TORONTO – More than anything, this is a time for some honest introspection for the Toronto Blue Jays. The eighth playoff appearance in franchise history was a deserved reward for an on-the-rise group in this pandemic season in which they called Buffalo’s Sahlen Field home, even if it ended in a convincing two-game sweep for the Tampa Bay Rays.
They cleverly gamed the shortened schedule by carrying up to 16 pitchers on the expanded 28-man rosters, allowing them to cover innings in optimal conditions as often as possible, and combined with some offensive gains and a remarkable resilience, they capitalized on a one-time only 16-team post-season format.
Good fun while it lasted.
Now, though, the Blue Jays have to be real about how far they’ve really advanced the program this summer. The series loss to the American League East champion Rays, capped by Wednesday’s 8-2 thumping in which ace Hyun-Jin Ryu didn’t survive the second, underlined how wide the gap is between the two clubs.
There’s much work to be done.
“They believe they can win,” manager Charlie Montoyo said in rhyming off the fundamental growth points for his club. “They believe they can get better. They know in our division they have to play clean games and all those tough games that we lost, they got that, you don’t teach that. We’ve got that going for us.
“Nobody expected us to be here. I’m so proud of these guys, our whole group, and like I said in the beginning, the guys that don’t complain will have a good chance to make it to the playoffs and we never complained, not having a home and going through all the stuff they went through.”
The two lineups match up relatively well (Dante Bichette’s influence on the approach of Blue Jays’ hitters at the plate was instrumental), but the Rays rotation of Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, who struck out eight over six innings of two-run ball in Game 2, Charlie Morton and Ryan Yarbrough, along with an absurdly deep pool of power and depth arms, is a major competitive advantage.
The Blue Jays got better in that regard, but only Ryu is a front-of-the-rotation arm and they have to figure out if the fluctuation in his velocity this season was a byproduct of the abnormal circumstances, or something more significant. Against the Rays, his four-seamer averaged out at 88.3 m.p.h., down 2.1 m.p.h. from his seven-inning gem last week in the post-season clincher versus the New York Yankees despite an extra day of rest.
His sinker and cutter were each down about one m.p.h., although Ryu felt “the mistakes (in location) actually hurt me more than the velo itself.”
As for the inconsistency of his stuff, if not results, Ryu, speaking through interpreter Bryan Lee, said, “I was able to get over those little humps. Like I always say, I’m not a guy who’s going to overpower hitters, so maintaining a good feel for my pitches is more important. In some games I just wasn’t able to during the regular season, but I was able to get over the little humps and ended the regular season on a good note.”
Two Bo Bichette errors certainly didn’t help his cause – the second leading to the Hunter Renfroe grand slam that opened up a 7-0 edge and ended Ryu’s evening – but the Rays were all over him before that point, too, controlling the series from start to finish.
The bar is clear.
“I don’t see a big gap,” said Bichette. “We believe we’re just as talented, but they do everything really, really well. They don’t make mistakes, they don’t beat themselves. My error in the second inning put us behind the 8-ball pretty early, pretty big. That’s something they don’t do and they capitalized on it. That’s a little thing I need to tighten up.”
Only Ryu and Tanner Roark are sure to return from a rotation that also finished with pending free agents Matt Shoemaker, Taijuan Walker and Robbie Ray, plus Chase Anderson, who has a $9.5 million club option for 2021. Nate Pearson tantalized once again, but the two dominant frames he threw Wednesday brought him to 20 for the season, and if the world is more normal and there’s a 162-game season next year, it’s hard to envision him suddenly making 30 starts.
Same goes for the starters-turned-relievers who helped underpin the club’s success – Thomas Hatch, Ryan Borucki, Anthony Kay and Julian Merryweather, primarily. If they move into the Blue Jays rotation, or return to the minors to get stretched out, the Blue Jays will have to rebuild a bullpen that won’t return Ken Giles, with Anthony Bass also headed to free agency.
More games, a return to 26-man rosters, still unknowable damage to the development of underlying prospects and a shrunken playoff field all mean the Blue Jays have a significant amount of work to do to field a legitimately competitive staff next year.
“All over,” catcher Danny Jansen, who hit a pair of home runs in Game 2, said of where the roster improved this season. “Speaking for the hitters, having the year of experience from last year, having the information that you digest at the plate, it’s a bit of a learning process, I think everybody has done a good job of getting acclimated. I think our bullpen was dominant all year with all the close games we had, and our starting rotation kept us in baseball games, too, allowing our offence to be there all the time. That goes a long way.”
Further, a decision on whether to continue with the seemingly rigid scripting of games that at minimum caused friction with the club’s starters this season, or to give the dugout more leash to run games, must be made.
Lost in the controversy over the club’s decision to tandem Shoemaker and Ray in Game 1 and push Ryu to Game 2 is that every team in the majors is being run in similar fashion. Whether it’s Dave Roberts with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Aaron Boone with the Yankees or any other club in the post-season, front offices are increasingly helping drive in-game decisions.
If you think there’s still a manager operating with feel on the fly in the dugout, siloed from the analytics department and the general manager, you’re not paying attention to the wider trends in the industry.
With advanced data the game’s primary currency, the teams that will be most successful are the ones best capable of, in the words of GM Ross Atkins, “demonstrating either to the decision-maker or to the person executing it why” a certain approach makes sense.
“It’s really more of the interpretation, the synthesizing of it and then the application, meaning how do we get buy-in,” Atkins continued. “That is where we spend a lot of time and energy and effort and helping that process.”
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There can be a gap bringing that to the players. While the Rays routinely buck convention with eyebrow-raising methodology – how would Blue Jays fans have reacted if Montoyo lifted Snell in the sixth inning of Game 1 at 82 pitches despite allowing only one hit? – there’s conviction in what they do.
Will the Blue Jays’ results be enough to unify the organization around some of the more creative approaches employed in 2020?
“You mentioned the word conviction – that’s the biggest thing,” said veteran infielder Joe Panik, another pending free agent. “Older players will generally be a little more stubborn to some of the new ideas. The younger guys have been brought up through the minor-leagues with the new ideas.
“But conviction, that is probably the biggest thing because with anything you do, you have to have conviction. You have to truly believe, you have to have trust in what the front office is saying, and in basically the way they view the game. You have to have that trust so when you go out there in that situation, you’ll be like, ‘Alright, this is the best possible situation for myself that they’re putting me in.’ If you don’t have that conviction, you’re not going to perform.”
By and large, the Blue Jays did perform this season. The pandemic and the limitations on daily life it created opened a pathway to the playoffs that otherwise would not have existed. To their credit, they took advantage of it and should relish the achievement. But as they begin making sense of this season like no other, they must make sure 2020 becomes the beginning to a championship end, not a curious little detour they happened into due to circumstance.
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