After their most recent blowout of the Angels, the Jays have scored 670 runs in 124 games (5.40 per game), with a .332 team on-base percentage and .445 slugging percentage. All those figures currently lead the AL, as does their context-adjusted 114 OPS+. Since 2000, 12 clubs (including this year's Jays) -- less than one club per season -- have posted a seasonal 114 OPS+ mark. Of those 12, nine (again including the '15 Jays) also led the league in runs scored. Below, we rank those nine clubs by the number of standard deviations they are above that year's AL average in runs scored.
Best American League offenses since 2000Code: Select all
Year Team Runs above standard deviation
2015 Toronto Blue Jays 2.64
2007 New York Yankees 2.28
2003 Boston Red Sox 1.88
2009 New York Yankees 1.77
2008 Texas Rangers 1.76
2001 Seattle Mariners 1.66
2013 Boston Red Sox 1.59
2011 Boston Red Sox 1.59
2002 New York Yankees 1.31
As you can see, in terms of the average variance from the norm in runs scored, the Jays have the premier AL offense since 2000. In fact, being more than two and a half standard deviations above the norm in anything is a really big deal. Two-thirds of the values in any range are within one standard deviation of the average; only the top and bottom one-sixth lie outside it. By this measure, the Jays are the elite of the elite since the turn of the century.
Pretty impressive stuff. Though the last paragraph I quoted is somewhat confusing. The title suggests that the Jays offense is 2.64 runs above the mean. Whereas the text suggests that the offense is 2.64 standard deviations above the mean. The latter would suggest that this Jays offense is better than 99.6% of all offenses that have ever existed in the MLB.
I don't have Insider so can't see what the rest of the article has to say, but either way this is pretty amazing.