Post#9 » by LieCheatSteal » Thu Dec 17, 2009 9:00 pm
I kinda see what AA is doing. Signing decent, stop gap, role playing guys, showcasing them this season and trading them for mid- to low prospects at the deadline for contenders who might need them and hope one of the prospects performs beyond expectations in a couple of years. Then repeat for a couple of years. Coupled with the high picks the Jays will inevitably get by finishing last in the division, the farm system could be replenished from the JP fiasco and these prospects could start to the major league roster. Around that time, the talent that the Yanks and Bosox have accumulated by FAs will all be in decline and the Rays and O's have wasted their resources trying to catch these two teams so they become depleted. And, in that year, bam, lightning in a bottle, the Jays will surprise everyone by finishing first and advancing to the World Series like the Rays did 2 years ago.
Now, the question is, will it be the Toronto Blue Jays or the Portland Blue Jays of the AL West when that happens? ;(
In all seriousness, I doubt we'll be seeing the key stopgap guys like Buck and Gonzalez finish the year in Toronto (or even holdover vets that could be vital cogs for a contender like MacDonald (if some team needs a defensive stopper at SS), Downs (if someone needs a lefty setup guy who can close) and Overbay (if all of a team's 1st base prospects all die in a fiery plane crash).
So, I have no problems with AA signing guys like a Castro or a Broadway. It's like buying low and selling high. God knows the Jays need prospects. The fact that the Halliday deal brought back probably the top 3 prospects of this organization speaks volumes in how terrible, and damaging, the JP regime was.
Two years from being two years away.