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Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball

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Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#1 » by LittleOzzy » Tue Mar 29, 2011 10:44 pm

The Big Question: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball’s toughest division?

Toronto has won at least 80 games in 10 of the past 13 years, but because the Blue Jays are in MLB’s toughest division they’ve finished higher than third place just once during that time while never winning an AL East title.

Last season was a familiar story, as outgoing manager Cito Gaston led the team to a 12-game improvement and 85-77 record … which was good for fourth place. To replace Gaston the Blue Jays hired former Red Sox pitching coach John Farrell and his challenge isn’t to simply remain consistently competitive, but rather to get over the third-place hump and actually secure a playoff spot for the first time since back-to-back Gaston-led World Series titles in 1992 and 1993.

Unfortunately, as usual the Red Sox and Yankees look like 90-win teams and the Rays are capable of making a playoff run as well, which leaves the Blue Jays needing to out-perform their expectations and have a couple rivals under-perform theirs. Those are long odds, yet if switched to the AL Central or AL West the Blue Jays would be legitimate contenders. But that’s nothing new. Consider that since 1998 they’re one game below .500 versus the AL East and 30 games above .500 versus the AL Central and AL West.

In a different division the Blue Jays would have made the playoffs several times in the past 13 years and Farrell might be taking over a team looking to defend its division title. Instead they seem destined to win 80-something games and finish third or lower for the 16th time in 17 seasons.


http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/ ... -division/
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#2 » by hyper316 » Tue Mar 29, 2011 11:07 pm

80 wins is not that great, it's not even .500
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#3 » by Randle McMurphy » Wed Mar 30, 2011 7:23 am

hyper316 wrote:80 wins is not that great, it's not even .500

When you're playing the two best teams in the league 36 times a year (and in recent years, the three best teams 54 times), it's actually pretty good.

The Jays aren't doomed, it's just ridiculously hard for them to make the playoffs in baseball's current format.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#4 » by Michael Bradley » Wed Mar 30, 2011 1:13 pm

I think the division thing is overstated. Is it hard for the Jays to make the playoffs? Absolutely. However, it is not impossible. The division excuse seems like a convenient way to justify inept management/ownership. The Jays had the best pitcher of the 2000's from 2001-2009, yet only twice (2006, 2008) did they finish with more wins than they did in 2010 (the first year without him). To win the AL East you need elite level talent; unfortuntely Ricciardi was never able to draft/acquire that type of talent, and Ash was giving those type of players away rather than adding them.

Now that the Jays FINALLY have someone who seems to know what he is doing, the division excuse will slowly start to drift away (hopefully). Of course, convenient timing with the extra Wild Card possibly being implemented soon.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#5 » by Hoopstarr » Wed Mar 30, 2011 4:40 pm

Paraphrasing: "The division thing is overstated. We just have to be a top 5 organization in baseball and then maybe we'll make the playoffs".
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#6 » by Schad » Wed Mar 30, 2011 5:20 pm

Hoopstarr wrote:Paraphrasing: "The division thing is overstated. We just have to be a top 5 organization in baseball and then maybe we'll make the playoffs".


Yeah, and being a top five team is not enough. We've been fifth or sixth in the league in third-order wins a couple times in the last four years (I can't check at the moment because the remarkably scattershot firewall at work apparently blocks BP, but not RealGM), and missed the playoffs by a comfortable margin.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#7 » by savierdcglobe » Wed Mar 30, 2011 5:23 pm

I see this whole division scenario more as motivation to do better. divison
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#8 » by satyr9 » Wed Mar 30, 2011 5:27 pm

Well I think it's overstated when it's used to try and say the Jays would've been a playoff team more often.

My complaint about the division is we don't even get any drama of a hunt in above .500 years and pretty much every other fan base gets at least that much. Thinking back, maybe one club makes it in if they get a weak division and some breaks, but none of those teams were ones where I think they absolutely should've made the playoffs or were better than Central or West teams that got in. So I don't think the division can be blamed as the reason they've failed to make the playoffs, unless you want to claim lack of summer races leads to fewer fans which led to lower payrolls and hence less overall talent, but that's a lot to put on divisional alignment.

And we do get some upside to the added difficulty as fans. The AL East is basically the elite division and I'm glad the team I love plays there. As much as I'm dying for a good summer of competitive baseball, I wouldn't trade all those games against the Yanks, Sox, and now Rays for extra games against the Indians, Royals, and Mariners (although I'd trade interleague for it in a heartbeat).

I'm also so optimistic after AA's first year that it doesn't feel insurmountable right now. If you'd asked me this question at the end of JP's tenure, I probably would've bitched and moaned about its unfairness. :D
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#9 » by Michael Bradley » Wed Mar 30, 2011 5:52 pm

The Rays made the playoffs twice in the last three years. If a team other than Boston and New York win the East, then the whole "division is too tough" excuse goes out the window since someone else (with fewer resources no less) has already done it. If New York and Boston steamrolled through the division every year with no one coming close to stopping them, then maybe I could understand the woe-is-me attitude, but that hasn't been the case. A well run organization can topple Boston and New York from time to time (probably not every year though). The Jays have not been that calibre an organization from 1994-2009 so naturally they were not going to compete in a division that requires greatness. I mean I'm sure Twins fans don't care that an average team can win the AL Central every year, but unfortunately the Jays have to build a better team than that.

Ultimately, I hope when the Jays make the playoffs again it is not because the playoffs expanded. Be the best team in the East.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#10 » by ItsDanger » Wed Mar 30, 2011 6:25 pm

Its considered the toughest division in sports for a good reason. Everyone should discount TB due to the LONG # of losing seasons and fortunate drafting, i.e. stars aligned. Bottom line is virtually all the time NY or BOS will win the division. Wild card is the only realistic objective. That is why its difficult for the Jays because other teams in other divisions have easier schedules which makes them more likely to get that wild card spot. Key for the Jays is to strive for .500 agains the AL East top dogs and beat up on everyone else.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#11 » by Schad » Wed Mar 30, 2011 7:03 pm

Michael Bradley wrote:The Rays made the playoffs twice in the last three years.


Indeed. And here's what it took:

- Five top-5 picks from 2001-2007, which got them David Price, Evan Longoria, Jeff Niemann, BJ Upton, and (indirectly, through the Delmon Young trade) Matt Garza and Jason Bartlett.

- Very good drafting elsewhere: James Shields in the 16th round (a key player in 2008), Carl Crawford in the 2nd, Wade Davis in the 3rd.

- Exceptional return on cheap free agent moves/trades: Carlos Pena, the Kazmir/Zambrano trade, the ridiculous number of thirty-somethings they've turned into top-flight relievers.


Basically, it is possible. You just need to have the best management in baseball for a period of several years, and it doesn't hurt if you're picking at the top of the draft for a few seasons running. And even then, a bit of luck helps: the 2008 Rays were third in the AL in Pythagorean wins (with 92), but won the division. Second, with 93? That was us.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#12 » by Hoopstarr » Wed Mar 30, 2011 7:04 pm

Disregarding the fact that "well run" organization /= best run organization (the actual standard and the one TB had to reach), why should a team have to reach that level to sniff the playoffs in the first place? "Just win baby" is a nice motto and all but it's false bravado and doesn't address the real issue.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#13 » by Michael Bradley » Wed Mar 30, 2011 9:14 pm

Schadenfreude wrote:
Michael Bradley wrote:The Rays made the playoffs twice in the last three years.


Indeed. And here's what it took:

- Five top-5 picks from 2001-2007, which got them David Price, Evan Longoria, Jeff Niemann, BJ Upton, and (indirectly, through the Delmon Young trade) Matt Garza and Jason Bartlett.

- Very good drafting elsewhere: James Shields in the 16th round (a key player in 2008), Carl Crawford in the 2nd, Wade Davis in the 3rd.

- Exceptional return on cheap free agent moves/trades: Carlos Pena, the Kazmir/Zambrano trade, the ridiculous number of thirty-somethings they've turned into top-flight relievers.

Basically, it is possible. You just need to have the best management in baseball for a period of several years, and it doesn't hurt if you're picking at the top of the draft for a few seasons running. And even then, a bit of luck helps: the 2008 Rays were third in the AL in Pythagorean wins (with 92), but won the division. Second, with 93? That was us.


But how does that explain why the Jays couldn't draft well? Or make great trades? Or sign impact talent? AA got "lucky" getting Morrow and Escobar within a six or seven month span, but why couldn't JP make a single trade like that in nine years?

That is what I mean. Some are using the divisonal excuse to make up for the real cause of the Jays inability to compete; which was inept management/ownership. Did the Rays require luck, high draft picks, etc, to win the division? Certainly. You need to be a top level team in order to compete in the East. But where was the Jays farm system ranked from 2002-09? Probably near the bottom most years. Where was the Jays payroll during that period? Probably in the middle of the pack most years except for 2008 which (IIRC) was close to $100 million. How many times did the Jays finish with at least 85 wins those years? Three times in eight years. This was not a machine churning out top prospects, making prudent signings, and just falling short. This was a mediocre run team dating back before Ricciardi (Ash was worse).

Long-story short: you can't win the East without being a top level club from top to bottom. You also can't win by being a middle of the pack club from top to bottom. The latter is where the Jays sat until AA came in. So no, I don't think the divional excuse can be used to explain Toronto's lack of playoff appearances since 93. A part of the reason? Yes. The main reason? No.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#14 » by Schad » Wed Mar 30, 2011 9:50 pm

Michael Bradley wrote:But how does that explain why the Jays couldn't draft well? Or make great trades? Or sign impact talent? AA got "lucky" getting Morrow and Escobar within a six or seven month span, but why couldn't JP make a single trade like that in nine years?


We did draft pretty well. Russ Adams was a mistake, but:

- Aaron Hill has been better than any of the 1st rounders taken below him...hell, he has the third-best WAR of any first-rounder in '03;
- Phil Hughes was the only guy selected after Purcey in '04 who hasn't been mediocre-to-bad (and Hughes was out of our reach in terms of bonus desired);
- Romero is probably second-best after Tulo from 2005;
- Snider has a good chance to be better than every 1st taken after him, though there are some other good prospects (Drabek, Conger, Bard) in that mix;
- Arencibia could be the pick of the second half of the 2007 1st round (save Porcello, who again was asking too much).

Yeah, we definitely had some busts, but any team drafting mid-round will. Expecting otherwise is to expect -- as both myself and Hoopstarr noted -- near-perfect management.


During that period, our drafting really had two problems. One, we had an unfortunate tendency to end up picking just a little too late to get the monster talents. Brett Lawrie, Ethan Martin, Justin Smoak, and Brett Wallace went in short order before Cooper (we definitely blew the Cooper vs. Davis choice). Jason Heyward went two picks before Ahrens, and Mesoraco went immediately before (a guy in whom we were reportedly interested...and a pick I'd have hated at the time. Not now, though). Lincecum and Greinke were off the board when the Snider pick came around. Jered Weaver, Billy Butler and Stephen Drew went off the board immediately before Purcey. While the Rays were picking from the best of the best, our consistently mediocre record left us picking from the remainder bin.

Secondly, Rogers refused to spend big on the draft 'til after Ted's death. Those few sliders that occurred in the first round, and the many in later rounds, were inevitably passed over because we wouldn't open the wallet. It was death by a thousand slot recommendations.

On the trade/free agency front, JP didn't work miracles, no doubt. However, he did get Jose Bautista for Robinzon Diaz, several excellent relievers for nothing, and the rollover from guys like Scutaro beget the massive number of picks that we'll have had in 2010 and 2011. No argument: he lacked the risk-taking gene necessary to be one of the best GMs in the game, which was the precondition to chase down the Sox/Yanks. But he wasn't chopped liver, either.

That is what I mean. Some are using the divisonal excuse to make up for the real cause of the Jays inability to compete; which was inept management/ownership. Did the Rays require luck, high draft picks, etc, to win the division? Certainly. You need to be a top level team in order to compete in the East. But where was the Jays farm system ranked from 2002-09? Probably near the bottom most years. Where was the Jays payroll during that period? Probably in the middle of the pack most years except for 2008 which (IIRC) was close to $100 million. How many times did the Jays finish with at least 85 wins those years? Three times in eight years. This was not a machine churning out top prospects, making prudent signings, and just falling short. This was a mediocre run team dating back before Ricciardi (Ash was worse).


Again: we were frequently among the top 5-8 teams in the league by third-order wins. On the farm system, the Ricciardi era has graduated a rather impressive crop, even if many of them weren't that highly-rated while on the farm. It wasn't a mediocre team...it was quite a good team in a division that demanded near-perfection. JP could've been better, and Rogers sure as hell could've been better, but they didn't fail from ineptitude, just a failure to achieve excellence.

Long-story short: you can't win the East without being a top level club from top to bottom. You also can't win by being a middle of the pack club from top to bottom. The latter is where the Jays sat until AA came in.


It's true, you need to be a top-level club from top to bottom, and we weren't. But that's the bloody reason that we're talking about it being the toughest division (by far) in baseball: in no other division is it necessary to be elite in order to compete. That's the very crux of the argument.

So no, I don't think the divional excuse can be used to explain Toronto's lack of playoff appearances since 93. A part of the reason? Yes. The main reason? No.


The main reason? Yes. The whole reason? No.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#15 » by Randle McMurphy » Wed Mar 30, 2011 10:45 pm

Oh, a good old-fashioned Ricciardi argument just before the season starts. Looks like Schad has this covered, though.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#16 » by Schad » Wed Mar 30, 2011 11:19 pm

Randle McMurphy wrote:Oh, a good old-fashioned Ricciardi argument just before the season starts. Looks like Schad has this covered, though.


I don't really consider it to be a Ricciardi argument, honestly. If anything, the bigger point here is to keep in mind just how remarkable Tampa Bay's management has been. They had some advantages thanks to their on-field suckitude in the LeMar era, but casting what they did (and what AA hopes to do) as something of an inevitability with very good management, really undersells what they did. It's probably the best front office-side story that we've seen in quite some time, and even then it's likely that they were only able to keep it together for a couple years until the vultures swooped in.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#17 » by Michael Bradley » Thu Mar 31, 2011 12:22 am

Schadenfreude wrote:
Michael Bradley wrote:But how does that explain why the Jays couldn't draft well? Or make great trades? Or sign impact talent? AA got "lucky" getting Morrow and Escobar within a six or seven month span, but why couldn't JP make a single trade like that in nine years?


We did draft pretty well. Russ Adams was a mistake, but:

- Aaron Hill has been better than any of the 1st rounders taken below him...hell, he has the third-best WAR of any first-rounder in '03;
- Phil Hughes was the only guy selected after Purcey in '04 who hasn't been mediocre-to-bad (and Hughes was out of our reach in terms of bonus desired);
- Romero is probably second-best after Tulo from 2005;
- Snider has a good chance to be better than every 1st taken after him, though there are some other good prospects (Drabek, Conger, Bard) in that mix;
- Arencibia could be the pick of the second half of the 2007 1st round (save Porcello, who again was asking too much).

Yeah, we definitely had some busts, but any team drafting mid-round will. Expecting otherwise is to expect -- as both myself and Hoopstarr noted -- near-perfect management.


The Jays drafted well in the "good to very good" player category (Romero, Marcum, Cecil, Hill, Lind, etc). I wouldn't consider it a very good draft record under JP (I thought Ash drafted "very good"). However, where the team lacked was impact talent. I can't think of one consistent impact bat the team drafted outside of the respective 2009 seasons of Hill and Lind (and they both were average before and after that season....to date). Pitching-wise the Jays have done pretty well, just unlucky with injuries.

In 2009, this is what BA said about the Jays system: "28. Blue Jays: Toronto would be No. 30 if not for last summer's Scott Rolen trade, which brought needed pitching talent from the Reds." I'm too lazy to look up where they ranked in other years, but I'd imagine it was in the 20's from 2005-2009.


During that period, our drafting really had two problems. One, we had an unfortunate tendency to end up picking just a little too late to get the monster talents. Brett Lawrie, Ethan Martin, Justin Smoak, and Brett Wallace went in short order before Cooper (we definitely blew the Cooper vs. Davis choice). Jason Heyward went two picks before Ahrens, and Mesoraco went immediately before (a guy in whom we were reportedly interested...and a pick I'd have hated at the time. Not now, though). Lincecum and Greinke were off the board when the Snider pick came around. Jered Weaver, Billy Butler and Stephen Drew went off the board immediately before Purcey. While the Rays were picking from the best of the best, our consistently mediocre record left us picking from the remainder bin.


That's true, but I think you are underselling how good the Rays were outside of the draft.

Upton, Young -> Garza, Niemann, Longoria, and Price were top five picks acquired by the Rays since 2002. That is two legit all-star/MVP/Cy calibre players plus some good players (Upton has underachieved a bit). It's not like the Rays were building the entire team of top 5 picks. As you said, they made smart bullpen decisions (which was one of JP's strong points towards the end of his tenure) and acquired good players for cheap. It wasn't all draft/luck related.

Secondly, Rogers refused to spend big on the draft 'til after Ted's death. Those few sliders that occurred in the first round, and the many in later rounds, were inevitably passed over because we wouldn't open the wallet. It was death by a thousand slot recommendations.


From what I recall, it was Godfrey who was against going overslot, but regardless that would fall under "ownership" ineptitude (Godfrey was a figurehead for Rogers basically) for not realizing the competitive advantage of going overslot. Tampa having the support (if you could call it that) of ownership for building the way they did was definitely an advantage for them, and a disadvantage for the Jays during Ricciardi's time.


On the trade/free agency front, JP didn't work miracles, no doubt. However, he did get Jose Bautista for Robinzon Diaz, several excellent relievers for nothing, and the rollover from guys like Scutaro beget the massive number of picks that we'll have had in 2010 and 2011. No argument: he lacked the risk-taking gene necessary to be one of the best GMs in the game, which was the precondition to chase down the Sox/Yanks. But he wasn't chopped liver, either.


I think this was the major reason why he was never able to get over the hump. None of his moves, even his good ones, were franchise changing moves. He didn't have that Escobar or Morrow type trade where he got a high upside player for nothing. It was always "he turned a bad starter into a solid reliever" or "he turned minor league relievers into a decent everyday player". Those types of moves, while not bad, certainly won't be enough to win a division where the Yankees can sign CC/AJ/Tex in a span of two months.

Again: we were frequently among the top 5-8 teams in the league by third-order wins. On the farm system, the Ricciardi era has graduated a rather impressive crop, even if many of them weren't that highly-rated while on the farm. It wasn't a mediocre team...it was quite a good team in a division that demanded near-perfection. JP could've been better, and Rogers sure as hell could've been better, but they didn't fail from ineptitude, just a failure to achieve excellence.


In the team's best seasons under JP, this was their wins rank:

2003: t-6th in AL, t-11th in MLB
2006: 7th in AL, 10th in MLB
2007: 7th in AL, t-14th in MLB
2008: 7th in AL, t-11th in MLB

Outside of those three seasons it was 78, 67, 80, and 75 wins.

I don't know, out of those seasons I only viewed the 2006 and 2008 teams as legit playoff calibre teams. I never got that sense in any other season.

I can agree with them being good certain years, and mediocre in others, but nothing beyond that. I wish they were.


It's true, you need to be a top-level club from top to bottom, and we weren't. But that's the bloody reason that we're talking about it being the toughest division (by far) in baseball: in no other division is it necessary to be elite in order to compete. That's the very crux of the argument.


What were your thoughts on the league set-up (two divisions, four playoff teams) prior to the Wild Card implementation? Because the Jays teams (2002-09) in that set-up probably finish 4th or 5th in the East every year. Back then you had to be elite to make the playoffs. Maybe I'm still using that criteria here. To me, being a playoff team should involve being elite. Sure I would not complain if the Jays were in the Central and beat the crap out of a bad division, but unfortunately we are not in that position. JP would be a great AL Central GM, and I think that was his main problem.


The main reason? Yes. The whole reason? No.


That is where we disagree. I think if the Jays were a highly ranked farm system and had at least one 90-win season during that time then I'd sway to your side, but we weren't even close. A good team some years, a playoff team in the Central or NL some years, but ultimately not close to the level it takes to win the East. That is why I don't like the division argument. It seems like an easy excuse to justify bad decisions.
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#18 » by Schad » Thu Mar 31, 2011 1:05 am

Michael Bradley wrote:The Jays drafted well in the "good to very good" player category (Romero, Marcum, Cecil, Hill, Lind, etc). I wouldn't consider it a very good draft record under JP (I thought Ash drafted "very good"). However, where the team lacked was impact talent. I can't think of one consistent impact bat the team drafted outside of the respective 2009 seasons of Hill and Lind (and they both were average before and after that season....to date). Pitching-wise the Jays have done pretty well, just unlucky with injuries.


No disagreement on the lack of true star talent. However, while it's certainly possible to get stars for slot below the top five, it's definitely an uphill climb. Regardless of who made the decision to stick to slot (and I agree that everything I've heard has led me to believe it was Godfrey, in part because Bud's "you'll never get the All-Star Game!" saber-rattling hit him where it counted), that made it pretty bloody difficult. We whiffed on a couple good-to-very-good players, but there just weren't many stars taken in the first round of drafts that we passed without financial reason, and expecting any GM to find stars beyond that point is a huge ask.

In 2009, this is what BA said about the Jays system: "28. Blue Jays: Toronto would be No. 30 if not for last summer's Scott Rolen trade, which brought needed pitching talent from the Reds." I'm too lazy to look up where they ranked in other years, but I'd imagine it was in the 20's from 2005-2009.


That's true, but I think you are underselling how good the Rays were outside of the draft.

Upton, Young -> Garza, Niemann, Longoria, and Price were top five picks acquired by the Rays since 2002. That is two legit all-star/MVP/Cy calibre players plus some good players (Upton has underachieved a bit). It's not like the Rays were building the entire team of top 5 picks. As you said, they made smart bullpen decisions (which was one of JP's strong points towards the end of his tenure) and acquired good players for cheap. It wasn't all draft/luck related.


I wouldn't argue that it was all draft/luck. However, I think that those things were wholly necessary to get them over the top...subtract Longoria, Upton, Garza and Price and they are a very solid team, but probably peak with wins in the high 80s and fail to make the playoffs. As we did, really.

I think this was the major reason why he was never able to get over the hump. None of his moves, even his good ones, were franchise changing moves. He didn't have that Escobar or Morrow type trade where he got a high upside player for nothing. It was always "he turned a bad starter into a solid reliever" or "he turned minor league relievers into a decent everyday player". Those types of moves, while not bad, certainly won't be enough to win a division where the Yankees can sign CC/AJ/Tex in a span of two months.


Yeah, but that's again the product of the division; anywhere else in baseball, those moves would have made us a playoff team.


In the team's best seasons under JP, this was their wins rank:

2003: t-6th in AL, t-11th in MLB
2006: 7th in AL, 10th in MLB
2007: 7th in AL, t-14th in MLB
2008: 7th in AL, t-11th in MLB

Outside of those three seasons it was 78, 67, 80, and 75 wins.

I don't know, out of those seasons I only viewed the 2006 and 2008 teams as legit playoff calibre teams. I never got that sense in any other season.


Last year we were seventh in the majors in third-order wins. Two years previous we were (if memory serves, as it turns out that I can't look at previous years on BP, or can't figure out how) fifth. We'd been among the better teams a number of times, and if not for our division -- actually, that and a maddening tendency to underperform our run differential, an oddity on a club with excellent 'pens -- we'd have made the playoffs at least once, possibly as many as three times in JP's stead. Anywhere else, it wouldn't be considered a dominant team by any stretch, but certainly a very successful one.

What were your thoughts on the league set-up (two divisions, four playoff teams) prior to the Wild Card implementation? Because the Jays teams (2002-09) in that set-up probably finish 4th or 5th in the East every year. Back then you had to be elite to make the playoffs. Maybe I'm still using that criteria here. To me, being a playoff team should involve being elite. Sure I would not complain if the Jays were in the Central and beat the crap out of a bad division, but unfortunately we are not in that position.


On the old system: something close to ambivalence, owing to competing favourable/unfavourable thoughts. I find it invariably silly when a team makes the playoffs with a .500 record, but no less silly than the '93 Giants missing the playoffs with the second-best record in baseball (by a game, and six games clear of the third-best).

On oddity of that system vs. the one now: probably owes to the growth in payroll disparity (and possibly expansion to boot), but the AL always featured a tonne of mid-tier mediocrity. From 1983-1993, there wasn't a single season in which you had 3+ teams with 93 or more wins, as far as I can tell. By contrast, every season from 2005-2010 featured 3+ teams that reached that threshold, and it hasn't been uncommon to see four or five in the same year. So I'm not sure that it required more elite play in many years, unless you got royally screwed, like the Giants. And as we've been to a less profound extent over the past half-decade.

JP would be a great AL Central GM, and I think that was his main problem.


He'd have been a very good AL Central, AL West, NL West, NL Central, and probably NL East GM. And therein lies the problem: we're playing an entirely different game than at least two-thirds of the teams in the league.


That is where we disagree. I think if the Jays were a highly ranked farm system and had at least one 90-win season during that time then I'd sway to your side, but we weren't even close. A good team some years, a playoff team in the Central or NL some years, but ultimately not close to the level it takes to win the East. That is why I don't like the division argument. It seems like an easy excuse to justify bad decisions.


The paradox is that our farm system did suck under JP, but it produced a lot of above-average major leaguers. Some top-tier guys would have gone a long way, but we neither sucked enough nor spent enough to make it a reality.


All in all, while I think that we were a good and competitive team under JP, I'm certainly more on-board with AA's philosophy. But that's largely due to the division: there's a good chance that AA does all the right things and this still goes down in flames to a far greater extent than any Jays team since Ash happened. Conversely, there's also a chance that everything comes together and we actually see the playoffs.

Call him the Three True Outcomes General Manager: either he'll hit a home run, or he'll strike out...in which case he'll walk.
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Avenger
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#19 » by Avenger » Thu Mar 31, 2011 2:53 am

I don't get the TTO analogy at all. Alex hasn't taken all that many risks and he certainly hasn't been trying to hit homeruns, maybe except for the Shaun Marcum trade. Other than that, i don't see another move that has been risky, he's been as risk averse as JP was but the returns on AA's moves have simply been better. Alex to me is more Albert Pujols or Joey Votto than Adam dunn
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Re: Are the Blue Jays doomed by baseball 

Post#20 » by Hoopstarr » Thu Mar 31, 2011 4:02 am

Avenger wrote:I don't get the TTO analogy at all. Alex hasn't taken all that many risks and he certainly hasn't been trying to hit homeruns, maybe except for the Shaun Marcum trade. Other than that, i don't see another move that has been risky, he's been as risk averse as JP was but the returns on AA's moves have simply been better. Alex to me is more Albert Pujols or Joey Votto than Adam dunn


Yea I agree about TTO. Only Marcum for Lawrie, Wallace for Gose and re-signing Bautista can be called risky but they're hardly hero or zero type of moves. Alex is so exhaustive and deliberative in his process that it's hard to apply a TTO analogy that implies all-in gambles. It's because of all that background work that he's able to manufacture trades like Morrow, Escobar, Lewis, and Olivo. Others could be purely luck and/or negotiation chops like the Wells dump, Buck and A-Gon, the Halladay trade, re-signing Lind, etc. Like BC, he talks about how a good trade is one that works for both sides so obviously he sees himself as a fair trade partner with an open door.

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