Jays 1, Rangers 4: Party-Poopers

Saturday, July 30 2005 @ 01:00 AM EDT

Contributed by: Magpie

It was Korean Night at the Rogers Centre, and Chan Ho Park was even scheduled to pitch. So what does Texas do? They trade him to San Diego an hour before the game starts.

Then they send John "Way-Back" Wasdin to the mound, and Wasdin and Doug Brocail completely shut down the Toronto offense. The hitters, one assumes, must have been really, really tired, although Buck Showalter had no sympathy whatsoever:

We got to our hotel room at 4 a.m. two days in a row. I don't want to hear about 18 innings when they are at home and get to sleep in their own bed.

The Rangers expect Phil Nevin to be on hand in time for Dustin McGowan's major league debut this afternoon. And speaking of rookies, as promised (and because I have no better ideas), here is part two of my romp down memory lane - this time, we'll look at the performance of the Jays' rookie hitters over the years.

It has often been a challenge determining which is the appropriate season to consider. Here is the official definition:

A player shall be considered a rookie, unless during a previous season or seasons, he has a) exceeded 130 at bats or 50 innings pitched in the major leagues, or b) accumulated more than 45 days on the active roster of a major league club or clubs during the period of a 25 man limit...

So, for example, Cecil Fielder had a nice cup of coffee in 1985, but still qualified as a rookie in 1986. He used up his eligibility that year, even if he was mostly sitting on the bench. And Vernon Wells doesn't have a rookie season - most of his major league service in 1999 and 2001 was as a September call-up, but he accumulated more than 130 at bats and no longer qualified as a rookie anymore by 2002. Ernie Whitt and Garth Iorg don't really have rookie years either - Whitt last qualifies in 1977, Iorg in 1978.

So how do the new boys stack up? Pretty well. At this pace, I think both will put together seasons that will stand among the top ten ever by a Blue Jays rookie. That list, in my mind, looks like this:

1. Eric Hinske, 2002 - He was the AL rookie of the year, and it's pretty clearly the best season ever by a Blue Jays rookie. Hinske was both productive and in the lineup every day, all year long. Established almost every single season record for a Jays rookie that was available.

2. Josh Phelps, 2002 - It was only half a season, but he was so bloody good in those 74 games that he vaults past everyone else on the list. Josh, Josh, Josh. What happened?

3. Fred McGriff, 1987 - McGriff was with the team all year, but played in a strict platoon arrangement at DH - his partner was Cecil Fielder. McGriff had just 26 at bats against LH pitchers in 1987. He beat the crap out of RH pitching (.257, .388, .520) though.

4. Shawn Green, 1995 - By the time Green arrived, platooning the rookies was a well-established Jays tradition. Green got off to a very slow start, a pattern he would repeat for the next two years, before playing like the star he would become in the second half. As a rookie, he hadn't quite learned how to turn all those doubles into home runs, and he was a pretty bad outfielder. But you could already see what he could become.

5. John Olerud, 1990 - Quiet John spent his first season used mostly as the DH against RH batters. This is a very impressive year for a 21 year old out of college. He slumped in August, and didn't play much in September because George Bell's injury problems forced him to take over at DH. After the season, the McGriff trade opened up first base for him.

6. Jesse Barfield, 1982 - Jesse spent three years as a platoon outfielder, playing mostly against LH pitching, hitting home runs, striking out a million times, and throwing out baserunners at will.

7. Junior Felix, 1989 - Junior was supposed to be 21 years old as well, not that anyone believes it. He hit the very first pitch he saw over the fence, and gave the Jays an exciting, exasperating year. He had amazing tools, and sometimes he put them to good use. Utterly uncoachable.

8. Reed Johnson, 2003 - In terms of production as a player, Sparky is a little like Junior Felix. Which is strange in some ways - Johnson's skills aren't nearly as impressive - he's not nearly as fast, his arm isn't as strong, he doesn't have as much pop in his bat. But his hustle and work ethic more than makes up for it.

9. Alfredo Griffin, 1979 - Alfredo shared the rookie-of-the-year award for this season, when he set career highs in BAVG (.287) and walks (40). As always, he flashed the leather at short, made lots of errors, and ran the bases like a maniac.

10. Damaso Garcia, 1980 - Damo hadn't learned how to steal bases yet, and he never would learn how to draw a walk. But he turned the DP as well as anyone, and hit lots of singles and doubles.

The candidates:


Pos Player              GPL  AB   R  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  SO  BAV  OBP  SLG SB CS  

77 Doug Ault            129 445  44 109 22  3 11  64  39  68 .245 .310 .382  4  4  
77 Bob Bailor           122 496  62 154 21  5  5  32  17  26 .310 .335 .403 15  6   
77 Al Woods             122 440  58 125 17  4  6  35  36  38 .284 .336 .382  8  7  
78 Rick Bosetti         136 568  61 147 25  5  5  42  30  65 .259 .299 .347  6 10   
79 Alfredo Griffin      153 624  81 179 22 10  2  31  40  59 .287 .333 .364 21 16  
79 Danny Ainge           87 308  26  73  7  1  2  19  12  58 .237 .269 .286  1  0  
80 Damaso Garcia        140 543  50 151 30  7  4  46  12  55 .278 .296 .381 13 13  
80 Lloyd Moseby         114 389  44  89 24  1  9  46  25  85 .229 .281 .365  4  6  
81 George Bell           60 163  19  38  2  1  5  12   5  27 .233 .256 .350  3  2   
81 Willie Upshaw         61 111  15  19  3  1  4  10  11  16 .171 .252 .324  2  1   
82 Jesse Barfield       139 394  54  97 13  2 18  58  42  79 .246 .323 .426  1  4  
84 Tony Fernandez        88 233  29  63  5  3  3  19  17  15 .270 .317 .356  5  7   
85 Manuel Lee            64  40   9   8  0  0  0   0   2   9 .200 .238 .200  1  4  
85 Lou Thornton          56  72  18  17  1  1  1   8   2  24 .236 .267 .319  1  0   
86 Cecil Fielder         34  83   7  13  2  0  4  13   6  27 .157 .222 .325  0  0   
86 Kelly Gruber          87 143  20  28  4  1  5  15   5  27 .196 .220 .343  2  5   
87 Fred McGriff         107 295  58  73 16  0 20  43  60 104 .247 .376 .505  3  2   
87 Nelson Liriano        37 158  29  38  6  2  2  10  16  22 .241 .310 .342 13  2   
88 Pat Borders           56 154  15  42  6  3  5  21   3  24 .273 .285 .448  0  0   
88 Sil Campusano         73 142  14  31 10  2  2  12   9  33 .218 .282 .359  0  0   
89 Junior Felix         110 415  62 107 14  8  9  46  33 101 .258 .315 .395 18 12   
90 John Olerud          111 358  43  95 15  1 14  48  57  75 .265 .364 .430  0  2   
90 Glenallen Hill        84 260  47  60 11  3 12  32  18  62 .231 .281 .435  8  3   
90 Greg Myers            87 250  33  59  7  1  5  22  22  33 .236 .293 .332  0  1  
90 Mark Whiten           33  88  12  24  1  1  2   7   7  14 .273 .323 .375  2  0   
91 Ed Sprague            61 160  17  44  7  0  4  20  19  43 .275 .361 .394  0  3   
92 Derek Bell            61 161  23  39  6  3  2  15  15  34 .242 .324 .354  7  2   
92 Jeff Kent             65 192  36  46 13  1  8  35  20  47 .240 .324 .443  2  1   
93 Randy Knorr           39 101  11  25  3  2  4  20   9  29 .248 .309 .436  0  0   
94 Carlos Delgado        43 130  17  28  2  0  9  24  25  46 .215 .352 .438  1  1   
95 Alex Gonzalez        111 367  51  89 19  4 10  42  44 114 .243 .322 .398  4  4   
95 Shawn Green          121 379  52 109 31  4 15  54  20  68 .288 .326 .509  1  2   
95 Sandy Martinez        62 191  12  46 12  0  2  25   7  45 .241 .270 .335  0  0   
95 Domingo Cedeno        51 161  18  38  6  1  4  14  10  35 .236 .289 .360  0  1   
95 Tomas Perez           41  98  12  24  3  1  1   8   7  18 .245 .292 .327  0  1   
96 Robert Perez          86 202  30  66 10  0  2  21   8  17 .327 .354 .406  3  0   
97 Jose Cruz             55 212  31  49  7  0 14  34  28  72 .231 .316 .462  6  2   
97 Shannon Stewart       44 168  25  48 13  7  0  22  19  24 .286 .368 .446 10  3   
98 Felipe Crespo         66 130  11  34  8  1  1  15  15  27 .262 .342 .362  4  3   
00 Chris Woodward        37 104  16  19  7  0  3  14  10  28 .183 .254 .337  1  0   
01 Felipe Lopez          49 177  21  46  5  4  5  23  12  39 .260 .304 .418  4  3   
01 Vernon Wells          30  96  14  30  8  0  1   6   5  15 .312 .350 .427  5  0   
01 Cesar Izturis         46 134  19  36  6  2  2   9   2  15 .269 .279 .388  8  1   
02 Ken Huckaby           88 273  29  67  6  1  3  22   9  44 .245 .270 .308  0  0  
02 Eric Hinske          151 566  99 158 38  2 24  84  77 138 .279 .365 .481 13  1  
02 Josh Phelps           74 265  41  82 20  1 15  58  19  82 .309 .362 .562  0  0   
02 Orlando Hudson        54 192  20  53 10  5  4  23  11  27 .276 .319 .443  0  1   
03 Reed Johnson         114 412  79 121 21  2 10  52  20  67 .294 .353 .427  5  3  
04 Alexis Rios          111 426  55 122 24  7  1  28  31  84 .286 .338 .383 15  3  
04 Kevin Cash            60 181  18  35  9  0  4  21  10  59 .193 .249 .309  0  0   

05 Aaron Hill            58 216  29  64 16  3  2  29  18  21 .296 .357 .426  1  0
05 Russ Adams            82 267  41  70 14  4  6  44  28  34 .262 .326 .412  5  1

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