polo007 wrote:
Is our manager under the impression that Matz is anything other than our 5th best starter?
Moderator: JaysRule15
polo007 wrote:
AthensBucks wrote:Lowry is done.
Nurse is below average at best.
Masai is overrated.
I dont get how so many people believe in the raptors,they have zero to chance to win it all.
GameChannel wrote:I may be in the minority but I am getting concerned that Vladdy may not turn out to be the star everyone predicted him to become. Based on what I saw last season and early this season, it doesn't fill me with confidence.
Cyrus wrote:T Walker looking good this year. Better than any of the back end of rotations guys we have had so far.
bluerap23 wrote:Cyrus wrote:T Walker looking good this year. Better than any of the back end of rotations guys we have had so far.
Yup. Many here thought last year was a fluke. At the contract he signed for it was definitely worth the risk. We simply don't have the depth in our rotation to let guys walk. This is why I find the idea of trading Ray if we aren't in contention very upsetting.
Shapiro confirmed that Ontario regards the convertible Rogers Centre as an outdoor venue, allowing for a capacity of 15,000 under Stage 3 of the province’s recovery plan, even if inclement weather forces the roof to be closed. The ability to keep some flaps open and increase air circulation is part of the plan to alleviate risk.
Information on tickets, with season subscribers a priority, is due early next week, along with details on health regulations and protocols in the stands. The dome has been deep cleaned after going largely unused for nearly two years, new turf installed and a sound system upgraded from the building’s original last year has been readied for use.
Equipment at Buffalo’s Sahlen Field must be shipped north once the current homestand ends with Wednesday’s series finale against the Boston Red Sox, while players need to close out leases and pack up homes in one city and start anew in another eight days later.
A lot of people will be doing a lot of hustle in a compressed time period.
The payoff comes in players getting to play before the team’s fans at Rogers Centre for the first time – like Hyun-Jin Ryu, George Springer and Marcus Semien – and staffers getting home after extended periods away from loved ones on the road.
There will be a financial benefit, too, as the Blue Jays are currently last in the majors in attendance at 161,313. The 21 games at Dunedin, where they drew only 30,936 for an average of 1,473, were largely responsible for that. They’ve averaged 6,861 fans through 19 dates at Buffalo, a pace better than the Miami Marlins (6,464) and Oakland Athletics (6,394) and just short of the Tampa Bay Rays (7,083).
Demand is expected to be strong in Toronto, although Shapiro said he had only for the first time asked the club’s ticket-modelling staff what the fiscal impact will look like.
“They're still working on that, which I guess is the best answer to the question, financial considerations weren't even a thought. They weren't even part of this,” he said. “We will certainly do a little better moving back. We have done well in Buffalo. Better in Buffalo than we did in Dunedin. It won't begin to eclipse the magnitude of losses that we've incurred over the last two seasons. This is about getting home. This is about being where we should be. This is about reuniting with our fans. Finances are a tiny to nonexistent part of the equation.”
Benefits from the restoration of normalcy are expected everywhere from on-field performance to trying to lure free agents in the off-season
polo007 wrote: