Tagged: Steve Delabar

Mid-Season Review – Part Two: The Bullpen

While not the official midway point through the season, the allstar break certainly serves as the unofficial midway point in the long, 162-game season that is major league baseball.  I thought it would be fitting to take advantage of the allstar break to prepare a report card of sorts and break down the different aspects of the Blue Jays organization.  This is part two of the series: The Bullpen.

Coming into Spring Training, it was hard to find any holes in the Blue Jays roster.  But if you were forced to point to something, it probably would’ve been the bullpen.  Casey Janssen showed great consistency since taking over the closer role in 2012, but he isn’t a prototypical closer and he was coming off shoulder surgery.  Sergio Santos was thought to challenge Janssen for the closer spot, leaving Darren Oliver and Steve Delabar as solid late inning options.  Aaron Loup was thought to make the club, but had almost zero expectations since he was entering his first full season.  Brett Cecil was a question mark to even make the 25-man roster.  Esmil Rogers was to be a mulitple inning, mid-relief guy.  Dustin McGowan, please.  He would probably just get hurt again.  Juan Perez, Neil Wagner….who are they?

One of the lone bright spots at the break is the Jays’ bullpen.  The group has posted the best bullpen ERA in the AL over the first half (2.90), the most wins in the AL (21), all while pitching the most innings of any ‘pen in the MLB (334.2).  Let’s look at each member of the group who has contributed to the surprise success.

Juan Perez (19.2 IP, 0.00 ERA, 1-1 record, 0.76 WHIP, 21 K’s) – Perez came out of nowhere this season.  A 34-year-old career minor leaguer and with the Jays in search of a fresh arm to eat some innings due to the rotations early season struggles, Perez earned a call up when he pitched to a 0.86 ERA over 21 innings in triple-A.  It was thought Perez would be a sort-term inning eater and head back to Buffalo when the rotation turned things around and got healthy.  After posting a 0.00 ERA in 19.2 innings with the big club, Perez doesn’t look to be going anywhere soon – especially since sending him to the minors would expose him to waivers.  With a very affordable $380,000 contract, he would surely be claimed by any contending club looking to add bullpen depth.  The emergence of Perez (along with Loup and Cecil) give the Jays flexibility to trade veteran Darren Oliver to a contender before the July 31st deadline.  With his hurky-jerky motion, he sure is fun to watch.

Dustin McGowan (11.2 IP, 1.54 ERA, 0-0 record, 0.86 WHIP, 15 K’s) – McGowan is finely healthy (touch wood) in part due to the Jamie Evans throwing program which has strengthened his ever-ailing shoulder.  It’s only 11.2 innings, but McGowan’s stuff looks as good as it ever has and his maturity and determination really shine through when he is on the mound.  If he can stay healthy – and that’s still a big if – the patience the Jays have shown with his injury-riddled start to his career might just pay off.  And if he does stay healthy, a lot more pitchers might start subscribing to the Jamie Evans velocity program.

Steve Delabar (42.0 IP, 1.71 ERA, 5-1 record, 1.26 WHIP, 58 K’s) – Delabar, a feel-good story of a teacher turned MLB allstar and arguably the man that made Jamie Evans’ velocity program famous, has been everything the Jays were hoping when they acquired him from the Mariners last season for OF Eric Thames.  He still walks too many hitters (23 so far) but doesn’t allow the long ball (1 so far) and has the strikeout ability to make up it.  More than any other reliever in the Blue Jays bullpen, when they need a big strikeout, he is the guy to go to.

Brett Cecil (46.1 IP, 1.96 ERA, 3-0 record, 0.97 WHIP, 55 K’s) – After winning 15 games as a rookie starter in a tough AL East, the next couple season weren’t too kind to Cecil.  He struggled mightily as a starter, experienced an alarming drop in velocity, and looked like he was destined for a permanent home in the minors.  Yet, Cecil – despite his struggles – still managed to get lefty batters out at a very high rate.  So it’s no surprise the Jays gave him a shot to grab a spot in the bullpen since he is out of minor league options (you’ll remember I wrote about this months ago and actually discussed it with Alex Anthopoulos).  Am I surprised with Cecil’s success this season?  Not at all.  I’ve always thought he was more suited for the ‘pen – he was a closer in college.  Am I surprised by Cecil’s command and much improved velocity?  Absolutely.  Thank you Jamie Evans (are we noticing a trend here?)

Aaron Loup (46.1 IP, 1.94 ERA, 4-3 record, 0.97 WHIP, 33 K’s) – Where did this guy come from?  Last year, Loup was a surprise call up from double-A and he has never looked back.  This year, Loup experienced his first major league camp Spring Training invite.  It’s unbelievable.  Loup has shown the ability to pitch multiple innings, strand inherited runners, dig in for a strikeout, or get a double-play grounder.  The angle he creates with his 3/4 arm slot is nasty, but it’s his ability to throw consistent strikes with his delivery that impresses most.  Loup has only walked 6 batters.  When looking to induce contact, Loup is an option right up there with Janssen.

Sergio Santos (4.1 IP, 2.08 ERA, 0-1 record, 0.92 WHIP, 6 K’s) – After missing nearly all of last season to shoulder surgery, Santos couldn’t get through 5 innings this year before requiring elbow surgery.  The hard-throwing righty is now been prescribed the Jamie Evans training program and hopes it helps cure his oft-injured arm.  The Jays are hoping Santos can regain the form that saw him strikeout 92 in just 63.1 innings for the White Sox in 2011.  2014 will be very interesting for Santos – the Jays hold club options on him for 2015, ’16, and ’17.  He’ll need to stay healthy and pitch well if he hopes to cash in on the contract structure the Jays inherited from the White Sox.  Santos is scheduled to come back to the ‘pen late July.  So the question is, who does he replace?  With how well everyone in the bullpen is throwing, don’t be surprised if Santos has an “extended” rehab assignment.

Thad Weber (13.0 IP, 2.08 ERA, 0-1 record, 1.23 WHIP, 8 K’s) – Weber was used as a fresh arm to call up when the bullpen was gassed earlier this year.  Although he pitched well, his stuff isn’t as good as the guys currently in the ‘pen and doesn’t look to have a role with the Jays beyond triple-A depth.  Yet, with a 2.37 ERA in 49.1 innings for Buffalo, he certainly provides quality depth.

Casey Janssen (29.1 IP, 2.76 ERA, 2-0 record, 0.89 WHIP 26 K’s) – With so much doubt heading into the season about Janssen’s ability to maintain his role as the team’s closer, he has certainly stuck it to his critics.  He may not throw hard, but he has pinpoint control (only 7 walks) and gets the job done – 18 of 19 in save opportunities.  While Delabar and Santos might have more traditional closer-like arms, Janssen’s ability to attack and carve up the strike zone is unmatched by any member of the bullpen.  It should be noted that the only save he blew, the Jays went on to win in extras, so the Jays have not lost a game that he has attempted to save all season.  Janssen is also on the Jamie Evans throwing program after having a slower than expected recovery from offseason shoulder surgery.  He has been pitching through what he describes as “discomfort” most of the year, but he appears to have turned a corner in the past couple weeks.  He is the leader of the ‘pen and an example to the young pitchers on the team of how location is more important than velocity.

Neil Wagner (18.1 IP, 2.95 ERA, 2-3 record, 1.15 WHIP, 15 K’s) – Wagner is a 28-year-old rookie.  He’s always had the power arm, but lacked control prior to this season.  He has a lower-grade version of McGowan’s stuff without having the previous arm issues.  As well as he’s pitched, he has minor league options and could be the odd man out of the ‘pen when Melky Cabrera comes off the DL later this week.  Definitely a plus-depth arm to stash away in triple-A.  Oh…and after going 13 for 13 in save opportunities for Buffalo, you know he’s ready to handle sticky situations.

Darren Oliver (29.0 IP, 3.10 ERA, 3-1 record, 1.21 WHIP, 23 K’s) – It’s not often a reliever throws less than a hit per inning, limits walks, has a winning record, and a 3.10 ERA yet finds himself pitching in a lesser role than the previous season.  However, with the emergence of Cecil and Loup above Oliver on the depth chart, that’s exactly what happened.  With Perez nipping at Oliver’s heals for innings also, it really wouldn’t surprise me to see Oliver be traded prior to the July 31st deadline.  There isn’t a contending team out there that wouldn’t want him on the roster.  And while it’s doubtful the Jays would get much in return for the 20-year veteran who aims to retire after this season, it would open up room in a crowded bullpen and also allow Oliver to pursue a World Series title – something he hasn’t been able to capture in his 20 years of MLB service.

Esmil Rogers – he is started the year as a reliever, moved to the rotation as a stop gap due to injuries, and now hasn’t looked back.  See Part One in the Mid-Season Review series for notes on Rogers.

Brad Lincoln (21.2 IP, 4.15 ERA, 0-1 record, 1.48 WHIP, 19 K’s) – While Lincoln’s numbers are plenty good enough for many MLB bullpens, they just aren’t good enough for this one.  The return piece in the deal that saw the Jays give up on former number 1 draft pick, Travis Snider, hasn’t lived up to his own 1st round status.  Although he has pitched modestly well, albeit inconsistently with the Jays, with the rise of other arms in the system, he continues to slide down the depth chart.

Mickey Storey, Edgar Gonzalez, Justin Germano, Jeremy Jeffress, and Dave Bush – None of these guys threw more than 8 innings, had an ERA under 7.30, a WHIP under 1.75, or won a game.  All were inning eaters during the early season melt down in the rotation when the Jays were forced to go to the ‘pen after only 2 or 3 innings routinely.  None were a factor in the bullpen’s success and none look to be a factor in the foreseeable future.

So…can the Jays bullpen keep up its torrid pace in the second half?  Probably not.  Can they maintain their status as the top group in the AL (and arguably the MLB)? Most definitely.

@IHRTBJs

Delabar makes Allstar team

Despite being 3 games under .500 and in dead last in the AL East, the Blue Jays will send 4 players to New York’s Citi Field for the 2013 allstar game next week.  Steve Delabar, 29, claimed the final vote roster spot and will join teammates Brett Cecil, Jose Bautista, and Edwin Encarnacion in the AL team clubhouse.  This will be Delabar’s first allstar appearance.

For AL relievers this season, Delabar ranks 3rd in strikeouts with 57 and 5th in ERA, posting a stingy 1.74.  Delabar picked up his first career save in Wednesday in Toronto’s only win in its series vs. the Indians.

Hard to believe someone with his arm has only 1 career save and it took until this year to get it.  Happy to see another Blue Jay in the allstar game, but 4 players from a team with a losing record?  Really?

@IHRTBJs

 

 

 

 

Blue Jays Allstar Selections Deserving?

I know the allstar game is for fans, but I’m not a fan of fan voting.  Too many times it’s a popularity contest and the players that earn a spot are snubbed.  The allstar game is by far the best in the four major North American sports.  Football – after the Super Bowl with no blitzing.  Really?  Hockey – a sport that only catches my eye when the gloves drop isn’t about to thrill my in a gentlemen’s version of the game.  Basketball – not bad.  A great show.  But no defence.

Baseball’s allstar game – the best hitters vs. the best pitchers with World Series homefield advantage on the line.  Amazing.

That’s why the best players should make it.  Not the fans favourites.

The Blue Jays currently have 3 players representing the team at the allstar game: Jose Bautista (voted in by fans), Edwin Encarnacion (voted in by MLB players), and Brett Cecil (selected by AL manager Jim Leyland).  There is also a very good chance that Steve Delabar will claim that last spot on the AL roster with – you guessed it – another fan vote.

The question becomes, are these Jays deserving?

I have trouble thinking someone who isn’t batting at least .280 as deserving (if not .300 – we want to see the best, right?).  So is it a roster determined by the first half of 2013 or a roster determined by the best player by position?

Even though Bautista has been up and down (just like the Jays), he is still arguably the best RF in the AL.  So I can see why he makes the squad.  Bautista has been named to the allstar team in each of the past four seasons. He’s enjoying another productive year at the plate despite struggling at times during June.  The 32-year-old is tied for seventh in home runs (20), third in walks (47), 10th in OPS (.872) and 12th in slugging (.511).

Encarnacion has been the Jays MVP this season in my opinion and is deserving.  Encarnacion will appear at his first allstar game after being a surprise snub in 2012.  He ranks among the league leaders in virtually every major offensive category.  The 30-year-old finished Toronto’s game against Minnesota on Saturday afternoon ranked third in home runs (23), sixth in extra-base hits (38), seventh in runs (54) and ninth in OPS (.877).

Cecil – a middle reliever – really?  Yes REALLY.  I think it’s great that the teams are taking more middle relief guys.  Typically we see only starters and closers.  The middle relief role is extremely under appreciated and Cecil has been among the best in the business so far this year (if you’ve followed my blog from the start, you’ll remember I’ve been suggesting Cecil in this role all along and even discussed it with GM Alex Anthopoulos).  Cecil, 27, is a former starter who was converted into a reliever late last season. He experienced a drop in velocity a couple of years ago, but now consistently throws in the mid-90s while also possessing a devastating curveball that has proved lethal to his opponents.  He set a franchise record earlier this year by going through 40 at-bats without surrendering a hit. He also went through a span of 20 innings without allowing a run and has become one of the elite left-handed relievers in the league (you’re welcome, Anthopoulos).

So if we are including middle relievers, why not Steve Delabar.  Include him too.  Vote!  Delabar’s inclusion along with Cecil’s would be a testament to the job the Jays’ bullpen has done this season.   Since May 29, the Blue Jays’ relief corps leads the Majors in ERA (1.45), opponents’ average (.177) and WHIP (0.92).

But here’s the thing: I don’t have a problem with any of these 4 guys making the roster, but when you step back and look at it, well, it starts to irritate me.  Why should a team that is in last place in its division and under .500 take up 4 roster spots?  What does that say about the other 21 guys on the Jays bench?

If I’m a big fan of another AL team and I see 4 Jays on the roster, it would piss me off.  So while all 4 guys are deserving – they are among the elite for their respective positions – it puzzles me that the Jays are a) playing so poorly and b) sending 4 players to the allstar game.

If you’ve never watched the allstar game, make sure you do.  It’s the best in sports.

@IHRTBJs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Santos eyes July return

Sergio Santos is hoping he’ll be ready to return to the Blue Jays bullpen sometime in July.  The Jays, though, will take their time with Santos since they have 8 men in the bullpen all pitching well.

Santos was place on the DL on April 14th with discomfort in his right elbow.  After unsuccessful rehab, he underwent minor surgery to have bone chips removed.  Santos was scheduled to face live hitters yesterday for the first time since his surgery.  

Santos has only played 11 games for the Jays over the past two seasons.  This year it has been the elbow; last year it was the shoulder.  Due to the injuries, Santos has now agreed to join Steve Delabar, Casey Janssen, Dustin McGown, and Brett Cecil – to name just a few – by implementing a weighted-ball program designed by Blue Jays exclusive consultant, Jamie Evans.  

While the program tends to increase velocity, it was actually designed to help avoid injury.  

If the Jays bullpen continues to pitch well, don’t expect them to hurry Santos back.  He may have some “extended rehab” if you know what I mean.

@IHRTBJs

Blue Jays hire Jamie Evans = Smart Move

Jamie Evans has helped numerous pitchers over the years with his Velocity Program, including Steve Delabar, Brett Cecil, Casey Janssen, and recently Dustin McGowan.  It has now resulted in a job with the Blue Jays.  Evans was hired earlier this week as an exclusive consultant to the Jays’ organization.  Under the agreement, Evans may still continue to development amateur players but can only work with professional players within the Jays’ organization.

Despite the stigma of using weighted balls and potential injuries they could cause a pitchers arm, Evans’ weighted-ball program has seen a large increase in popularity over the past year.  The workout routine involves the use of weighted balls to strengthen muscles around the shoulder and is now thought to actually decrease the risk of injury while also improving velocity. As part of the process, pitchers use various holds and also go through their throwing motion without releasing the ball.  The idea for the program originally came from a study involving tennis players. Those athletes rarely sustain shoulder injuries despite going through a similar motion during their serves as a pitcher.  Evidence suggested that a reason for the lack of injuries among tennis players was that they did not release the racket during their serve. That spurred the use of a weighted ball that would not be released during a pitcher’s motion.

Delabar brought a lot of attention to the program two years ago when he credited it with helping him return from a fractured right elbow. Toronto’s right-handed reliever was out of the game and working as a substitute teacher when he began using the program with student athletes he was helping coach.  The results that followed speak for themselves.  During his first stint in baseball, Delabar was throwing 89-92 mph, but now he was consistently hitting 94-97.  Delabar has turned into one of the most reliable Jays out of the ‘pen as evidenced by his 1.85 ERA in 34 innings this season.  Brett Cecil, almost out of the majors at the end of last season, used the program and has noticed a dramatic increase in velocity (was 85-88 mph, now 91-94 mph) and sits with a 1.53 ERA in 35.1 innings pitched.

Evans has tailored his program over the years to each athlete’s individual needs.  As well as the offseason workout program, there is another that can be used during in season that serves as more of a method for maintenance and recovery.

Janssen, for example, is using a modified version of the routine that is not quite as intense as some of his counterparts’.  That is mainly because Janssen did not start the program until the start of the season after offseason shoulder surgery. Janssen said the work would continue but that the intensity would really pick end when the year comes to an end.

Whether this sort of throwing program turns out to be a fad or something that becomes the standard around baseball, the Jays are smart by locking Evans down.  I imagine he’ll work with pitchers at all levels of the organization to help increase shoulder strength and limit injuries.

@IHRTBJs

 

Nolan to make debut tonight, Oliver hits DL, Happ DL stint extended

I love watching pitchers for the first time.  Therefore, I love when a young kid makes his major league debut.  We are fortunate enough to see it twice this series, – last night with Kevin Gausman of the Orioles and tonight with lefty Sean Nolin.

MLB.com ranks Nolin as the Blue Jays number 8 top prospect.  After being drafted in the 6th round of the 2010 class, Nolin has excelled the past couple years in the minors.  Making the leap from short season A-ball, to rookie ball, to low-A ball, to high-A ball, and finally double-A this year.  Overall in the minors, Nolin sports a 16 – 6 record, a 2.92 ERA with 263 strikeouts in 246.1 innings.  In three starts in double-A this year, he is 2-0 with a sparkling 1.17 ERA while adding 16 K’s in 15.1 innings.  It will be fun to see how he reacts to the big stage.  If he can manage his emotions, he might just be able to steal us a game since there will be little to no scouting report or video on him for the Orioles players to prepare.  First time through the line up, it’s important to note if he is throwing strikes and getting ahead.  Too often excitement gets the best of young pitchers or they feel they need to be “too perfect” with their pitches, which leads to walks and hitters counts.  If he can settle in the first time through, it will be equally interesting to see how he pitching the second and third time through the Orioles line up.  Once MLB players see what a pitcher has, they are very quick to make adjustments.

To make room on the 40-man roster for Nolin, J.A Happ has been transferred to the 60-day DL.  Happ is able to play catch and cleared from to play from a perspective of his head injury when he was hit by a vicious comebacker square in the ear.  His right knee sprain, however, from when he fell after being struck by the ball in the head has not healed well.  Doctors do not want him throwing off a mound yet without a brace, which has been ordered and is on route.  This means Happ won’t be back until early July at the earliest.  I’m guessing shortly after the allstar break if all goes well during his rehab.

To make room on the 25-man roster, Darren Oliver has been placed on the 15-day DL.  The move is retroactive to May 19th meaning Oliver (he last pitched on the 18th) meaning Oliver could come back on June 3rd if healthy.  The 42-year-old lefty has been plagued by a sore pitching shoulder and has been held out of games recently.  The soreness has persisted so the Jays have decided to give him a breather.  Oliver has again pitched well boasting a 3.17 ERA in 17 appearances this season.  If we are going to make a serious run, we’ll want him healthy and pitching some late innings for us.  Look for Steve Delabar and Brett Cecil to split the 8th inning work until Oliver can come back.

@IHRTBJs

People Questioning John Gibbons Moves – April 16, 2013

There is still a bit of a buzz around Blue Jays nation following a move made by manager John Gibbons on April 16th.  Gibbons brought Rajai Davis off the bench to pinch hit for Colby Rasmus – and three days later everyone is still asking “what if”…

Rasmus had been 2-2 with a homer, but was about to face a lefty.  He hasn’t had many at bats vs. lefties this season, but is just 2-10 (.200 avg) with 7 K’s.  Yikes.  Davis, on the other hand, is 5-12 vs. lefties (.417 avg) and only hitting .200 vs. righties.  Seems like a natural move to make in a tie game, right?

But Rasmus has unbelievable power and it’s hard to take a homerun guy – who is the winning run – out of a game.  Also, Rasmus is by far the best defensive CF on the team.  And when Emilio Bonifacio took a bad route to a ball in CF moments later, the media and fans jumped all over Gibbons.

But here’s the more puzzling move (or non-move)…..

Why did Gibbons not bring in Casey Janssen to pitch the 9th in a tie game at home?  When at home you won’t get a save situation in extras, so you might as well throw your best reliever at the opposition in the 9th – your closer – and hope to score in the bottom of the 10th.  Gibbons is starting to make a habit of throwing one-inning guys multiple innings.  It worked when Aaron Loup pitched 3 inning of 9 up, 9 down ball.  It obviously did not work when Steve Delabar pitched (or tried to pitch) 2 innings on April 16th.  I didn’t mind stretching out Loup as much because we had a 4 run lead.  But in a tie….use one-inning guys for one-inning and play for the home half.

Davis or Rasmus late in a tie game vs. a lefty – that move gets questioned either way and frankly I have no problem with either.  If Davis had of got on a stole a base or two, nobody would be saying anything about the swap.  It’s just a move that backfired and those will happen over 162 games to any manager.  It’s the bullpen use that I’m questioning here, which is thought to be a strength of Gibbons.

Overall, I think Gibbons has done a good job managing the early overused bullpen.  But let’s all keep our eyes on whether he starts using our one-inning guys for one inning.

IHRTBJs

 

Lawrie Returns; Santos Hit DL

Brett Lawrie has returned to the Blue Jays lineup and from everything I’ve heard (I’m overseas on business and haven’t been able to watch the past few games), his defence has been a major improvement on what the Jays were getting from Maicer Izturis and Mark DeRosa at the hot corner (although I though DeRosa didn’t look that bad – Lawrie is definitely better, but Rosey held his own).

But Lawrie is 0-7 with 4 K’s since returning to the big club.  Was he rushed back?  Probably.  According to earlier reports from the Jays, Lawrie wasn’t supposed to be back until this weekend’s series vs. the Yankees.  But with Jose Reyes going down to a severe ankle injury that will most likely keep him sidelined until the allstar break, the Jays wanted to bring up some defence and add Lawrie’s bat to the lineup.  Even if he was rushed and his timing is a bit off, I think it’s the right move.  He’ll be just fine.

However, in the same day Jays fans received the good news of the Lawrie activation, they also learned that hard-throwing righty Sergio Santos has hit the DL.  Santos had looked good so far this season during his brief sample size of appearances.  Despite giving up a homer and being tagged with a loss in one of his outings, overall he had pitch 4.1 innings, had 6 K’s, only 1 BB and held opponents to a .188 batting clip while boasting a 0.92 WHIP.  With those sorts of numbers and the inconsistency of Steve Delabar to start the season, losing Santos could hurt the backend of the bullpen.

Santos has been shutdown for extra rest already twice this year (once during spring training and once in Detroit) for experiencing a sore triceps muscle.  It appears the Jays have taken the cautious approach, as they should early in a season, since Santos had a MRI that showed no damage.  He won’t throw for a week and will be re-evaluated.

I don’t know about the rest of the Jays fans, but I’m getting tired of the organization telling us these injuries “are nothing” having players go “day-to-day” only to see them miss fairly considerable time from what we were told during first assessment.

So….Lawrie back, Santos out.  Probably more good news than bad, but still not great to hear.

@IHRTBJs

Janssen Thinks Opening Day is Realistic

Casey Janssen has gone on the record and said he thinks there is a realistic chance he’ll be ready for opening day and will head north with the club for the April 2nd match up vs. the Indians.  However, when you read between the lines, you’ll pick up some of the other items constantly being talked about at Jays camp.

It’s no secret that Alex Anthopoulos envisioned Sergio Santos would be the team’s closer after acquiring him from the White Sox following the 2011 season.  Santos, however, is dealing with his own arm issues and is trying to get back to his old form following shoulder surgery as well.  With both Janssen and Santos entering the season as question marks, you wonder why we don’t hear more about Steve Delabar as an alternative after his breakout last year – .193 opponents batting average, 1.09 WHIP, and 92 K’s in 66 innings.

I still think Janssen has to be given the job to lose, but if he can’t start the year and someone like Delabar does the job perfectly, does Janssen get bumped when he returns?

Janssen remains optimistic about being ready for Opening Day, but his status for that game versus Cleveland on April 2 still remains very much in doubt. He’ll need to advance through live batting practice, a Minor League game and, presumably, at least a few outings in Spring Training.  When you hear him say things like “April 2nd…is not an end date anymore.”, it doesn’t give you a whole lot of confidence that he, himself, feels like he’ll be ready.

Meanwhile, Santos has been out of action since experiencing discomfort following an appearance on March 3rd.  The injury appears minor but considering how last season went for Santos, there was initial cause for concern.  Santos has thrown a bullpen session after a couple days off and we’ll have to wait to see when he returns to an in-game appearance.

While the speculation surrounding both Janssen and Santos swirls, this is one fan who is happy Anthopoulos traded Eric Thames to Seattle last year for Delabar.

IHRTBJs

Re-thinking the Bullpen

After Alex Anthopoulos and Darren Oliver met with the media last evening via conference call, we got a peak into what Anthopoulos is thinking regarding the bullpen.  He said that Casey Janssen, Darren Oliver, Sergio Santos, and Esmil Rogers were locks.  He stressed Rogers was a lock because he is out of options and would likely be claimed off waivers if sent to the minors.

So who else is out of options in the bullpen?  Brett Cecil and Jeremy Jeffress, that’s who.

Anthopoulos also said he likes Brad Lincoln as both a starter or a reliever and if Lincoln (who has options) doesn’t make the MLB club and starts the year in triple-A, it will be as a starter.  He was quick to point out that J.A. Happ and Aaron Loup also have options remaining.

If you look at the logic of keeping guys on the MLB squad as to not expose them to waivers then the current bullpen would shake down like this:

Middle relief – Cecil (L), Jeffress (R), Rogers (R), Delabar (R) – he also has options but is the best reliever of those who has them,

Set up – Oliver (L), Santos (R)

Closer – janssen (R)

That means the Jays would head into the season without the traditional long reliever/swingman who is often called upon should a start get shelled or injured early in a game.  But with the rotation of R.A. Dickey, Josh Johnson, Mark Buehrle, Brandon Morrow, and Ricky Romero, perhaps the Jays don’t think they’ll get shelled often and carrying a long man is a waste of a bullpen body.  If a starter goes down early with injury, each reliever could plug an inning until the next time around in the rotation when someone is called up from triple-A to start.

That puts J.A. Happ starting the year in triple-A as the Jays “6th” starter.  Brad Lincoln likely falls right behind him in triple-A as the “7th” starter by the way Anthopoulos was talking.  Lincoln would likely be called up if a right handed arm was needed in the ‘pen even if he is starting in triple-A.  My only comment to this is that the Jays gave up a lot of young prospects to get Happ and rent Brandon Lyon for half a season, so Happ was the key guy they wanted.  And for Lincoln we surrendered Travis Snider.  Is our team really that deep that these guys can’t crack the roster?

Any way you frame it, the Jays certainly have depth…

IHRTBJs