TORONTO — As the Toronto Blue Jays went their separate ways for the all-star break, the narrative emerging from the clubhouse this month is the one you’d expect: Everyone feels they’re better than their record. Many, including most of the metrics, would agree with that assessment. Based on run differential alone, the Jays should be sitting on a 50-37 record, five games better than what they actually are. Thank the bullpen’s ugly run in late May and early June for that disagreement. As Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Bo Bichette, Marcus Semien and Teoscar Hernandez were heading to Denver for the Midsummer Classic, manager Charlie Montoyo’s assessment of his club’s first half was an honest one.