Thoughts on the 2010 Toronto Blue Jays?

Soon the Toronto Blue Jays could be the eleventh team in baseball to be officially taken out of 2010 playoff contention (their AL East "elimination number" is 8, their AL Wildcard is 11). The Blue Jays currently have a winning record of 72-68 (.514).

The Toronto Blue Jays are historically an average team. Since starting in 1977, the franchise has a losing record of 2,661 wins and 2,700 losses. The Blue Jays have been to the playoffs 5 times, won 2 American League Pennants and 2 World Series (they defeated the Braves in 1992 and the Phillies in 1993). The Blue Jays finished last season with a losing record, but had winning records for 2006, 2007 and 2008.

Let's look at the facts about this year:

First game of season: Beaten by the Texas Rangers in Arlington 4-5 (April 5)
First home game of season: Beaten by the Chicago White Sox 7-8 (April 12)

Worst Loss of season: Beaten by the Boston Red Sox in Toronto 3-14 (July 9)

Best Victory of season: Defeated the Red Sox in Boston 16-2 (August 20)

TRADES:
- The Blue Jays traded SP Roy Halladay (3.32 ERA) to the Philadelphia Phillies for minor league players P Kyle Drabek, C Travis D'Arnaud & OF Michael Taylor
- The Blue Jays traded RP Brandon League (3.81 ERA) to the Seattle Mariners for SP Brandon Morrow (4.09 ERA)
- The Blue Jays traded a player to be named for SP Zach Jackson (5.49 ERA)
- The Blue Jays traded cash to the San Francisco Giants for RP Merkin Valdez (5.24 ERA)
- The Blue Jays traded cash to the Oakland Athletics for SP Dana Eveland (5.63)
- The Blue Jays traded SP Dana Eveland (5.63) to the Pittsburgh Pirates for minor league pitcher Ronald Uviedo
- The Blue Jays traded SS Alex Gonzales (.248) and two minor leaguers to the Atlanta Braves for SS Yunel Escobar (.292) and SP Jo-Jo Reyes (6.40 ERA)

RETIREMENT:
This will be the last year for World Series winning manager Cito Gaston with the Blue Jays.

SEASON STATS:

So far the Blue Jays have won all 12 games against the Baltimore Orioles
The Blue Jays have lost 11 of 15 games against the Boston Red Sox
The Blue Jays have won 8 of 15 games against the New York Yankees
The Blue Jays have lost 8 of 15 games against the Tampa Bay Rays

Best Blue Jay batting average: CF Vernon Wells (.270 average)
Most Blue Jay home runs: RF Jose Bautista (44 home runs, most in MLB)
Most Blue Jay RBI: RF Jose Bautista (106 RBI, 2nd most in MLB)
Most Blue Jay wins: SP Shaun Marcum (12 wins, 7 losses)
Best Blue Jay ERA: SP Ricky Romero (3.51 ERA)
Most Blue Jay saves: RP Kevin Gregg (31 saves, 5th most in American League)

Toronto Blue Jays team batting average = .249
Toronto Blue Jays team ERA: 4.16
Toronto Blue Jays team fielding percentage = .985

What are your thoughts on the Toronto Blue Jays? What do you have to say about the trades, about the season, the players, the management, next year, etc?

http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/TOR/
http://mlb.mlb.com/schedule/sortable.jsp?c_id=tor
http://espn.go.com/mlb/statistics

?2010-09-10T08:07:21Z

Favorite Answer

If anything, the Blue Jays played over their heads this year. Anyone expecting a repeat performance from Batista is going to be sorely disappointed. There is a reason the guy bounced around 2nd rate clubs as a journeyman outfielder.

Next year: Hill & Lind won't be as bad. Wells and Batista won't be as good. Call it a wash.
The pitching continues to improve - Romero, Marcum, Morrow & Cecil make it a pretty solid starting rotation. The bullpen has a lot of arms.
J.P. will do the catching next year (upgrade from Buck) and hopefully Wallace will be at first base (I like Overbay, but they needed to move him while they could get something for him)
Snider will continue to improve, especially if he's healthy, and Lewis and Escobar were solid additions.

The Jays have a legit shot at 85-90 wins next year. Not enough to make the playoffs, but enough to be in contention all year.

Who will be managing next year will be a big question. They need someone capable of managing the ups and downs that come with having young players, who by their very nature are erratic.

Stay the course, let the kids in AA/AAA that they have acquired mature. And may Dustin McGowan could finally get healthy and pitch. Now that would be a great 5 man rotation, which could challenge anyone's 5 man rotation.

BravesGirl52010-09-10T16:48:08Z

So first things first, I am a huge Braves fan, have been my whole life, and I must say to the Toronto Blue Jays thank you for taking Yunel Escobar off our hands(: Goodness gracious it was absolutely horrible in Atlanta! I would love to know what the Toronto front office was thinking when they traded for him! It's not that he's a bad player, but he's a horrible teammate! Even Tim Hudson made a comment after they traded him about how the clubhouse was like a breath of fresh air without Yunel. No team should want that negative chemistry unless they have a manager that can really have it under control (don't know too much about Cito Gaston, so maybe he's that type of manager). That Roy Halladay trade is going to be great for the Blue Jays in my opinion! I know that Roy Halladay is a great pitcher, but those prospects are great and I think they'll do a gerat job in the majors. The only other trade that I think was big was the Brandon Morrow trade, and another one that I think the Blue Jays will benefit from. Only watched a few of his starts, but I think he's gonna be great. The biggest problem for the Blue Jays--their division. They've got three powerhouses in that division in the Rays, Yankees, and Red Sox. No matter how good the Blue Jays are, it's gonna be a dog fight every year trying to win that division. They're gonna need a big turn around to make a run for the playoffs with that division.

--Kelly (http://gtlbb.mlblogs.com/)

?2010-09-10T08:12:46Z

Great post man. I feel like the Blue Jays are a very underrated team, like the Marlins in the National League. The Marlins also have 2 titles in 97 and 03, and on a consistent basis are a .500 ball club or a little under or better. The Blue Jays play in the toughest division in baseball, which makes it very hard for them to have to play so many games agaisnt probably 3 of the top 5 teams in baseball so many times. Next year, I feel the Blue Jays will do the same thing, maybe have a little better win percentage in the end, but the Yankees and Red Sox alaways seem to improve. The Rays will also be a good team next year, and I feel bad for the Blue Jays playing in such a tough division. However, this team does hit alot of homeruns (the most in baseball so far this season) but there best BA is only .270 thats not good at all. average of under .250 BA is not good either. They need to be more consistent. Sure homeruns win games, but not like hits do consistently, because most players wont hit a homerun every game, like alot of players get hits and contribute. The 4.16 ERA is pretty decent for starting pitchers though. Just like the Marlins they got some very good young and up and coming players, and you dont hear about them that much. The Marlins also play in a tough division with the Phillies, Mets and Braves, (Braves are usually not that good though) and have a team like the Nationals, who are like the Orioles. Who knows, maybe next year they could start hitting more consistent, and start winning more games agaisnt their division rivals, and possibly take the wild card spot. Of course, the wild card sport most likely comes from 2nd in their division like every year, so they need to win those division games!!!! I say underrated team, and looks pretty decent in the road ahead. Great facts and post bro!!!

Anonymous2016-04-13T08:44:21Z

I was reviewing MLB Channel's preseason picks. Pretty much all of the analysts picked the Red Sox in the World Series. Most were against the Colorado Rockies. As mentioned, the injuries really limited the Red Sox this season. The main factor that hurt the Red Sox were the injuries to their OF. Ellsbury and Cameron were supposed to lock down the OF defense with their great range. Bill Hall did a decent job of adding his bat to the lineup while playing the OF but his defense was not good.

Hanna Ashenafi2010-09-10T07:52:42Z

No disrespect to the city of Toronto but the Jays ownership should try to move to a different city or ask the commissioner to be in the NL because they can't challenge the Yankees(money), Rays(they're young) or the Red Sox(money) in the AL East. This franchise needs to develop their own players through Triple A and Double A and learn from the Rays how to utilize a low budget team. In conclusion the Jays have not under achieved due to being in the AL East.

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