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Merry Krampus Everyone! Saturday Dec 14, 2013 Links

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It has been quite a busy and somewhat strange week. The best Jays pitcher retires as a Jay to the chagrin of the self-centered Phillies media. Yankees are shocked that no one really wants to take the Yankees money or terms. Here is a whole pile of links for you long-suffering Jays fans--a couple won't make you happy.

ROY HALLADAY AND SOME JAYS LINKS

Anthopoulos: Jays trade targets still in play - Sportsnet.ca
Barring an unexpected turn, the Toronto Blue Jays will leave the Swan and Dolphin Hotel without having made any significant additions. They’ll return to Toronto, get some rest and review their options before resuming trade talks and free agent negotiations. As of Thursday morning, general manager Alex Anthopoulos remains focused on at least three starting pitching targets

Blue Jays notebook: Pitching search drags on - Sportsnet.ca
Alex Anthopoulos isn’t concerned that the Toronto Blue Jays didn’t add a starting pitcher at the Winter Meetings, and he won’t mind if his search for arms lasts into January. In fact, he expects steady activity to continue across MLB well into next month.

Winter Meetings: Anthopoulos thinking outside the box: Griffin | Toronto Star
Nobody will ever accuse Blue Jays GM Alex Anthopoulos of not thinking outside the box. It’s inside the box where he’s getting beat around.

The Blue Jay Hunter: Is Alex Anthopoulos Tempering Expectations?
The question at the end of the 2013 was "how will the Blue Jays repair their rotation?" But over time, that question has progressed to "will they even upgrade their starting rotation at all?"

Roy Halladay retires
The Hardball TImes: A surprise announcement brings a fan's appreciation.

The Blue Jay Hunter: Roy Halladay: The Ultimate Class Act
Very few players in the history of baseball elicit the kind of response that Roy Halladay does. Halladay was a consummate professional, the fiercest competitor, and the ultimate class act.

Blue Jays: Toronto will always be ‘home’ for the Halladays | Toronto Star
It was an emotional moment for Brandy Halladay on Monday morning at the Disney resort hotel watching her teary-eyed husband announce his retirement.

MLB LINKS

An Eyewitness Account Of The Baseball Agent Slapfight
We've been trying to piece together the fight in the parking lot at baseball's winter meetings in Orlando. Threats of arson? Yes. Gary Sheffield and Dave Stewart? No. Grown men twirling and clapping and slapping? My goodness yes!

Another Reason Frank Thomas Deserves Your Hall Of Fame Vote
When I advocated for Frank Thomas's Hall of Fame candidacy, I mentioned that the autograph I got from him on the day he kinda-sorta saved my life had faded completely from the ball it was on. It turns out Thomas read my post, and he was kind enough to send me a new autographed ball. Seriously, put this man in the Hall of Fame.

Trading for Proven Workhorse David Price | FanGraphs Baseball
The thing we know is that David Price is going to be traded. That much is a virtual certainty, for all of the reasons you already understand. The things we don’t know are all of the details.

MLB Investigates Yankees For Potential Tampering With Mike Trout
This seems like a whole lot of nothing, but we can stand behind anything to make baseball's silly season the sillier. Yesterday, Yankees president Randy Levine had this to say by way of explaining why the team was hesitant to give Robinson Cano too many years:

Tool: Basically Every Pitching Stat Correlation | FanGraphs Baseball
In doing my research, I often like to take a look at correlations to get an idea about whether factors might be connected.

Are Aging Curves Changing? | FanGraphs Baseball
For years it’s been assumed hitters will get to the major leagues and peak offensively around age 30. Teams and fans can hope the new, shiny, 20-home-run-hitting rookie will improve over time and someday will hit 30 to 40 home runs.

Job Posting: Baseball Info Solutions Multiple Openings | FanGraphs Baseball
Baseball Info Solutions (BIS) is committed to providing the most accurate, in-depth, timely professional baseball data, including cutting-edge research and analysis, striving to educate major league teams and the public about baseball analytics.

The all-decade team: best of the best
From Hardball Times: After a whole year of constructing teams of decades one-by-one, Richard is at last ready to reveal the best (and worst) from those squads

The best rookies of the ‘20s
From Hardball Times: The final stop on our tour of the great rookie seasons in baseball history.

FREAK'N BEAR JAMBOROO LINK

The 2013 Deadspin Bear Of The Year
Deadspin is pleased to announce our 2013 Bear of the Year. There were a great many bears to choose, but ultimately our decision was a simple one: Bicycle-Riding Bear Who Ate a Monkey.

TODAY IN SNOWY CANADIAN MLB HISTORY

Baseball History - December 14th - National Pastime - Baseball History
1977 The Red Sox trade Fergie Jenkins, a future Hall-Of-Famer, to the Rangers for 23-year-old pitcher named John Poloni, who will never play in another big league game. As a starter for both the Rangers and later with the Cubs, the Canadian right hander will post a 69-56 record with a 3.71 ERA during the remaining six years of his career.

Poll
What do you think you should get for Χmas?

  69 votes |Results


Would Gavin Floyd Be A Good Signing For The Blue Jays?

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There's some rumblings out there that the mystery team going after former White Sox pitcher Gavin Floyd is none other than the Toronto Blue Jays. Nothing of any truth has been reported, but Alex Anthopoulos does seem to like to do his deals quietly. Just so we can eliminate one team from the possible destinations:

As the tweet notes, Floyd didn't make it out of April this season, but has been a fairly consistent pitcher throughout the rest of his career. He's exceeded 180 innings in four of the last six years, although the last two seasons were the ones where he didn't. When he pitches a full season he has historically hung around 3-4 WAR with his ERA and FIP usually ending up in the high three or low four range.

As I noted in Floyd's "Who Are Ya" post back in April, the 30-year-old right hander is pretty boring and goes about his business pretty quietly. He throws a fastball, sinker, slider, and curveball along with the occasional changeup. He threw this nasty pitch to Robinson Cano in 2012, which they called a cutter (not so sure it is):

Cano1_medium

via www.baseballprospectus.com

Floyd was paid $9.5 million last year after Chicago exercised his club option, but is likely in for a pay cut after his Tommy John surgery. There's some reports that Floyd's contract will be filled with incentives, which makes sense for a player that may not be ready for Opening Day. The Maryland native profiles as a back of the rotation piece, which the Blue Jays are overflowing with. If Floyd were to sign with Toronto, then J.A. Happ, Marcus Stroman, Kyle Drabek, Esmil Rogers, Dustin McGowan, Drew Hutchison, and the aforementioned Floyd would be fighting for two spots in the rotation. Maybe if you throw enough average pitchers at the wall one of them sticks and gives the Blue Jays good value (and the rest get hurt).

I'm not even going to attempt to guess on the contract Floyd would get in Toronto, but you fine folks can try in the comments.

Poll
Do you want the Blue Jays to sign Gavin Floyd?

  736 votes |Results

Today in Blue Jays history: December 15

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Quite the busy day in franchise history.

2012

A year ago today, Dickeymania descended onto Bluebird Banter as news started to leak out that Alex Anthopoulos and the Toronto Blue Jays were close to landing the National League Cy Young winner R.A. Dickey. Things really started on December 14, when Damaso's Burnt Shirt posted a Ken Rosenthal tweet saying that extension talks have broken down between the Dickey and the Mets, and speculated about how the Blue Jays could acquire the knuckleballer. In the poll, 34% of you wanted to trade J.P. Arencibia and Moises Sierra for R.A. Dickey--keep that complete lowball in mind as you put out trade proposals this offseason.

For some reason, I was still up at 3 am and posted a couple of early morning tweets from Jeff Passan, who said that Travis d'Arnaud was one of the "principals" of the trade. My favourite sentence in the piece:

I don't know why the Jays would need more starting pitching, but they could use them for a subsequent trade.

That clearly shows that I know nothing--why the hell would the Jays need Jon Niese or Zach Wheeler--they have plenty of pitching, it's not like they'll have to use Aaron Laffey in the rotation haaha. A baseball analogy of that sentence is this:

1rasmusmoore1

via FanGraphs

In the poll, 60% of you were either uncomfortable or were unsure whether you'd be uncomfortable with the Blue Jays sending d'Arnaud for Dickey. I wish I was there when you found out who else was being sent over! (Points to Pikachu, who was the first to mention that perhaps one of Noah Syndergaard or Aaron Sanchez was to be included.) By the afternoon of December 16, 2012, the tables flipped and 63% of us were ready to accept the high price (Syndergaard and d'Arnaud) for Dickey, because flags fly forever and all that.

From that first speculation post to the official trade post, we Bluebird Banterers made 9,365 comments in a three-day period. In the final post, after knowing all the pieces of the trade and how much Dickey was going to cost, 70% of us still said that they would not have vetoed the trade. A few days after the trade, Emily G detailed what she thought about the trade in a piece called "A Roller Coaster Ride Of Feels: From Hate To Love Of The R.A. Dickey Trade." I hope that Emily got off the roller coaster some time before April.

2011

"New York Post Thinks Blue Jays Will Get Yu Darvish"

2009

Although not officially completed until December 16, Tom Dakers showed that by the morning of the 15th there were already pretty concrete rumours out there saying that the Blue Jays were going to receive Kyle Drabek, Travis d'Arnaud, and Michael Taylor for Roy Halladay and cash. What I had forgotten was that reporters were initially unsure whether the Phillies were sending back Drabek or J.A. Happ--who would've thought that by 2013 Happ would've contributed 0.6 greater WAR in a Blue Jays than Drabek? Simultaneously, the Phillies traded Cliff Lee to the Mariners for Tyson Gilles, Philippe Aumont, and J.C. Ramirez. (Note: Navin Vaswani, a.k.a. eyebleaf, was a commenter in that thread, clearly before he was too famous for us.)

Later that day, the Blue Jays flipped Michael Taylor to the Phillies for third basemanBrett Wallace, puzzling Dakers, who wrote:

Not sure I understand the point of getting Wallace, who looks like someone that will have to move to first base. I was hoping we were going to give Brian Dopirak a shot at first if Lyle is moved. And without Taylor we still have a gaping hole in RF. I was really hoping we were doing something that would stop Cito from using Bautista in RF this year. Wallace better be an amazing bat.

Of course, the reason Anthopoulos acquired Wallace was because he wanted him to slug in Las Vegas then acquire the guy the Phillies refused to give up: Anthony Gose (and also because he knew that Jose Bautista was going to break out in 2010, I'm sure). Right now, Gose still looks like the best out of the three, with Taylor just having logged 26 big league games over three seasons, and Wallace struggling with the Astros.

Kind of overshadowed, what with the departure of a franchise great and all, Adam Lindwon the Edgar Martinez designated hitter award after hitting .305/.370/.562, hitting 35 home runs and 46 (!!!) doubles. He hit .275/.318/.461 against lefties that year...

2006

The first bit of news of a seven-year $126-million contract extension for Vernon Wells leaked out via Ken Rosenthal on this day six years ago. We now know what a disaster that deal turned out to be (for the Angels), but as Rosenthal pointed out, Wells could've potentially had a larger payout if he had reached free agency.

2003

The Blue Jays acquired reliever Justin Speier from the Rockies as part of a three-team trade, sending Mark Hendrickson to the Devil Rays and Sandy Nin to the Rockies. Justin was the son of Chris, who was the Expos' shortstop in the late '70s and the early '80s. The Speier family lived in Sainte-Adèle year-round and even attended a bilingual school. Speier had three solid seasons in the Blue Jays' bullpen, maintaining a 3.18 ERA and a 1.160 WHIP in 187 innings. He took those numbers to the Angels and signed a three-year, $12.75-million contract (he had one good season with them before falling off a cliff). The Blue Jays thanked him for his services and drafted Brett Cecil as compensation.

Toronto also sent Shannon Stewart and Dave Gassner to the Minnesota Twins for outfielder Bobby Kielty. Kielty played half of 2004 with the Jays before being traded to the A's for Ted Lilly in one of J.P. Ricciardi's best trades.

2002

December 15 has been quite the busy day for the Blue Jays. In 2002, they acquired prospect Jason Arnold from the Athletics in a four-team trade. The Blue Jays sent future All-Star shortstop Felipe Lopez to the Reds, who sent Elmer Dessens to the Diamondbacks, who in turn sent Eubriel Durazo to the A's. Arnold never made it to the major leagues and was out of baseball by 2006.

1998

SkyDome Corp. president Pat McDougall announced that the stadium was in such dire financial straits that they needed $2 million in order to stay afloat through February 28 and that they will be seeking further bankruptcy protection from creditors. The $570-million stadium was sold for $85 million to Sportsco International a month later. Sportsco later sold it to Rogers for $25 million in 2005.

1993

Mark Eichhorn left the Blue Jays after winning a World Series ring and signed with the Orioles.

1992

Tom Henke broke many Blue Jays' fans' hearts as he returned to the Texas Rangers as a free agent, signing a two-year, $8-million contract. With Duane Ward ready to slide into the closer's role, the Blue Jays never bothered to offer Henke a contract.

1983

Commissioner Bowie Kuhn suspended Steve Howe, Willie Wilson, Jerry Martin, and Willie Aikens for an entire season for drug abuse. The Royals and Blue Jays had agreed on principle to a trade to send Aikens (who was in prison for purchasing cocaine at that time) to Toronto, but the suspension threw a wrench into things. A few days later, the trade was completed when the Blue Jays sent Jorge Orta to Kansas City. He successfully appealed the year-long suspension and managed to play 93 games with Toronto in 1984, dropping from a .302/.373/.539 line in 1983 to a meagre .205/.298/.376. Aikens was out of the majors by April 1985, but not until he put his name into the record books: Aikens hit a game-tying two-run homer in the top of the ninth of a game against the Rangers in his last major league at bat.

SB Nation's Amy Nelson wrote a great piece about Aikens last summer and you should go read it.

1977

The Blue Jays traded John Scott to the Cardinals to complete a trade in which Toronto acquired Pete Vuckovich for Tom Underwood and Victor Cruz.

Sources: Bluebird Banter archives, Baseball-Reference, FanGraphs, Toronto Star archives, 2013 Toronto Blue Jays Official Guide.

The 411 On Potential Jeff Samardzija Trade Partners: Blue Jays

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In the first of a series, we'll review the Jays as a possible suitor for Jeff Samardzija.

The Need

The Jays appeared to go all-in last year, trading several top prospects for veterans that would help them win in 2013. Whoops. The Jays lost 17 of their first 26 games and never recovered, finishing 14 games under .500 and fourth in the American League East. The Jays seem to now be on a tight budget with a team that's built to win now and they need help. What kind of help? Pitching help. Enter: Jeff Samardzija.

The Prospects

Let's lead this off by level-setting everyone. I'm not a scout. I don't talk to scouts. I have zero contacts inside the industry. But, I have a laptop with an internet connection and that gives me information. Here's what I'm looking at, in case you'd like to play along

Baseball America's Top 10 Jays Prospects (12/13/13)

Baseball Prospectus' Top 10 Jays Prospects (12/6/13)

Fangraphs' Top 10 Jays Prospects (12/3/13)

MLB.com's Top 20 Jays Prospects

For the purpose of the Jays system, I'm going to focus exclusively on their pitchers, both because I think that's what the Cubs will be most interested in and because the Jays are loaded with them.

Aaron Sanchez, RHP, High A: 86⅓ IP, 7.82 K/9, 4.17 BB/9, 3.63 FIP, 3.34 ERA

Widely regarded as a Top-50 prospect, Sanchez is at worst the #2 player in the Blue Jays system and projects as a future No. 2. Sanchez didn't really put up mind-blowing numbers in High-A, walking a lot of guys and not striking a whole lot of guys out, which only continued in the Arizona Fall League. The interesting thing about Sanchez is that even though he's so well thought of, his only current consensus plus pitch appears to be his fastball, which sits in the mid 90s with life. His curve ball seems to be his second best pitch, with services on the fence of whether or not it's plus, but everyone agreeing they think it'll get there. He also throws a change that the above sites think can eventually get to plus, but is currently average. The biggest flaw here appears to be that Sanchez needs to work on his command.

Marcus Stroman, RHP, Double A: 111⅔ IP, 10.4 K/9, 2.18 BB/9, 3.21 FIP, 3.30 ERA

Stroman will probably end up in most Top 100s, but there is a lot of debate on his future role in the big leagues. The point of contention revolves around his height: Stroman is listed at 5'9" and he could be even shorter than that. The list of successful MLB starters at 5-9 or under is not very long, so many think his eventual role will be as a high leverage reliever. Stroman throws a plus mid-low 90s fastball, a plus cutter and a plus slider to go with a developing change up. He's able to maintain his velocity on his fastball late into games as well. The height really seems to be the primary issue here, with services questioning whether his body can hold up and whether he can get downward plane on his fastball. He could end up as high as a No. 2 or he could end up in the bullpen.

Roberto Osuna, RHP, Low A: 42⅓ IP, 10.84 K/9, 2.34 BB/9, 5.53 ERA, 3.55 FIP

Osuna had Tommy John surgery and could return in 2014. He projects as a No. 2 or No. 3 starter with a good fastball, but his secondary pitches and control need a bit of work. Osuna is only 18, so he's got time on his side, but there are also concerns about his maturity and his weight.

Daniel Norris, LHP, High A: 85⅔ IP, 10.4 K/9, 4.6 BB/9, 3.48 FIP, 4.20 ERA

Norris has a No. 3 ceiling, but he needs to improve his command in order to reach it. He throws a fastball that can sit in the mid 90s and his breaking pitch (some called it a curve, some a slider) can be a plus pitch. Everyone talks about his athleticism and he was able to tinker his delivery last year, which helped him decrease his walks. Norris only played one game in High-A, so he'll probably start the season there.

Sean Nolin, LHP, MLB (Stats from Double A): 92⅔ IP, 10.00 K/9, 2.43 BB/9, 3.01 ERA, 2.69 FIP

Nolin is a MLB-ready starter whose repertoire includes a fastball, change up, slider and curveball, all of which are average with the exception of his plus change. He makes it all work with plus command and that's what gives him a No. 4 starter projection.

Alberto Tirado, RHP, Rookie Ball: 48⅓ IP, 8.19 K/9, 3.72 BB/9, 1.68 ERA, 3.39 FIP

The Jays' rookie ball squad had several high upside arms of interest and the most highly thought of is Tirado, an 18-year-old out of the Dominican Republic. He has the potential to be a No. 2 starter if he can improve his stamina, command and the consistency of his delivery. He throws a mid 90s fastball that's currently plus and a change up and slider that services are betting both get to plus.

Chase DeJong, RHP, Rookie Ball: 56 IP, 10.61 K/9, 1.61 BB/9, 3.05 ERA, 1.90 FIP

DeJong is a projectable 2012 second-round pick who has a chance to be a No. 3 in the big leagues. His fastball and curve ball both project to plus.

Others to keep an eye on:

Matt Smoral, D.J. Davis, A.J. Jimenez, Franklin Barreto, Jairo Labourt, Anthony Gose, John Stilson and Tom Robson.

The Deals

Womp Womp:

Sean Nolin, Chase DeJong & Alberto Tirado

Daniel Norris, Chase DeJong & Alberto Tirado

That's about right:

Aaron Sanchez, Sean Nolin and Chase DeJong

Sean Nolin, Chase DeJong, Daniel Norris, Alberto Tirado and John Stilson

Holy &%$#!

Aaron Sanchez, Marcus Stroman and anyone

Feel free to tear my proposed deals to shreds in the comments and create your own.

Jared Goedert reportedly signed minor league deal with Blue Jays

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According to Jon Morosi, the Blue Jays have agreed to a minor league deal with former Pittsburgh Pirates minor leaguer Jared Goedert and have invited him to attend big league spring training. Goedert, 28, is a utility player who has spent the majority of last season--and his career--at third base, but has logged some time in the corner outfield positions as well as first and second base.

Goedert, a righty, was picked in the ninth round of the 2006 draft by the Cleveland Indians out of Kansas State and has been meandering the minor leagues since then, taking four seasons to make it to triple-A. He left the Indians organization after 2012 to sign on with the Pirates as a non-roster invitee, and played 130 games with the triple-A Indianapolis Indians (confusingly a Pirates, not an Indians, affiliate) where he hit .241/.316/.390 with 11 homers and 32 doubles.

Unless he breaks out in spring training, or even if he does that, Goedert is likely to begin the 2014 season with the Buffalo Bisons

Blue Jays 2014 Winter Tour

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Ontario stops only.

The Blue Jays announced their 2014 Winter Tour.

So this year's "Cross Canada Tour" all happens in Ontario. As a westerner, it feeds into our stereotype vision of folks from Toronto, thinking that Canada ends at the Ontario borders Stupid cheap Rogers doesn't want to kick in for airfare. They are going to make the players hitchhike from stop to stop.

The tour has two legs. One January 9-12th going to Oshawa, Toronto, Kingston and Peterborough. And then, from January 16-18th making stops in St. Catharines, London and Mississauga.

In this interview Minor Leaguer did with Buffalo Bisons' GM Mike Buczkowski, Mike mentions he's like the Jays to visit Buttalo. One would think the Winter Tour, especially with it staying close to home, would be a good opportunity for the Jays to hit Buffalo, but no. I don't understand why they wouldn't. How far is it from London to Buffalo? Maybe they will visit Buffalo at another time this winter, but this would be a good excuse.

Players that will taking part in the tour are Adam Lind, Steve Delabar, Josh Thole, Colby Rasmus, Brandon Morrow, Dustin McGowan, Esml Rogers, Todd Redmond, Anthony Gose and, of course, manager John Gibbons.

Here is the itinerary:

OSHAWA:

Autograph session at Oshawa Centre (January 9)

TORONTO:

Media Availability at Rogers Centre (January 10)
Ronald McDonald House Toronto Visit (January 12 private event - open to media)

KINGSTON:

Media Availability at Marriott Residence Inn Kingston (January 10)
Canadian Forces Base Kingston visit (January 10 private event - open to media)
Kingston Frontenacs game (January 10, players to assist in various game entertainment activities)
Autograph session at Cataraqui Centre (January 11)
Kingston Boys and Girls Club visit (January 11 private event - open to media)

PETERBOROUGH:

Autograph session at Lansdowne Place (January 12)

ST. CATHARINES:

Brock University visit (private event - open to media) (January 16)
Autograph session at The Pen Centre (January 16)

LONDON:

Sir Isaac Brock Public School visit (January 17 private event - open to media)
Media Availability at Hilton London (January 17)
Autograph session at Budweiser Gardens prior to the London Knights game (January 17, players to also assist in various game entertainment activities)
Baseball Skills Event at Centrefield Sports (January 18 private event - open to media)

MISSISSAUGA:

Autograph session at Erin Mills Town Centre (January 18)

If you are in one of those cities, it is a good chance to get an autograph or two. It was great fun when they came to Calgary 3 years ago.

New posting rules for NPB players

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The MLB PR department twitter posted this:

So there is no more bidding. The MLB team that makes a deal with the player will have to pay the NPB team the posting cost that the NPB team sets, no more than $20 million. I'd imagine all the top players will come with the $20 million price tag.

Any MLB team would pay $20 for a player like  Masahiro Tanaka, so it  really makes the posting more like a normal free agent deal. The teams will negotiate with the player, and if they make a deal $20 million is paid to the NPB team. It seems like this will make it more likely the big market teams will get the player, though I suppose it was always most likely that big market teams would get the player. The NPB teams, at least the ones posting the very top players, are losing out on a lot of money. The Nippon Ham-Fighters got $51,703,411, for Yu Darvish, from the Rangers. $31.7 million more than Tanaka's team will get. I think that the team gets less, and it's likely the player will get more because he can play the MLB teams off against each other, instead of only have one team to negotiate with.

I wonder if Tanaka will be posted this year? I would think that the Rakuten Golden Eagles would have been hoping for more than $20 million.

I'm not sure if this makes it more or less likely that the Jays will get Tanaka.

Indians sign Shaun Marcum

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Tribe begins to add some backend rotation candidates.

The Indians have signed right-handed starting pitcher Shaun Marcum to a minor league deal. Marcum is thus not guaranteed a spot, but he can opt out of the deal of he's not on the 25-man roster come Opening Day. If he does make the team, his salary bumps to $1 million, with an additional $3 million in incentives.

Marcum pitched very well for Toronto in 2008, but his season ended early due to an elbow injury which required Tommy John surgery and kept him out all of 2009. He returned in 2010 and pitched well for 2.5 years, split between the Blue Jays and the Brewers, before missing 60 games with a strained elbow. He signed a 1-year, $4 million deal with the Mets last offseason, hoping to rebuild some value, but instead started only 12 games due to injuries to his neck and shoulder, and also on account of ineffectiveness, as he struggled through his worst season in MLB.

If he can get back to his 2010-2012 form, he'd be a solid #3 starter, but his pitches have each lost ~3 MPH from his peak seasons, and he's not seen as a good bet to get back to his previous form. Still, given that the Tribe's other options for the #5 spot in the rotation right now are Carlos Carrasco, Trevor Bauer, and Josh Tomlin (appealing), it's worth signing him to this risk-free deal and putting him into the mix come Spring Training. Who knows, maybe he'll work out as well as Scott Kazmir did.

YearAgeTmERAGGSIPHRBBSOERA+WHIPHR/9BB/9SO/9
200523TOR0.00508.00441.2500.04.54.5
200624TOR5.06211478.1143865911.5961.64.47.5
200725TOR4.133825159.027491221081.2451.52.86.9
200826TOR3.392525151.121501231251.1631.23.07.3
201028TOR3.643131195.124431651151.1471.12.07.6
201129MIL3.543333200.222571581111.1561.02.67.1
201230MIL3.702121124.016411091111.2661.23.07.9
201331NYM5.29141278.172160681.3530.82.46.9
8 Yrs3.88188161995.01313038061071.2341.22.77.3


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What one question would you like to ask Alex Anthopoulos?

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I'm tired of this off-season already.

Last year, the off-season was fun. It was exciting. Things happened. The club had obvious holes and it went out to fill the holes. We didn't know that it wouldn't workout. This season, well the team has obvious holes, but there doesn't seem to be a rush to fill them. Well, except for catcher. We can argue about how well they filled the spot but they did fill it.

Since we have no news this morning, let's do a question:

If you could ask Alex Anthopoulos one question, what would it be?

Mine was: What one thing do did you learn from this season?

He hasn't gotten back to me on that. I'm starting to think we aren't the buddies I thought we were. Sometimes, I get the feeling that this is all a one sided relationship. I give and give and give and get nothing back.

Or it's possible that he has no idea who I am.

Anyway, get us the question that you'd like to ask of Alex.

Blue Jays sign Steve Tolleson as a non-roster invitee

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A day after inking Jared Goedert, the Blue Jayssigned utility player Steve Tolleson to a minor league contract with an invitation to big league spring training. Tolleson, 26, is not related to Dodgers reliever Shawn Tolleson but he is the son of former Ranger and Yankee infielder Wayne Tolleson.

Steve Tolleson was the Twins' fifth round pick in 2005 and made his major league debut with the Oakland Athletics against the Rays in April 28, 2010 and collected his first career hit two days later against the Blue Jays, singling against Josh Roenicke. The righy hit .225/.273/.350 in 54 major league games in 2010 and 2012. Tolleson had a career moment on June 10, 2012 with the Orioles when he slammed a game-tying three-run homer off of Cliff Lee to help the Orioles in a  5-4 win.

Since 2009 he has played mostly in triple-A with Rochester, Sacramento, Tucson, Norfolk, and most recently Charlotte. It is likely that he will spend most of 2014 with Buffalo. In the minors, he has logged the most time playing the middle infield positions, with some times spent at third base and left field.

Tolleson is out of options.

Tuesday Pondering: How Many More Players Does This Team Need?

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The news is coming in real slow these days, making us Blue Jays fans a little anxious about the upcoming season with the first pitch of Spring Training about 71 days away. I'm interested in how far away the Blue Jays are away from having a team you'd be comfortable with come February. Obviously there are 25 players on a Major League team and Toronto currently has 39 players to work with from their 40-man roster.

For me personally, I'd be content with Dioner Navarro at catcher, with Edwin Encarnacion, Ryan Goins, Jose Reyes, and Brett Lawrie taking up the starting infield spots. Jose Bautista, Colby Rasmus, and Melky Cabrera starting in the outfield is not too worrying, with Anthony Gose, Josh Thole and Maicer Izturis taking up 75% of the bench spots, while Adam Lind DH's. If we're being realistic, Ryan Goins may not be a suitable starting second baseman for a contending team so we'll consider that position a spot of need.

On the pitching front, R.A. Dickey, Mark Buehrle, Brandon Morrow are definite members of the rotation while a multitude of second-tier starters battle it out for the back-end spots. In the bullpen, Steve Delabar, Brett Cecil, Casey Janssen, Sergio Santos, Aaron Loup, Jeremy Jeffress, and Neil Wagner make up a fairly strong bullpen, but adding one more cheap piece with upside wouldn't be a bad move for Alex Anthopoulos.

That leaves positions of need at second base, the fourth bench spot, the back-end of the rotation, and possibly the bullpen before I'd be confident in the 2014 Toronto Blue Jays. That equals four players being added  before the active roster resembles something that would be good enough to break camp with in a few months. Obviously the front office will be doing everything they can to add pieces at nearly every position, but with the quiet off-season so far Toronto should at least try to fill their clear areas of need. Of course Moises Sierra, Marcus Stroman, and a large number of Blue Jays pitchers would have something to say about not being included in the current roster, but they haven't earned their spots as of yet.

On this slow Tuesday, what do you folks think about the Blue Jays current roster situation?

Poll
How many more players would you like to see the Blue Jays add to their active roster?

  522 votes |Results

Esmil Rogers Needs To Feature His Sinker

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When Esmil Rogers first arrived as a starter in 2013 there was a lot of buzz about his new sinker. If he wants to be successful in 2014 he'll need to go back to relying on that pitch.

In 2013 Esmil Rogers emerged from relative obscurity to start 20 games from the Toronto Blue Jays. The fact a guy like Esmil Rogers started 20 games for a team that thought it was a World Series contender going into the season is pretty indicative of how last season went. Rogers ended up having a season that had a very Carlos Villanueva flavor to it. He was brilliant at times, usually not great, and had some trouble as the season wore on. Unlike Villaneuva, Rogers had a bit of a rebound in September suggesting being out of gas wasn't the source of his issues. At the end of the day he put up numbers that were not good, but could have been worse, with a 4.77 ERA, a 4.73 FIP and a less than fantastic 0.4 WAR in 137.2 innings.

Approaching the 2014 season it's hard to say exactly where Rogers fits with this team. The Blue Jays have tendered him a contract and he is out of options so they definitely see him as a big league caliber player. The smart money would be on Rogers working out of the bullpen as a long reliever/spot starter, but there's a chance he'll get the opportunity to compete for a starting job. After all, it doesn't hurt to have as many guys competing as possible. Additionally, the Blue Jays will likely want Rogers stretched out in case he is needed due to injuries. Even if it is near the bottom, Esmil Rogers sits somewhere on this team's starting rotation depth chart. It would not be altogether surprising to see him take the hill in the first inning at some point in 2014. The question is, how likely is it that he can be effective if he does so?

Esmil Rogers certainly had flashes of brilliance in 2013 but he was not consistent. If we look at his numbers month-to-month while he was a starter, they look like this:

Month

K/9

BB/9

HR/9

ERA

FIP

xFIP

June

5.68

2.27

1.14

2.27

4.18

3.53

July

7.07

2.89

1.29

7.07

4.41

3.77

August

6.45

2.82

3.22

7.66

7.35

4.34

September

6.75

3.38

1.01

3.71

4.25

3.91

The ERA numbers there show the extreme volatility of sample sizes as small as a single month, but even by FIP Rogers had his best months in June and September. The reason this is interesting is because that's when Rogers was using his new sinker the most. In June before joining the rotation Rogers added a sinker to his repertoire and it was often given credit for the successes he had early on. As the season wore on Rogers struggled and that sinker stopped getting any attention. Rogers new go-to pitch became an afterthought, but perhaps it shouldn't have. The following chart shows his sinker usage by month compared to his four seam fastball:

Rogers went to his sinker much more frequently in the months where he was most successful. That in and of itself doesn't prove anything, but it did pique my interest. In order to find out more about the link between Rogers success and his sinker usage I dug a little deeper. The following zone profile from Brooks Baseball shows the location of sinkers thrown by Esmil Rogers during the 2013 season:

It's clear that Rogers did a great job of a burying the sinkers down in the zone, a prerequisite for success with the pitch. Location is one thing, but results are another entirely. You can have a perfectly placed sinker, but if opposing batters are driving it in the air it's not an effective pitch. The picture below shows how often Rogers was able to induce the ground ball with his sinker:

That's some pretty impressive stuff. We're probably not looking at the next Brandon Webb here, but a sinker that is well placed and gets ground balls is a valuable tool.

In order to see if there was a link between the quantity of sinkers Rogers threw and his effectiveness as a starter, I looked at his game logs in order to see in which starts he used his sinker the most. In the course of the season I found 6 starts where Rogers used his sinker more often than his traditional four seam fastball. The following chart showed how Rogers performed in those starts:

Game

Sinkers Thrown

Sinker Percentage

Innings Pitched

Hits

Runs

Earned Runs

Home Runs

Walks

Strikeouts

6/13/13 @ TEX

36

38.7%

7

5

1

1

1

1

1

6/18/13 COL

34

38.2%

6.2

4

3

2

0

1

5

6/24/13 @TB

36

37.9%

6

7

4

4

3

3

2

6/29/13 @ BOS

44

44.4%

6

6

0

0

0

1

6

9/2/13 @ ARI

34

41.0%

6.1

1

0

0

0

1

5

9/8/13 @ MIN

34

36.6%

7.2

3

0

0

0

1

4

There are 5 quality starts on this list, though the other start with three home runs allowed against Tampa is particularly ugly. If you add up the total of these starts you get the line below:

Innings Pitched

BB%

K%

BABIP

ERA

FIP

39.2

5.4%

15.6%

.196

1.82

4.06

The ERA is artificially low because of the BABIP number here, but even the FIP is respectable. Although there is no way the BABIP is remotely sustainable, Rogers did allow a less dangerous batted ball profile against in the starts he used his sinker the most:

Split

Ground Ball%

Fly Ball%

Line Drive%

Heavy Sinker Usage Starts

57.4%

25.2%

17.4%

2013 Totals

47.2%

29.6%

23.2%

It's hard to be too definitive given the small sample size of six starts but it appears that there is something here.

Esmil Rogers isn't a great starting pitcher, or even a good starting pitcher. When we are talking about Rogers we are shooting for adjectives like fringe-average and feasible. However, it does appear that the sinker that he developed last year is an effective pitch and that he has more success when he throws it more often. If he were to reinvent himself as a purer sinkerballer he might be able to improve upon his numbers from last year. In all honesty, Toronto Blue Jays fans don't want to see very much of Esmil Rogers as a starting pitcher in 2014. Unfortunately, a situation may arise where they have to. It's comforting to know that if that day comes Rogers has a quality weapon in his arsenal.

Blue Jays' slow offseason "to give writers a break" says Alex Anthopoulos

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Since the beginning of November 2013, the Toronto Blue Jays have only made 19 transactions after making 52 transactions over the same period in 2012. The quiet offseason has caused worry among some segments of the fanbase, who believe that the club needs to do more to fill significant holes in their starting rotation and lineup. The reason for the lack of moves, Bluebird Banter has learned, is that general manager Alex Anthopoulos wanted to give some time off for beat writers and bloggers who follow the team.

"They've worked so hard since last offseason," Anthopoulos told Bluebird Banter in an exclusive interview, "last offseason there were so many moves--we made 15, 20 waiver claims--and the writers had to write about each one of them. Every day there was some sort of move and they would have to go online and find out who David Herndon and Scott Maine and Tyson Brummett were.

"We were a bit reckless--maybe that's too strong of a word, how about 'trigger-happy'--last offseason and we never thought about the ramification of our actions on the reporters and bloggers."

Anthopoulos then recounted a story a beat reporter told him a story about how his Christmas shopping was interrupted with the news that the Blue Jays had outrighted Mickey Storey in order to claim Russ Canzler. Rushing to his car to get his laptop to write up the story, the unnamed reporter accidentally ran into a group of orphans, shattering the only Christmas present they were going to get that year--a Blackberry Playbook tablet.

"I'll never forget that story, it will live with me for the rest of my life," Anthopoulos said, "I mean when they're older the orphans would realize that Playbooks are as useless as Phiten necklaces, but my decision to claim Canzler brought tremendous grief to those kids."

Anthopoulos added, "to prevent something like that from happening before the Christmas break, I spoke with Dana [Brown], Andrew [Tinnish], and Tony [LaCava] that we would not be making any moves even when it might be something that benefits the club. They worked their butts off last offseason and then were forced to sit through and write about 2013. I think it is time to give writers a break, let them spend more time with friends and family. I mean we'll do a Jared Goedert here and a Stevie Tolleson there because sometimes I just can't resist, but those are like two- or three-paragraph stories max.

"We'll see what we can do in January. We'll see how the market develops then. If all the players are gone by then and we finish in last place again, well, at least I'll know in my heart that bloggers and reporters were able to spend quality time with their loved ones, to live their lives."

We at Bluebird Banter thank Alex Anthopoulos for speaking with us and for mistakenly believing that we have a life outside of blogging and that lack of team news means that we end up doing posts on wildly speculative trade suggestions, endless analyses of free agent targets, and unfunny satirical pieces.

UPDATE

2013 Blue Jays Most Memorable Games: Tom's Picks

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We are going to do a round of having each of us pick out our three most memorable games from this past season. Since I'm going first, I'm picking the low hanging fruit.

Opening Day

This is a bit of a cheat, opening day is always memorable. This one more so than most. After the build up of the off-season, we were really looking forward to this season. With R.A. Dickey, Josh Johnson and Mark Buehrle added to the rotation and Jose Reyes, Melky Cabrera and Emilio Bonifacio added to the line up, this was going to be our year. How could the season go wrong, we had Geddy Lee throwing out the first pitch.

Opening Day should have been our first clue that it wasn't going to be our year. First of all, we were only able to manage 4 hits against Justin Masterson and 3 relievers, one of whom has Chris Perez. Not being able to score against Perez should have told us everything we needed to know about 2013.

We had our ace starting, the 2012 NL Cy Young winner. All would be good. It wasn't. For one, he had a hard time with the strike zone, or, perhaps, home plate umpire, Jeff Nelson had a hard time calling a knuckleball. It isn't easy, I umpired one game when a kid threw an occasional, but very impressive, knuckleball. It is a tough pitch to call. Most pitches you have a good idea if it is going to be a strike soon after it leaves the pitcher's hand. Knuckleballs you have no clue until it gets to the plate, and at the very last moment it could move several inches in any direction (ok, not up, even the knuckleball can't defy gravity).

Among the things that made the game memorable (in a man I wish I could forget that way) was J.P. Arencibia's troubles catching a knuckleball, one that was dancing even more than normal. J.P. had 3 passed balls on the day, and there was one Dickey pitch that was deemed a wild pitch. After the three passed balls, in the first two innings, Henry Blanco made a suggestion that improved things for him.

The moment that sticks out most in my mind was the two-run home run that Asdrubal Cabrera hit. I can still see the incredulous look on Dickey's face. Cabrera didn't really make great contract but he ball carried over the opposite field wall. It surprised me that it was a home run, but not as much as it surprised RA. More foreshadowing. That would be the first of 35 home runs Dickey would allow.

Really about the only things this game was missing, to make it a total metaphor for the season to come was a Bonifacio error and an injury.

Opening day, and we found out that our Jays wouldn't go 162-0. The good foreshadowing? We had 3 scoreless innings from our bullpen. Aaron Loup, Sergio Santos and Brett Cecil allowed just 2 hits to go with 3 strikeouts.

You can see the look on Dickey's face in this MLB recap of the game.


Mark Buehrle allows 7 runs in one inning, Jays come back and win.

It was May 6th and the season wasn't going the way we expected. Coming into that evening's game against the Rays we were sitting at 11-21.

That night's starting pitcher wasn't giving us what we expected either. Before the start of the game, he was 1-2 with a 6.43 ERA. We were starting to feel that Buehrle just didn't have what it took to pitch in the AL East. or maybe he was done at the age of 34.

The night, against the Rays, he fought his way through a first inning in which he allowed 2 hits and a walk, but a pickoff of Desmond Jennings helped him put up a zero in the first. Then a quick 3 up 3 down second inning made you think all was going to be ok. That feeling didn't last long.

His third inning went single, walk, single, single, home run, double, strikeout (yay), home run, ground out and strikeouts. 7 runs. The guy gave up 7 runs, including 2 home runs, in one inning, and stayed in the game. I spent a few hours, on Baseball Reference, trying to find another time when a starting pitcher had allowed 7 run in an inning and stayed in the game to pitch the next inning, but I didn't find one.

Buehrle would pitch 3 more innings, allowing just one more hit.

Amazingly enough, our offense was able to make a great comeback. We scored 3 in the 4th inning, Colby Rasmus hit a 2-run homer, and Melky Cabrera singled home another. Two more scored in the 6th, on a Mark Buehrle home run. A Jose Bautista sac fly in he 8th brought us to within a run. And J.P. Arencibia hit a 2-run shot, in the 9th, to give us the lead. He was loved, for a few minutes.

Our bullpen pitched 3 scoreless innings, to give us the chance to catch up. Esmil Rogers, Darren Oliver and Casey Janssen threw an inning each.

We had hopes that this would be the game that turned our season around. It didn't. But it did seem to turn Mark Buehrle's season around. He finished the game with a 7.02 ERA, by September 4th he would have his ERA down to 3.88. After that start, he went 10-5 over his next 22 starts. Leaving him in the game turned out to be one of the best moves that Gibby made all season.

It almost seemed like Buehrle was tired of being humiliated start after start and decided to fix things. He did seem to get into a better rhythm with JP after that game. JP was, perhaps, having troubles getting the signs down quickly enough for Buehrle who does say that he'd rather throw the wrong pitch than spend time thinking about the right pitch. He never shakes off a catcher.

Here is MLB's video recap of the game:


Munenori Kawasaki's walk off double

May 26th was the day we found out that Munenori Kawasaki was Japanese. This was the greatest post game interview of the season.


In a season with few high points, this might have been the best moment of the season. Munenori came up to bat in the bottom of the 9th with the Jays down by a run, 2 out and runners on the corners. If we weren't in love with him before this, we were after.

If the game winning hit wasn't enough, Munenori had an RBI single in the 8th and he made a great relay throw put out Nick Markakis at the plate in the first inning.

If you want to know more about the game: Chad Jenkins started and give up 8 hits and 3 walks in 5 innings, but only allowed 2 runs, pretty much a magic act. Thad Weber continued the magic, by allowing 2 hits and a walk, but not allowing a run. Aaron Loup and Steve Delabar weren't as lucky, allowing a combined 3 run in 3 innings.

But really, Kawasaki was the entire story of the game, getting a .954 WPA for the game.

I was at the game, we were in Toronto for a week of games, I'm very lucky that was one of the game we saw.


Cubs Announce 2014 Minor League Coaches and Staff

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The Cubs didn't shake things up much in the minors for 2014.

The Cubsannounced the minor league managers, coaches and staff for 2014, and there aren't a lot of changes from the successful 2013 campaign. All five of the managers of the top five affiliates return to the same team. That's Marty Pevey in Iowa, Buddy Bailey in Tennessee, Dave Keller in Daytona, Mark Johnson in Kane County and Gary Van Tol in Boise. For the Cubs rookie league team in Mesa, Jimmy Gonzalez takes over after having served as the hitting coach there the year before. Juan Cabreja takes over the Dominican Cubs and Pedro Gonzalez is the new Venezuelan skipper.

The bigger movement is among the pitching coaches. Most notably: Storm Davis, who received a lot of praise and credit as the pitching coach for the Florida State League champion Daytona Cubs, moves up to Tennessee, presumably to work with mostly the same prospects. Likewise, Ron Villone is the new Daytona pitching coach after having served in the same capacity for Kane County and David Rosario moves up from Boise to Kane County.

The new Iowa pitching coach comes from outside the organization. Bruce Walton served as the Toronto Blue Jays pitching coach from 2010 to 2012 and will share that major league experience with the I-Cubs this season.  Brian Lawrence takes over as the pitching coach for Boise after coming over from the Padres High-A affiliate in Lake Elsinore last season. It's good to see the Padres allow Jed Hoyer to interview their coaches.

Down in Venezuela, the new pitching coach is a familiar name to all of you: former Cub Angel Guzman.

There's no movement among the hitting coaches in the minors, so that means Bill Buckner will still be in Boise (where he wants to be, in truth) and Brian Harper will still work with the hitters in Iowa. Desi Wilson, Mariano Duncan and Tom Beyers continue in their same jobs with the Smokies, D-Cubs and Cougars respectively, although Wilson will get an assistant hitting coach in Leo Perez, who has been a catching instructor in the organization previously.

The Cubs minor league organization had a pretty successful year everywhere last year (except for the W-L record in Kane County, I guess) so it's not a surprise that there is little to no shakeup in the organization. The Cubs kept all the top managers where they are and kept the pitching coaches with the prospects that are moving up to a higher league.

Here is a complete list of the organization's managers, coaches and trainers; boldface indicates a member of the staff from last year who's in a new position, boldface italics indicates a staff member new to the Cubs organization for 2014.

AFFILIATE    MANAGER       PITCHING COACH    HITTING COACH/ASST.     TRAINER
===================================================================================
Iowa        Marty Pevey     Bruce Walton       Brian Harper       Scott Barringer
Tennessee   Buddy Bailey    Storm Davis        Desi Wilson        Shane NelsonLeo Perez
Daytona     Dave Keller     Ron Villone        Mariano Duncan     Peter Fagan
Kane County Mark Johnson    David Rosario      Tom Beyers         Jonathan Fiero
Boise       Gary Van Tol    Brian Lawrence     Bill Buckner       Toby Williams
Mesa        Jimmy Gonzalez  Anderson Tavares   Ricardo Medina     Mike McNulty
Dominican   Juan Cabreja    Leo Hernandez      Oscar BernardJose AlvarezYudith Ozorio
Venezuela   Pedro GonzalezAngel Guzman       Franklin Blanco    Arnoldo Goite

Here are all the coordinators for various positions within the minor-league ranks:

Tim Cossins returns for his second season as the organization’s minor league field/catching coordinator following 10 years in the Miami Marlins farm system, including the last six as the minor league catching coordinator.

Derek Johnson returns for his second year as the Cubs minor league pitching coordinator following 11 seasons (2002-12) at Vanderbilt University as the team’s pitching coach, including the last three as the school’s associate head coach/pitching coach.

Anthony Iapoce begins his second season as the organization’s Special Assistant to the GM and Player Development, overseeing the minor league hitting program while contributing to additional projects within the organization.

Jose Flores returns for his second season as minor league infield coordinator, his 14th year as a coach or manager.

Carmelo Martinez enters his 17th season in the Cubs organization, beginning his second stint as the organization’s Latin American Field Coordinator after serving as hitting coordinator for the Cubs Single-A, Rookie League and Dominican League teams last season. Previously, he was Chicago’s Latin American field coordinator for five years (2008-12).

Mike Mason begins his first season as assistant pitching coordinator after spending the previous six years as Triple-A Iowa’s pitching coach.

Doug Jarrow begins his seventh season as Chicago’s minor league strength and conditioning coordinator.

Nick Frangella begins his 11th season with the organization and his first as head minor league athletic training and performance coordinator. He spent the previous two seasons as Triple-A Iowa’s athletic trainer.

Chuck Baughman enters his 15th year with the Cubs organization, his first season as assistant athletic training coordinator.

Rick Tronerud returns for his 19th year with the Cubs and his first as minor league rehab pitching coordinator. He spent the previous 13 seasons with Rookie-League Mesa, serving as the club’s rehab pitching coach. Rey Fuentes begins his second season as Coordinator of Cultural Education, overseeing all educational classes for the Cubs Latin American players.


MiLB's Blue Jays Organizational All-Stars

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MiLB.com have posted their Blue Jays Organizational All-Stars. Let's take a look:

Catcher: Derrick Chung

Derrick played in Vancouver, 71 games, hitting .287/.341/.336 with 0 home runs and 21 RBI. He walked 20 times and struck out 30. At 25 he was old for the level. He threw out 43% of base stealers. He had a good time in the Arizona Fall league too, hitting .390.

A.J. Jimenez also had a pretty good year, hitting .287/.332/.406 with 4 home runs and 38 RBI playing for Dunedin, New Hampshire and Buffalo.

First base: Mauro Gomez

Gomez hit .249/.322/.521 with 29 home runs and 73 RBI, 43 walks and 131 strikeouts. He was 28. After the season, Gomez was picked up by the Nationals off waivers and has since been released.

Matt Dean got 'honorable mention for hitting .338/.390/.519 with 6 home runs, 14 walks and 57 strikeouts in 63 games in Bluefield. I think I'd have picked Dean, if it were up to me. L.B. Dantzler had a good season too, hitting .302/.385/.504 with 9 home runs in 59 games for the Canadians.

Second base: Jon Berti

Berti hit .250/.338/.323, with 3 home runs, 57 walks, 90 strikeouts, 56 steals and 19 times caught in 128 games in Dunedin. Not exactly stats that scream out all-star, but ok. I think I'd have voted for Jim Negrych, who hit .285/.360/385 at Buffalo.

Shortstop: Franklin Barreto

Barreto hit .299/.368/.529 in 44 games in the Gulf Coast League with 4 home runs, 13 walks and 42 strikeouts. He didn't do as well when moved up to Bluefield, .204/.259/.333 in 15 games. He did make a bunch of errors, 28 in total, for a .888 fielding average, but he's just 17. Lansing's Emilio Guerrero had a pretty good season too, hitting .277/.355/.402 with 17 stolen bases at age 20. Dickie Thon did a good job for Vancouver, hitting .280/.370/378.

Third base: Ryan Schimpf

Speaking of numbers that don't scream all all-star, Ryan hit .210/.338/.428 with 23 home runs, 65 RBI, 79 walks and 138 strikeouts in 126 games in New Hampshire. Ryan is 25.

Andy Burns was pretty good (.288/.346/.470 with 15 home runs, 85 RBI and 33 steals), splitting time equally between Dunedin and New Hampshire. And Mitch Nay hit .300/.364/.426 with 6 home runs and 42 RBI at Bluefield. I'd have voted for either of those two above Schimpt.

Outfielders: Kevin Pillar, Brad Glenn and Dalton Pompey

Pillar hit .307/.353/.461 with 9 home runs in 123 games split between the Fisher Cats and the Bisons. And we saw him in Toronto.

Glenn hit .261/.333/.465 with 22 home runs and 79 RBI mostly at New Hampshire (111 games) with a few at Buffalo (18).

Pompey hit .261/.358/.394 with 6 home runs, 40 RBI and 38 steals in 115 games at Lansing.

Our system didn't exactly have a lot of outfielders that put up great numbers.

Utility: Luis Jimenez

They have a different definition of utility than I do, Luis played DH and 1B for the Bisons. He hit .285/.351/.494 with 18 home runs and 73 RBI.

Right-handed Pitcher: Marcus Stroman

Can't argue with that one, Marcus was 9-5, with a 3.30 ERA, 129 strikeouts, 27 walks in 111.2 innings. Austin Bibens-Dirkx get 'honorable mention' for his 12-9 record, 2.48 ERA, 155 strikeouts, 43 walks in 166.2 inning split between Dunedin and New Hampshire.

Left-handed Pitcher: Sean Nolin

Nolin was 9-4 with a 2.77 ERA between New Hampshire and Buffalo. 116 strikeouts and 35 walks in 110 innings.

Relief Pitcher: Arik Sikula

Sikula (24) was 6-1 with 19 saves and a 1.93 ERA Lansing. He had 60 strikeouts and 18 walks in 60.2 innings.

Maybe we should do our own voting.

A Doc to Remember: Roy Halladay and Toronto

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Editor's note: Matt English (@mattomic) originally wrote this piece about Roy Halladay for his blog "Carrie Hunt and the Spoonerisms". We liked it so much we asked him to post it here too.

"You headed to the Jays game?"

It was a stranger on the subway talking to me. An older man, bearded, carrying one of those shabby Blue Jays giveaway bags from Mr. Sub that looked like it was won back in the Juan Guzman era. I was alone on the subway, headed to the Rogers Centre. I was probably around 17, which would put this squarely in the year 2004. You remember the summer of 2004: the Expos were bidding a final adieu, Paul Martin was forming an ill-fated government, your crappy local Canadian mall had a MusicWorld between the Randy River and the Stitches - and a tall redheaded man named Harry Leroy Halladay III was the reigning Cy Young winner after an otherworldly workhorse season, one where he faced 1,071 batters over 260 innings pitched.

Of those 1,071 batters he faced in 2003, only 253 collected a hit, a paltry 39 got walked or wild-pitched, nine were foolish enough to crowd his sinker and got plunked, and the rest--all seven-hundred-and-seventy of them--trotted right back to the dugout as failures.

"Yeah," I answered to the old-timer. It was pretty obvious where I was headed. As a high school kid with nothing to do on a muggy summer weekday, I'd catch a bus from the boonies of suburban North York, hop on the subway, find the scalper who looked least likely to murder me for meth money, palm him some cash I'd earned at my summer job mopping puke at Rainbow Cinemas, stroll into the Rogers Centre-née-SkyDome and plunk down in my seat to watch that season's 67 W - 94 L Blue Jays.

"Yeah, I saw you've got the new jersey," the old-timer said. Damn right I was wearing my spiffy new Jays jersey on the subway - the black alternate, natch, courtesy of Santa Claus. In retrospect, those 2004-2011 duds will probably mark a forgotten era of Toronto Blue Jays history, duds in both a performance-wise and sartorial sense. As hard as it is to believe, I used to like that logo. We all kinda did. One day in the distant future the idea of the Blue Jays switching to silver-and-black uniforms with a sharper, meaner, over-stylized Terminator-lookin' logo, complete with our formerly passive blue jay now seeming to be full of Nu-Metal rage, will scream "that's SO '00s", the same way we now get a knee-jerk so '80s! reaction from this, or this. But at the time, those new Jays duds looked fresh.

Ku-xlarge_medium

Image from Carrie Hunt and the Spoonerisms

The stranger and I talked about the team the whole ride, since my parents apparently never taught me not to talk to weirdos on the subway. Boy, that Rios sure can hit. I hope the rumours about Delgado leaving aren't true. He asked me who was pitching today, and I said I thought it was Halladay.

That's when I saw it. He had a wistful look in his eyes the moment Halladay was mentioned. "I tell ya, that Halladay, he's something special." It was like he was talking about a beloved childhood pet, not a local baseball player.

I said something to the effect of "Yeah, he's really good". The old-timer, smelling of Labatt Ice and a half-pack of smokes, leaned in and told me something that struck me: "Naw, he ain't just good, he's once-in-a-lifetime. Just watch."

I don't know why I remember talking to a grizzled eccentric on the subway about Roy Halladay nearly a decade ago, but I think from that point forward, it gave me some perspective. Here was a guy who'd probably seen four decades of mostly-heartbreaking Toronto sports--he knew the bad from the good, plus a crapload of the plain old mediocre. He knew how to tell a flash-in-the-pan success story from a bona fide star in the making. I guess to that point I'd been taking Roy Halladay for granted. He was our best pitcher, but ultimately, just another one of our five starters. And those five starters were just part of the 25 guys on the team, all with their own roles and personalities and stats to memorize. I was a greenhorn teenage baseball fan, after all – maybe I just thought having a Cy Young winner on your team was normal. Maybe I figured every team had a guy who'd go eight or nine innings every single night, pitching like he'd unlocked a cheat code, frustrating a new batch of baffled batters night in and night out with a slew of weak grounders to the shortstop and devastating, knee-buckling curveball strikeouts.

It turns out that no other team had a Roy Halladay. For a decade of dominance, he was ours and ours alone.

We didn't have five starters. We had four starters and one Doc Halladay.

The Doctor Is In

Nothing about Roy Halladay's demeanor screams "fun". From his granite-faced expression to his reputation for military-like focus and seriousness, he was no one's idea of a barrel of laughs. His retirement press conference may have been the most he's smiled in public in the past 10 years, his playoff no-hitter excluded. But one thing was undoubtedly fun: watching Roy pitch.

It didn't matter whether it was against the dynasty-era Yankees or the dumpster-fire-era Devil Rays, he'd approach every game like it was the deciding World Series game he would ultimately never get to play in.

Roy's tall, imposing body would stand astride the mound like a Colossus, still like a statue, burning a hole through the opponent's bat with his unblinking gaze. It must have been terrifying to face Roy Halladay in his prime. I can just imagine stepping up to the plate, looking into his fiery orange beard and coal-black pupils staring back at you, knees trembling over what might be coming. For one, Halladay's just a huge human being. Batters who've faced him have said it felt like he was on top of you, like the ball was coming down at you from the heavens, able to dart in on your hands with his sinker or slip away off the plate with his cutter. He'd uncork his body in a flash of speed and his signature cutter would whiz by at 92 MPH, first feeling like it was coming right in on your delicate little hands, breezing your knuckle hair, then zipping back to catch the inside corner of the plate.

He's playing chess, and all you brought was a checkers set.

Spitting on the AstroTurf and readjusting, you'd cock your bat and get ready--alright, here comes that cutter again, time to take a King Kong swing and unleash hell on this freaky ginger Mormon. The windup is the same, it's a buckle-high fastball right down Main Street, you're thinking cutter right out of his hand--only this time instead of zipping away, it darts in on you. You've swung right into Halladay's sinker, catching the handle of your bat and slashing it harmlessly foul, leaving your hands ringing like a jackhammer.

He knew you'd swing. Roy Halladay was five steps ahead of you on this entire at-bat. He'd been thinking about you since 8 AM this morning, you poor little Devil Rays batter. He's been sitting alone and going through this exact at-bat in his head over and over again.

He's playing chess, and all you brought was a checkers set.

On the third pitch you're tied up in a pretzel as a looping curveball comes in on you, dropping away and catching the corner of the plate. The ump rings you up with a bellow that echoes through the mostly-empty blue plastic of SkyDome. Radios across Ontario crackle with Tom Cheek howling "Got him!"

You retreat to the dugout, defeated, knowing what it feels like to be humbled by the best pitcher in baseball.

Robo-Doc

Back in the primordial soup that was mid-2000s internet sports discussion, there was no Twitter for teenagers to voice their dumb Vernon Wells opinions, so I'd frequent blogs like Drunk Jays Fans in its primitive Blogspot form. In any game thread before a Halladay start, Stoeten would post his crudely-Photoshopped picture of Roy Halladay as Terminator--half his face burned off over T-800 exoskeleton. It was a fitting image for Roy. For one, his pitching seemed so effortlessly dominant, so automatic, that we truly believed for a while that he must have been part cyborg. But on a deeper level, there was something about Roy Halladay's personality that seemed robotic. His focus and determination seemed superhuman. On TV you'd see him on the bench, just sitting alone with his jacket on, staring dead ahead with a grim, almost frightening level of focus in his eyes. No one dared speak to Roy while he was in the groove. Robo-Doc had taken over, and unnecessary conversation would just confuse his programming.

You can just imagine that when he stepped on the mound Roy saw everything in Terminator-vision, stats and figures and diagrams calculating everywhere. An infrared target would focus on the catcher's glove with blinking red text: "TARGET: ACQUIRED. CALCULATING PITCH SELECTION... PITCH SELECTED: CUTTER, OUTSIDE CORNER. PROJECTED OUTCOME: SWINGING STRIKE."

How did Roy become half-man/half-machine, the RoboCop of Major League Baseball? The conventional wisdom is that it must have happened back in 2001. Now part of the familiar Roy Halladay mythos, Roy made his Major League debut in '98, pitched a near no-hitter in his second MLB start (broken up by a pinch-hit homerun with two out in the ninth, in a game that lasted only 1 hour, 45 minutes), completely fell apart in 2000 to the tune of a historically-bad 10.64 ERA, and got sent all the way down to single-A ball in 2001. Not just rehabbing in AAA, or AA--crashing down in a freefall all the way south to sleepy Dunedin, Florida with the single-A Dunedin Blue Jays.

The late Mel Queen was brought out of retirement just to fix Halladay. It's almost as if he reported back to the brass in Toronto: "We can rebuild him. We have the technology. We have the capability to make the world's first bionic pitcher." In Dunedin, Halladay was completely dismantled by Queen. Not only were his pitching mechanics completely rebuilt from the ground up, Roy's entire way of thinking and pitching was stripped to the bone, leaving nothing but a shell of pure, raw talent. All the way from the bottom of the barrel, rescued from the brink of career disaster, Roy Halladay the Machine was born.

Armed with a new pitch repertoire, new throwing grips and a new mental outlook after the gruelling bootcamp in Dunedin, Roy Halladay returned to Toronto a new man. Just over a year later, Roy would throw four consecutive complete games, rack up 22 wins, and pitch 266 innings (no pitcher has thrown 260+ IP since) on the road to the Cy Young award. For Jays fans he had become more myth than man, a towering figure whose intensity would strike fear into the hearts of opponents (and, occasionally, teammates who would dare talk to him on start days.)

A Halladay to Remember

We tend to focus so much on his cyborg half, we forget his human half. Roy Halladay would step off the mound after a gruellingly intense outing, and he'd go back to being a mild-mannered citizen, with a wife and kids and a keen sense of humour. Maybe that dichotomy was what drew us to Roy. Maybe as a city, we've got a bit of that ying and yang--that business-like scowl mixed with that vulnerable humanity.

Sometimes you'd hear an anecdote about Roy just being the most down-to-earth, fun-loving goofball, and you'd wonder if they were talking about the same warrior-like Roy Halladay who'd fight through a shredded shoulder if it meant giving his team another strikeout. It's hard to parse the vision of the intense, glowering Roy punching into his mitt after giving up a hit, and the Roy who was the most warm-hearted, generous guy in Toronto during his decade of dominance. After Spring Training night games in Dunedin he'd kick back in a tent behind the stadium bullpen, just having a beer with fans and shooting the breeze about baseball. He genuinely loved the city of Toronto, too--unlike a lot of local athletes, he actually lived in the city and became part of the local community, attending charity events and raising his children here. (His son Braden, now 13, was born in Toronto.) With his wife Brandy he started the Doc's Box program, partnering with Sick Kids Hospital to let hospitalized kids and their families enjoy Jays games. He always had time for children, and would take the time to chat up a group of kids for up to an hour just signing autographs.

Ultimately, that love of kids and family was in a way what led him to an early retirement. Here was a man who loved baseball more than you or I will ever love anything--but even then, he somehow found a way to love his family even more. He wanted to spend time with his kids, and avoid a of back surgery that might have squeaked out a couple more playing seasons at the expense of his quality of life. Not to mention that as a genuinely upstanding man, he had a hard time accepting another year of the Phillies' money if he didn't feel he could compete at the level he was being paid. He accepted his retirement the same way he accepted his 2001 demotion, and his 2009 trade: with humility and class.

A lot has been written about that dark day in December of 2009 when the Jays traded Halladay. We all huddled around blogs like families huddled around a wartime radio broadcast, waiting for the grim news. We swallowed hard and accepted our fate, and asked each other how the name "Drabek" was pronounced. The greatest player Toronto sports fans had seen in a generation was gone--but in a way, it's like he never left. We all knew that Roy was going to leave, but what we didn't expect was the full-page newspaper ad he took out the next day to thank Toronto fans. The overwhelming sentiment from Toronto sports fans, a group known for being burnt-out and bitter? "No, Roy: thank you."

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Photo Credit: Abelimages

Although his initial homecoming as a member of the Phillies was delayed by a bunch of idiots setting fire to police cars up and down Queen West, I was at the game where Roy finally came home. I joined 50,000 other Jays fans, players, and staff members in a standing ovation. We all clapped until our palms hurt.

* * *

A Canadian woman named Joni Mitchell used to busk in downtown Toronto in the 1960s not far from where Roy Halladay lived, and she once wrote a lyric that rings true:

"Don't it always seem to go / That you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone."

We couldn't truly appreciate Roy Halladay while he was in Toronto, because we were too caught up in the moment. Now that we can step back and have some perspective on his career as a whole, it's only now that we can see him for what he was.

He was exactly what the old man on the subway told me: "once-in-a-lifetime."

This piece is an edited version of the original, which was posted on Carrie Hunt and the Spoonerisms on December 17. Reprinted with permission of the author.

Buffalo Bisons 'Hot Stove Luncheon' January 16th

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Bisons luncheon

The Buffalo Bisons' 'Hot Stove' Luncheon will be on Thursday January 16, at Adam's Mark Hotel, starting at 12:00 pm. And in answer to Minor Leaguer's criticism that the Blue Jays 'Winter Tour' wasn't stopping in Buffalo, Brandon Morrow, Dustin McGowan, Esmil Rogers and Todd Redmond as well as Blue Jays 'front office personal' will be in attendance.

Tickets are on sale now, $25 a person or, special deal, a table of 8 can be purchased for $200. For that you get a buffet meal, a Blue Jays Toque and a issue of Baseball America. Also one person at each table will get an autographed 'item' from one of the players there and there will be door prizes.

The players will take be part of a 'fireside chat', I imagine they will take some questions during this time.

You can get your tickets at Bison.com or by calling (716) 846-2011.

I wish I could go, but the flight to Buffalo might make it just a little too expensive, but I'm sure it will be a good time, though Minor Leaguer says not to expect great food.

U.S. Mint will release a baseball mitt coin, what has the Royal Canadian Mint done?

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The United States Mint will be releasing a special curved coin in 2014 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the National Baseball Hall of Fame. The coins will have a baseball on its reverse side ("tails") and a glove on its obverse ("heads") side. The glove side is concave just like a glove, and the ball is convex to mimic a spherical shape. The glove was designed by Cassie McFarland, who won the "Batter Up" public design competition, which was judged by Joe Morgan, Brooks Robinson, Ozzie Smith, Don Sutton, and Dave Winfield. The official blurb about the design:

Built upon the value of community, Baseball is the backbone of American culture. Raised loving the native pastime, a glove assisted me not only as a tool, but helped foster communication and trust between my family and peers. It is a fundamental symbol for teamwork and camaraderie. The shape of the glove also highlights the concavity of the coin. Two wheat sheaves unite with the braided lace of the glove to form a ring. This stands for American unity, stitched together to form one nation. The wheat celebrates a love for our bountiful land and home.

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There will be three versions of the coin: a $0.50 copper/nickel clad, a $1 silver, and a $5 gold. I want all three.

The Royal Canadian Mint did not produce any baseball coins until earlier this year, when they produced a series to commemorate the Blue Jays-destroying World Baseball Classic. The series consisted of four 1 oz silver coins: a runner, a left-handed fielder (probably an outfielder, his glove looks big enough), a pitcher with pretty bad-looking mechanics, and a hitter failing to check a swing--all wearing high socks. In addition, a 1/4 oz. gold coin features a baseball, another featuring bats and a diamond, and a $1550 1/2 oz. gold coin showing a runner celebrating and possibly running towards Brian McCann. The coins were designed by Canadian designer Steve Hepburn. Each of the coins features a portrait of Her Majesty Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith.

The Toronto Blue Jays have never been depicted on a coin, but the bird species has. Take a look at this handsome fellow on a quarter.

Poll
Will the pitcher depicted on the Royal Canadian Mint coin need Tommy John surgery?

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Give us your last-minute Christmas gift suggestion for the Blue Jays fan

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They tell me the site is back up. They waited until I went out to fix it.

Anyway, quick post, give us your suggestions for last minute Christmas gifts for Blue Jays fans.

My thoughts, well with how the weather has been out here in Calgary, a toque and gloves with be a great choice. Or the official Blue Jays snow shovel.

What I'd  really suggest is OOTP Baseball, it is a great game for anyone that wants to avoid interacting with people for days on end. Their Franchise Hockey Manager is a good game as well, though I'm not as addicted to it.

Poll
BBB going down was a plot by

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