starts has been stellar, building as he goes. The 6 2/3 innings he went on Monday (that should have been longer) was the deepest regular season start of his career, as was his 98 pitches.
Given the injury woes to the rotation (with Dylan Cease the latest to join the injured list prior to Monday’s game), the Jays are going to need every bit of his ability.
“Trey’s pretty savvy for a young guy and understood the natural buildup of the season,” manager John Schneider said. “Going back to last year, he’s been impressive in terms of handling everything that we’ve thrown at him and understanding what we want from him and how to do it properly.”
In particular, the Jays have liked the resilience Yesavage has shown, a maturity that belies his youth.
“It’s his first full year in the big leagues, so the routine part of it, the adjustment part of it and seeing what pitch is working every outing is part of it,” Schneider said. “He’s been really damn good.”
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Quick hits
For the optimists in the crowd, the Jays reached the one-third marker with a 26-28 record a season ago, just one win better than this uneven version of the team … Of added note to Pinango’s wayward night in the field: It came on the same day that the man who often patrols left, Davis Schneider, was sent down to make room for the addition of Lukes … Perhaps lost in the blowout portion of the evening was the big-league debut of reliever Tanner Andrews, who arrived at the dome just prior to game time. After 11 years in the minors, the 30-year-old Andrews was an emergency call-up to temporarily take the roster spot vacated when Cease was transferred to the 15-day IL. Andrews pitched a onoe-two-three ninth for the Jays and was warmly received by his teammates when he returned to the dugout … It was a productive night for the Canadian contingent on the Marlins roster as Burlington native Owen Caissie had a pair of hits and two RBIs while Toronto’s Hicks was 1-for-4 and scored a pair of runs.
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