Randle McMurphy wrote:How did the Jays manage a Pythagorean W-L of 88-74 on that 2005 payroll with no Halladay for half the year, the best full-season pitcher being Josh Towers, and nobody on the entire roster above .800 OPS except Frank Catalanotto? I'm going to chalk it up to Gibbons.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/TOR/2005.shtml
Especially when that was the year JFG was gonna break out, along with Quiroz, and we'd just robbed TB of Chad Gaudin. If someone's got Spring Training 2005 season threads, my guess is there will be multiples on each of them, I'm sure there were on Scout.com at the time (please don't find them, I remember being particularly fond of the Gaudin pick-up, at least 'til I saw him... you know... like... pitch

).
I will say that lineup makes a pretty good case that OPS is power-biased, 'cause they played pretty well even if those numbers are unremarkable in retrospect. Really if you can do a few things just well enough, there's some room for marginal success. I think it's one of the missing ingredients of Baseball's statistically analysis: what's a good enough performance? The identification of true difference making thresholds for a player, for a club, etc..., that's the goal.
And one last thing; Looking at that roster, both the names that panned out and the ones that didn't, Gord Ash probably deserves a touch more credit than he gets (yes I know where we are in relation to Gord at this point). His legacy to the subsequent GM was certainly more helpful than JP's.