dacrusha wrote:Rogers has always been a very passive and careful owner, so it'll be interesting if the Jays can be bought by a group that is willing to put money into the team to drive fan interest. They have always been one to pay the bare minimum to field a .500 roster in hopes that they somehow can make some noise in August/September... rather than investing ahead of time in the off-season to field a competitive side out of the gate.
True to their passive ways, Shapiro was telling fans recently we're in the running for Ohtani, which of course was a lie just to keep Jays fan hopes/interest high.
It's sad, because if Rogers and management decided to really pour money into the team to build a winner at all costs, they would have record-breaking profits come back to them year over year, because Toronto (and Canadian) baseball fans have no problem opening their wallets for a winner.
Shapiro never said the Jays were in the running for Ohtani. Ross Atkins mentioned being comfortable with selling the organization to him based on a number of factors, but no president or GM ever said their team was in the running of Ohtani, and that includes every other team. No one even knew what his preferences were until he was posted and started eliminating teams from contention.
As far as your point about Rogers, I don't think they get enough credit. The team was in shambles before they took over. Then their first real front office decision was to hire a Billy Beane disciple during the height of Moneyball, which showed some level of foresight in terms of where the game was going (unfortuntely Ricciardi was average at best as a GM). They allowed the Jays to sign Burnett and Ryan, back when starters getting five year deals was rare, and a reliever getting that much to this day doesn't happen. They allowed an extension for Wells which was ridiculous in hindsight but showed some level of commitment to keeping a player who was perceived to be the franchise's star positional player at the time. Then there's the whole 2012 madness with the Marlins trade and everything that happened after that. They have invested in the team. Maybe not as much as some people like, but more than enough to field a competitive team. They have just picked some suspect GM's and ran into a Yankees/Red Sox buzzsaw in the 2000's without a 2nd wild card to help them out.
Rogers gets too much flack. Some might be deserved, but definitely not all.