From the moment he found out he’d been traded to the Blue Jays, Brett Lawrie left no doubt where he intends to play this season.
“I’m ready (for the major leagues), there’s no doubt in my mind that I’m ready,” the Burnaby, B.C., native said last December, a day after he’d been dealt to the Jays for pitcher Shaun Marcum.
“I have a lot of trust in myself, a lot of trust in my ability. I’m going to go into big-league spring training, do my thing. I’m as ready as I’ve ever been.”
Apparently, this was no idle threat. From the day he arrived here, he’s been all business, clearly bent on making it tough on the Blue Jays braintrust to send him out.
“He’s been doing everything we hoped for and possibly more,” said manager John Farrell on Thursday.
Asked if he thought Lawrie could go north with the Jays, Farrell paused.
“I’ve got my thoughts,” he said, a broad smile across his face. If he had been playing poker, Farrell might have been betraying a royal flush.
The manager isn’t the only person of power who might be thinking “now” rather than “soon” but there are a lot of considerations to be weighed, not the least of which is Lawrie’s age (21) and his inexperience, after just two seasons of professional ball. He’s learning a new position, third base, but has looked comfortable there already, making some tough plays flawlessly.
And there is also the issue of starting his arbitration clock at such an early age.
At the plate, he has only a couple of hits in 11 at-bats, but has impressed with his plate awareness and his short powerful stroke.
“He’s an exciting young player,” said Farrell. “I don’t know where things end up at the end of camp. He’s not on the roster, and in this case, that’s a good thing because we can see him right to the end, giving him regular at-bats.
“We can see him in the last 10 days to two weeks where things really kick in for pitchers and they have their better stuff and better command of their secondary pitches. You get a little more accurate read on a hitter then than right now.
“But everything has been very positive. We gave up a very good pitcher to get him, but we got a very good player in return.”
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