So Far, So Good is a 1993 Bryan Adams compilation album.

It’s also an apt slogan for this nascent Phillies’ season, as your boys find themselves in first place in the National League East on April 8th with a 6-2 record. Zach Eflin looked strong on Sunday afternoon, giving up one run in seven innings of work as the Phils scraped a 2-1 win to take the series from the Twins.

One guy who hasn’t looked so good is Cesar Hernandez, who has 5 hits in 32 plate appearances this season, good for a .179 average, .250 on-base percentage, a .286 slugging percentage, and a .536 OPS, which is worst among starting field players.

Gabe Kapler hasn’t messed with the lineup this season, making just one change in eight games when he gave Andrew Knapp a start on Saturday afternoon. J.T. Realmuto, who is also off to a slow start at the plate, came in to pinch hit in the 7th inning and went 0-2 with a pop out and ground out.

After Sunday’s win, Kapler didn’t rule out making a swap for this series against Washington.

Via Jim Salisbury at NBC Sports Philadelphia, after the jump:

“It’s something that is under consideration and we’ll talk about it (Sunday night),” Kapler said of a lineup tweak after Sunday’s 2-1 win over Minnesota. “Cesar has not gotten off to his best start. We also have a tremendous amount of confidence based on his track record. He has a track record of getting on base. He has a track record of being a productive offensive player. We expect the same from him this year. And if we decide he needs a blow then we’ll get Scotty in there.”

Kingery has zero hits and a walk in five plate appearances this season, so the sample size is essentially zero.

Here’s how his batting numbers compared to Hernandez in 2018:

It’s early, I know. We’re eight games in.

So you tell me –

Would you go for a Scott Kingery start or keep rolling with the same lineup that has thus far gotten you to 6-2?

For now, enjoy Bryan Adams: