Post#56 » by dagger » Sun Aug 9, 2015 2:58 pm
The question is not whether the Jays can contend with this year's win now moves. It's possible they can, even take the division, even win a World Series. Who knows. The issue is whether this is repeatable, and if the owner's traditional budgeting behaviour is a portend of the future, it is hard to imagine this being repeatable. Some would say go for it, a World Series is worth everything, and that's hard to argue against, unless you go 22 years between playoff appearances because of a refusal to "do things the right way". With the prospect pitcher bulge we had developing, along with some interesting position players in the system, it's possible this team might have built itself into a solid, sustainable contender by 2017 or 2018, where any surplus prospect talent could have been used every couple of years to keep the Jays out in front of the AL East and in real contention, and it would have co-existed within the budget parameters one would expect Rogers to lay down. The Cards have shown what can be done with a sustainable development program that keeps the major league team relevant year after year. That's where the Jays could have ended up, with a bit more patience. Instead, we have to consider the likelihood of signing or replacing three of our five starting pitching next season: Price, Buehrle and Estrada are all free agents, and you have to wonder what Dickey will have at age 41. Don't look to the minors for help, the best young starting pitchers there are at least another year away, i.e. won't arrive until 2017 or 2018. There is nothing worth looking at in terms of starters at AAA or AA right now. At the same time, we face arbitration with Donaldson, and all of our over-30 position players will be a year older. I'm not saying we can't be good, but it will be hard to be as good as the team that AA has sold his soul for right now.
If you look around you, many of the up and coming teams in the majors are teams that built at least partly through the draft: Houston, Washington, New York Mets. As they contend for the first time, they are doing it with a lot of young controllable talent, and have surpluses in their farm systems to go after the veterans to put them over the top. Their horizon of contention stretches out several years. Ours is cloudier, and if you only make yourself relevant for a couple of months, all the casual fans who have come out of the woodwork will head right back into it when the team is mediocre again without building a new generation of fan dom on which to expand the economics on which the Jays often flounder.
I'm going to enjoy the next several weeks, rooting for the team like crazy, but like some of us here, I don't think the level the team is at this minute can carry over to the next couple of seasons unless there are fundamental changes in how Rogers views funding its baseball team. And no, I don't think a two month surge in ticket sales and ratings is going to change anything, because spending even a few million dollars more last season could have made the world of difference, too. It made a lot of sense, and yet the owner stuck to its budget as if it was the literal word of the Almighty.
2019 will never be forgotten because FLAGS FLY FOREVER