satyr9 wrote:Of course. Of course. Anyone who doesn't 100% agree with every opinion you have is, of course, (Please Use More Appropriate Word), no? Give me a break Randle.
No, just those that are arguing against obvious facts. The Jays did not play their best lineup for a month nor were they eliminated from playoff contention at the beginning of September. When you put those two things together, it seems even Adam Lind can figure it out.
They were a .500 team 6.5 games out on August 29th first with a minimum of 4 teams to catch and had played 14 games under .500 for going on half a season, if you continued to believe throughout that's great for you, but that makes you incredibly optimistic.
Any remaining hope I had evaporated when I saw the lineups they were running out. But that doesn't mean a great month was outside the realm of possibility, we already saw one less than 3 months before (and it is the rather random sport of baseball where such streaks happen all the time).
And even if that's patent nonsense and everyone agrees they were in the midst of a race and gave up, they played great for the first two weeks of the changes you hated and went 10-3, that's a long way along the road to 19-7, almost making any optimism from labour day warranted. If you want to make the case they should've played that way for two weeks and then magically known the TB series was the time to put Colby and Juan back in the lineup, then you're free to make that argument, it just isn't an argument that I, of course, would choose to try and defend.
No, my argument is a rather simple one. It involves putting your best lineup out on the field until you're officially eliminated (especially when you're sadly as close to the playoffs as you have been in 16 years).
And I don't even believe they were failing to compete, there just isn't anywhere close to a definitive case for Juan over Valencia or Colby over Gose for September. Is Colby a better player than Gose? Yup. Is Juan a better option vs RHP than Valencia? Sure. Were either one of them playing well enough to be guys you have to play? Nope.
Rasmus is better than Gose and especially better than Pillar. And yet both played over him full-time when Melky got hurt (and this was when their odds had improved to somewhere around 7-8 percent in mid-September). If their primary motivation was still winning games, there is no good explanation for this.
Danny Valencia is a career .615 OPS (65 wRC+) hitter against RHP. Under no circumstances should he be playing full-time for a team that is trying to win baseball games. Even if you think fat Juan cannot hack it offensively or defensively any longer (to the point where he's not even allowed to step on the field), Kawasaki is still there as a platoon option. We also know that Gibbons is capable of both understanding the value of platoons and of executing them (because he did it effectively for years in his first run and has done it with Lind in his second). The only conclusion left to take from this is that winning was no longer being prioritized in September.
Or maybe they just started playing for next year.
Bingo. In fact, they basically said as much (which makes your contestation here all the more puzzling).
Either way it's not some grand betrayal of the fans.
I didn't say it was. They looked at the odds and made the call they thought was best at the time for the organization. That involved prioritizing 2015 and beyond over winning now. I would have preferred waiting a bit longer, but only time will tell whether it was the right call to make.
And what's most amusing to me is you're complaining about decisions that came far closer to working than they should've.
No, they really didn't. The wins they did have came mostly on the shoulders of a hot streak from Bautista (a top 5 player in baseball once again in 2014), Encarnacion (a top 10 hitter once again in 2014), and the improved pitching staff that went on a run of good form in September.
You also think you know what it means and that meaning is some awful thing that they've personally done to you. Again, that's fine, I just think that it's, of course, utter nonsense.
Awful to me personally? Hardly. The Jays decided their season was over at the end of August and made moves to better understand what they had going forward. Even if they were decisions I didn't understand or agree with (such as the playing of Valencia), the thinking behind them was clear.