Posts Tagged 'Blue Jays May 2012'

Can The Blue Jays Win The AL East?

Is the AL East suddenly winnable?

If there has been a common refrain over the past decade (or longer) out of Blue Jays nation it would have to be one word – unfair.  That’s how being a member of the AL East has felt seemingly forever given the presence of the two headed financial powerhouses in New York and Boston.

It was an honest beef with the clout those two teams had, often times the salaries from only their infields alone surpassing most other teams entire payroll.  Whatever problem either of these teams would face they could always throw the mighty dollar at it and seemingly make it disappear.

To make matters worse over the past five years there has been another franchise starting to take flight on a bare bones payroll structure.  It would be hard to argue the Tampa Bay Rays haven’t been the most well run franchise in baseball over a five or six year period.

Endless supply of quality starting pitchers, athletically gifted position players at a few key positions (all at either affordable or bargain bottom prices) and a penchant for turning reclamation projects into superstars (Ben Zobrist anyone?).

The Toronto Blue Jays were always the also-rans to the ‘big two’ of Boston and New York, good for a noble third place effort year in and year out.  Well even that changed recently with the emergence of the Rays.

However the year is now 2012 and the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox are suddenly looking well, rather ordinary and dare I say it, beatable.  Of the two the Yankees look more likely to shake off a relatively slow start as any time you can roll out a line-up that deep you are never out of a game.

But the reality is no team is impervious to the aging curve and it looks like both the Sox and Yanks have gotten a bit long in the tooth.  Whether it is injury (Youkilis, Rivera) or just underperformance (Beckett, Hughes) the two kingpins look vulnerable.

Let’s look at the standings as of May 14, 2012.

AL East W-L GB    RF   RA   Home Away Vs East P10 Pythag W-L
Baltimore 22-13 4.7 4.2 11-8 11-5 12-6 6-4 19-16
Tampa Bay 21-14 1.0 4.5 4.3 13-3 8-11 8-8 4-6 18-17
New York 19-15 4.0 4.9 4.4 11-8 8-7 8-6 6-4 19-15
Toronto 19-16 5.5 4.7 4.0 8-7 11-9 4-8 5-5 20-15
Boston 15-19 6.5 5.5 5.5 7-11 8-8 4-8 5-5 17-17

 Based strictly on runs for/runs against (Pythag. theorem) the Toronto Blue Jays are actually the top team in the American League east.  Both the Orioles and Rays have benefited from a bit of fortune in terms of their overall win/loss records.

The Blue Jays haven’t done themselves any favours in terms of head-to-head AL East matchups thus far and that has to be something they improve upon immediately.  Given the slow offensive starts for Jose Bautista, Adam Lind and Yunel Escobar and the shaky ninth inning duo of Sergio Santos and Francisco Cordero (Jays have seven blown saves thus far) the team has performed admirably.

The New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox have serious rotation question marks and those aren’t going away this season.  The Baltimore Orioles are definitely a team on the rise but I don’t think they can match the Toronto Blue Jays bat for bat or arm for arm. 

Finally that leaves the Tampa Bay Rays who are looking like the class of the division.  They can send a stud to the mound at all five spots in the rotation and they haven’t missed a beat since losing Evan Longoria.  If they can get timely hits they are built to win this season and I feel they are the team to beat right now in the East.

But don’t count out the Blue Jays if the bats start to match the outright amazing performance of the pitching staff.  It still feels like this team hasn’t played that great yet either and definitely not their best. 

This could be an interesting season.

Blue Jays Series Recap – Split With the Twins

 A tight four game series split versus the Minnesota Twins saw the final three games decided by one run each.  The Blue Jays had a good chance to take three of four but couldn’t get the timely hit needed to pull off a late inning comeback Friday or Sunday.

Some definite positives with Jose Bautista showing some signs of life as he went yard three times in the series.  Henderson Alvarez and Drew Hutchison pitched very well and the bullpen was pretty solid overall. 

Let’s recap the series: (includes link to boxscore)

Game 1 – Blue Jays 6, Twins 2 – Henderson Alvarez impresses again.

Game 2 – Twins 7, Blue Jays 6 – Jose Bautista goes yard twice in a losing effort.

Game 3 – Blue Jays 2, Twins 1 – Jose Bautista with the go-ahead homerun, his third in two games.

Game 4 – Twins 4, Blue Jays 3 – Ricky Romero struggled with command, walking 5 and striking out none.

Up next: A tough two game series starts versus the AL East leading Tampa Bay Rays.  This series is followed by a quick midweek two game set versus the New York Yankees prior to inter-league play.

 

Blue Jays Series Recap – Splitting With The Angels

The Toronto Blue Jays had a chance to take three of four but had to settle for the split in a four game series versus the Los Angeles Angels.  They won on aggregate runs (14-10) as they started the series with back-to-back complete game shutouts (Brandon Morrow and Henderson Alvarez).

Albert Pujols broke a ridiculously long homerun drought with his first of the season in the fourth game of the series.  Drew Hutchison continues to give up hits and will be a pitcher who relies on getting quality defense at the major league level for any sustained success.

Eric Thames had a chance to make a big catch in left field during yesterday’s fourth game of the series but failed to bring it in, the play ended up being big as the Angels went on to score a couple runs.

Here are the game boxscores, click the score for more details:

Game 1 – Blue Jays 5, Angels 0 – Brandon Morrow 3-hits Angels for CG SHO.

Game 2 – Blue Jays 4, Angels 0 - Henderson Alvarez CG SHO.

Game 3 – Angels 6, Blue Jays 2 - CJ Wilson pitches Angels past Jays.

Game 4 – Angels 4, Blue Jays 3 - Albert Pujols hits first homerun of season.

Next up are the Oakland A’s (15-14, W2, 6-4 L10, 6-7 home), a two game set in Oakland.


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