With the Major League Baseball off-season in full swing now with free agents eligible to sign wherever they want, it's time to shift our focus to Canada's lone team, the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Jays finished the 2011 season 81-81, which was good for fourth place in the American League East. They were 10 games out of the Wild Card, so needless to say, the team has some work to do now that the off-season is upon us.
Our question for you today is what should the Jays focus on adding the most via free agency or trade? Hitters, starting pitching or the bullpen?
The Argument for Offence
While General Manager Alex Anthopoulos said during a conference call on Tuesday that another bat was "very low on the priority list and we have a lot of other areas we'd rather address first," one could argue that another bat is what the team needs.
In overall offence in 2011, the Jays managed to score the sixth-most runs in baseball, while posting the 11th-best OPS, 18th-best OBP and 20th-best average.
One could wonder how much better the Jays could be if they could get some more protection in their lineup for Jose Bautista.
Starting Off
In 2011, the Blue Jays' starting pitchers ranked 25th in baseball, recording a 4.55 ERA. Only the Twins, Rockies, Cubs, Royals and Orioles' staffs struggled more.
Ricky Romero was stellar for the club, posting a 15-11 record with a strong 2.92 ERA. Henderson Alvarez started 10 games and despite posting a 3.53 ERA, won only one game. After that, the Jays starters all had down years in 2011, with Brandon Morrow (4.72 ERA in 30 starts), Brett Cecil (4.73 ERA in 20 starts), and Kyle Drabek (6.16 ERA in 14 starts) getting most of the other starts.
Call To the 'Pen
Last season the Blue Jays bullpen had the 21st-best ERA in all of baseball with a .388 mark, while being tied for third in the league for blown saves with 25.
Now, while all of those blown saves didn't result in losses, it still signifies a problem as their direct competition in the AL East were all much better in that stat, with the Rays bullpen only blowing 12 saves and the Red Sox and Yankees bullpens each only stumbling 16 times apiece.
The blown save stat aside, the Jays bullpen is in flux, with the in-season departures of Marc Rzepczynski, Jason Frasor and Octavio Dotel, and the fact that the two men who handled the bulk of the ninth inning duties in 2011, Frank Francisco and Jon Rauch, are both free agents.
Lots more info if you click the link: http://www.tsn.ca/mlb/story/?id=379567