Post#24 » by Michael Bradley » Sat Jan 28, 2012 12:43 am
The thing to keep in mind with Morrow is he has only been a full-time starter for two seasons, and in one of those seasons (2010) he was on a strict innings limit. From 2006-2009, he started a grand total of 35 games. Three and a half pro seasons and 35 starts. That's ridiculous. Morrow is still not a finished product, and while I think his upside is more (the good version of) AJ Burnett rather than Justin Verlander, that is still a quality #2 starter. The ratios are there. He just needs to put it all together. He may or may not in the long run, but that is one of the reasons the Jays are a bit under the radar. He has just as much chance to bust out as anyone.
I can't comment on Cecil because his problem last year was a loss of velocity. When he is right, I have no problem with him being a league average starter. Hopefully his weight loss helps him out. McGowan is a big question mark. Tough to project what Alvarez will do. I'd expect Carreno to start some games next year over Drabek (in case of injury), but Drabek prior to 2011 was a top 30 prospect in baseball. Between Farrell and Walton, I would hope someone in the organization can help the guy fix his command issues. If he does, then the Jays have a real darkhorse rotation candidate out of ST, but I'm not going to buy into any Drabek hype until he shows improvement.
The issue with the Jays rotation is uncertainty, but the upside is there. Same thing with the offense. People assume Kelly Johnson and Colby Rasmus suck because of 2011, but prior to that they have a history of putting up all-star calibre numbers for their positions. It feels like half the Jays team is a "buy low" candidate, which is why I am a bit more optimistic about 2012 than others are. It is like the team is filled with Yunel Escobar's from last year (i.e. players coming off down years that are sure to improve). That is usually a good thing. It may not be good enough to make the playoffs, but who knows.