Who: Kelly Johnson | No. 2. | 2B (and possibly LF, but don’t mention that to him) | 6’1, 195 lbs.
Tao-Approved Nicknames: KJ. It’s not original, but it works well in Twitter. And there’s something about Johnson’s time in Phoenix that makes make sense.
History: Six MLB seasons and 791 games with Atlanta, Arizona and Toronto.
Contract: Signed one-year, $6.75 million deal this off-season.
Career Stats: .260/.343/.441/.784 in 3,186 plate appearances.
2011 Stats: .222/.304/.413/.717 | 21 home runs | 16 stolen bases in 147 games between Arizona and Toronto. Posted a .364 OBP in 33 games after the trade.
Nerd Stats: From 2007 through last season, Johnson trails only only Chase Utley, Dustin Pedroia, Rickie Weeks and Dan Uggla in Win Expectancy Added (WPA) among Major League second basemen (5.38).
Somewhat Surprising Stat: Struck out 26.6 per cent of the time in 2011, the highest rate of his career and the highest rate among qualified second basemen in the big leagues last year.
Aaron Who? In Johnson’s first 33 games with the Jays he posted a .781 OPS. In Aaron Hill’s final 33 games as a Jay, he posted a .479 OPS.
Looking Back: The Blue Jays finally got their man when they landed Kelly Johnson after the non-waiver trade deadline, in exchange for fan favourite John McDonald and Aaron Hill. And it really says something about the decline of Hill that the one-time all star and Silver Slugger winner could leave alongside a bench player, and be the player whose departure the fans mourn the least.
The Jays pursuit of KJ goes back to the 2010 off-season when they attempted to lure him to Toronto, with the condition that he would play left field (Because apparently, you can never have too many options in left field).
Johnson rebuffed them at the time, choosing to continue to play second base in the desert of Arizona, in spite of the previous dubious reviews of his glove work.
His reputation as a fielder was established early in his career with Atlanta, where he posted negative Ultimate Zone Rating (UZR) numbers in each of his three seasons with the Braves. But since leaving the land of Tyler Perry and peaches, he has put up successive seasons on the positive side of that ledger (7.1 and 2.5 in 2010 and 2011 respectively.)
Upon signing him to a one-year deal this year, Jays GM Alex Anthopoulos again mused about the idea of Johnson playing elsewhere (nowhere in particular…maybe someplace that rhymes with “deft yield,”) a notion at which Johnson once again scoffed.
Looking Forward: In spite of being a middle-of-the-diamond player, it’s Johnson’s bat that seems to preoccupy most Jays fans, and his maddening inconsistency leaves one to scratch their head when pondering what we might see from him next year. Can he replicate his 2010 season with the Diamondbacks, in which he walloped 26 dingers and posted a stellar .865 OPS?
Or can we expect a sub-.700 OPS, such as the one he posted in an injury-shortened 2009 (.692) or his final days in Phoenix (.699)?
It’s a fool’s errand to look at the 33-game sample after the trade in an attempt to find something upon which we can hitch our hopes. But if you’ll indulge us as we rattle the bells on our jester’s hat, we note that Johnson’s strikeout rate dropped 3.9 per cent and his walk rate went up by 3 per cent, bringing those numbers into the same territory as his good years.
2012 Expectations: With John Farrell already angling to place Johnson in the second spot in the order, part of the Blue Jays’ early season offensive success will depend on him getting on base ahead of José Bautista. If Johnson can stop channeling his inner Mark Reynolds and demonstrate a patient approach, he could be a key piece of a successful season.
But as we attempted to game our way through a number of lineup scenarios this off-season, we kept finding ways to push Johnson to the bottom of the order. It’s not inconceivable to us that he might end up hitting ninth by the time they crack open the lid.