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The farm went 2-2 and even went 25-25 in terms of runs on Monday night. The evening featured more of the same stuff we've come to expect from the farm: offense from Las Vegas and errors from Gustavo Pierre.


Las Vegas 10 at Iowa 5

I'm starting to think that Las Vegas' recaps could be mad libs. "Lots of great production from the 51s' bats on (day) night. (Player 1) set the table with three hits and two walks, and (Player 2) (2B, HR, BB) and (Player 3) (4 2Bs) provided the power. (Player 4) also had a good day, contributing three hits and a walk. All this led to (number > 8) runs, plenty to beat the (opposition)."

*day = Monday
Player 1 = Mike McCoy
Player 2 = Brett Lawrie
Player 3 = Adam Loewen
Player 4 = David Cooper
number = 10
opposition = Iowa Cubs

While the offense is freakishly consistent in terms of battering its opponents into submission, though, the pitching is more of a mixed bag, featuring prospects, minor-league vets and major league pitchers trying to rediscover their fastball, so the mad lib format won't work. It was Brett Cecil's turn on Monday night, and he had a solid game, allowing five runs over seven innings while striking out eight. Cecil allowed three home runs, which could be a bad sign, or could just be a fluke of PCL ballparks.

New Hampshire 3 at Portland 7

This is what you want to hear, so I'll just get right down to it: yes, Anthony Gose is still hot. The speedster singled, doubled, walked and reached on catcher's interference (and struck out) in five trips to the plate, though despite six doubles, his team could only bring him home once. This proved to be their undoing, as the team went 2-12 with RISP, leading them to score only three runs despite ten hits and a couple walks.

Gose, by the way, is now hitting .280/.366/.379 on the year, with 18 steals in 22 attempts. You would like a bit more power, especially considering his strikeout rate (35 in 43 games), but for a 20-year-old in AA who plays outstanding defense in center field, that is excellent. The OBP/speed package is exactly what one wants from a premier leadoff hitter.

And while Gose's stock is skyrocketing, Zach Stewart has gone in the opposite direction. He went just four innings in this game, allowing three times that many base-runners and surrendering all seven runs. Stewart sports a WHIP around 1.5 for the season and neither his strikeout rate nor ground-ball rate are particularly impressive.

Travis d'Arnaud also had a good day at the plate, singling and doubling.

Charlotte 6 at Dunedin 0

The D-Jays ran into a steamroller named The Combined Charlotte Stone Crabs Pitching Staff. Though none of the Crabs' pitchers lasted more than four innings, they only gave up three hits to Dunedin batters, while striking out fifteen. (They did, however, walk six men.) So, not much to speak of on the offensive side. Justin Jackson singled and walked, but he also struck out twice.

Chad Jenkins was pretty much the opposite of the Crabs' pitching; he actually pitched quite deep into the game (eight innings), but allowed a whole bunch of runs (six, to be precise, though only three were earned). Jenkins actually pitched quite well, allowing seven hits and no walks, and getting an amazing 18 ground ball outs to only four fly-outs. You have to imagine a major league defense would have served him a bit better.

Bowling Green 7 at Lansing 12

Whoa! That's a little more like it. Lansing perfectly balanced the evening for the affiliates - both in terms of wins (2-2) and runs (25-25) by out-scoring the Hot Rods by five. As with Vegas, many hitters are worthy of mention - Carlos Perez singled and scored thrice, Kevin Nolan reached four times, and Michael Crouse doubled, tripled and SFed, driving in four.

On the negative side... actually, on the so-ridiculous-it's-just-kinda-funny-at-this-point side, Gustavo Pierre made three more errors to bring his seasonal total - and may I remind you that it isn't yet June - to TWENTY-SEVEN. Oliver Dominguez and K.C. Hobson also committed errors, and as a result the pitching staff (Sean Nolin for five innings, Sam Strickland and Marcus Walden for two each) actually didn't allow a single earned run.

Three Stars!
3. Mike McCoy - 5 times on base
2. Chad Jenkins - 8 IP, 18 GB outs
1. Adam Loewen - four doubles
A Double-Double of Doubles | 47 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Dave Rutt - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 03:32 AM EDT (#235368) #
The Jays had an impressive showing in the Player of the Week awards, with Lawrie and Jackson taking home awards for their respective leagues and Joel Carreno winning Pitcher of the Week for the Eastern League.
Lugnut Fan - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 06:05 AM EDT (#235369) #
The Pierre errors are really staggering.  To put this in perspective, I was watching the Tampa Bay / Detroit game last night and they flashed a stat that the Rays have only committed 19 errors as a team so far this year.  WOW!  Maybe not a fair comparison, but I find it staggering non the less.
lexomatic - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 07:54 AM EDT (#235371) #
I'm sure a little of Pierre's erroritis is due to poorer quality fields... but only a little. Anyone actually see where the errors are coming from? Is he just makign mistakes? trying to do too much? Just curious.
Lugnut Fan - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 08:27 AM EDT (#235372) #
The fields in the MWL are actually pretty well maintained.  The bounces are pretty true.  A majority of his errors are of the throwing variety.
85bluejay - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:06 AM EDT (#235379) #

Ant particular reason that Travis Snider was pulled last night? He was HBP earlier in the game.

ayjackson - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:18 AM EDT (#235381) #

Suggestion for a poll question:  Who is our #2 prospect right now?

Assuming JPA and Drabek have graduated, is it Thames?  Stewart?  McGuire?  D'Arnaud?  Gose?  Alvarez?  Sanchez?  McDade?

Right now I'd go with D'Arnaud.

ayjackson - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:21 AM EDT (#235382) #
Lawrie tweeted that Snider had a sore "hoof".
PeterG - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:26 AM EDT (#235383) #
Gose - I would even consider him for #1
Moe - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:35 AM EDT (#235385) #
#2 Prospect:
None of the pitchers from last draft, too little track record.  In general, I have a hard time putting a a player in A in the top 3 unless they are killing the opposition.

Stewart has been trending down, so probably Gose based on upside and better play recently.  Hechavarria and the catching prospects could make a run for the top 2/3 if they have  strong 2nd half.



gcopeland19 - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 12:08 PM EDT (#235388) #
Agree with Gose for #2... nobody can take #1 spot from Lawrie though. (Unless of course he gets called up soon...fingers crossed)
Kelekin - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 12:19 PM EDT (#235389) #
Interesting splits for Crouse, a righty:

.195/.205/.293 vs Lefty
.319/.411/.626 vs Righty

That's definitely an extreme reverse split.

I didn't notice Scott Gracey got promoted but good for him.  I know he was very raw as a pitcher when drafted and it sounds like he has improved a bit.  Frank Gailey must be wondering "What the heck do I have to do to get promoted?"
greenfrog - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 12:30 PM EDT (#235391) #
My 2 cents:

1. Lawrie
2. Gose
3. McGuire
4. D'Arnaud

Other top 10 candidates: Marisnick, Stewart, Thames, Sanchez, Perez, Jimenez, Wojciechowski, Jenkins, Alvarez. Hechavarria could be in the top 10, but he needs to start hitting a bit first IMO (he might have a great glove, but a 573 OPS in his second season just seems to low to warrant inclusion).

It will be interesting to see to what extent Jackson works his way back on to prospect lists. He's still only 22.
uglyone - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 01:34 PM EDT (#235393) #
ah why not give it a shot?

1) Lawrie
2) JPA (?)
3) Drabek (?)
4) Gose
5) D'Arnaud
6) Alvarez
7) McGuire
8) Thames (?)
9) Jimenez
10) Marisnick

and if those (?) are no longer prospects, then:

11) McDade
12) Crouse
13) Jenkins
Moe - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 02:24 PM EDT (#235394) #
No more love for Hechavarria?  Yes, he is not hitting too well but I still think he belongs into the top 10.



Adrock - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 02:34 PM EDT (#235395) #
I'm not sure if anyone has mentioned it already, but John Sickels at minorleagueball.com has a write-up on Lawrie. Sickels isn't prone to hyperbole, so his description of Lawrie as Ryan Braun, but a real third baseman, is very exciting.
92-93 - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 03:19 PM EDT (#235399) #
Regardless of how you rank them, the Blue Jays have a very solid Top 20 that could help them target players like Fielder or Reyes should they find themselves in that position come July. Maybe you can get the Mets interested in a package centered around Hechavarria & Stewart or something along those lines.
finch - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 03:19 PM EDT (#235400) #

I'd have to go with the follow as my Top 10 currently:

1. Lawrie

2. Gose

3. Marisnick

4. Thames

5. d'Arnaud

6. Stewart

7. McGuire

8. Perez

9. Alvarez

10. Jenkins

Either way, extremely deep farm system, only about to get deeper. Pretty safe to say AA will spend on the draft. I read that he is likely to spend more this year because of the Wells contract off the books. CAN NOT WAIT!

 

 

finch - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 03:23 PM EDT (#235401) #

Regardless of how you rank them, the Blue Jays have a very solid Top 20 that could help them target players like Fielder or Reyes should they find themselves in that position come July. Maybe you can get the Mets interested in a package centered around Hechavarria & Stewart or something along those lines.

 

Jose Reyes is not worth the asking price that he is looking for in terms of dollars AND term. Hechavarria/Stewart I would do in a heartbeat though.

uglyone - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 03:38 PM EDT (#235403) #
seriously, though.....FREE BRETT LAWRIE time or what?
85bluejay - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 03:52 PM EDT (#235404) #
Brett Lawrie will not be Freed until super 2 passes in 2/3 weeks - makes very little sense to cost the club millions for a few weeks - while fans may not like it, it's still a business and that money can be used elsewhere - even if the Jays lock him up before, it will still cost millions because a player with 4 arbit. yrs will get a bigger contract than with 3 arbit. yrs - in 2/3 weeks Larwie will likely be up and the 3rd base roulette will be over.
John Northey - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 04:25 PM EDT (#235406) #
Thinking about Lawrie... are the Jays willing to do something ala the Rays and make a 10 year offer to him before he gets to the majors, or after just a few games? Would you? Major risk (if he goes in a Snider direction for example) but potentially major rewards (see the Rays who should save over $100 million over the life of that deal).
uglyone - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 04:36 PM EDT (#235407) #
good chance that the super-2 date has already passed for Lawrie.

waiting longer for super-2 is being ultra, ultra-safe.
Gerry - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 04:53 PM EDT (#235409) #

If Lawrie is recalled you don't need EE or Rivera.  I don't think a trade market, if it exists for them, will develop until the end of June.  So on that basis I wouldn't expect Lawrie before then.

The offset to this argument is whether AA believes the Jays can win a playoff spot this season.  If he thinks they can then Lawrie should be recalled ASAP.

AA might be hedging his bets.

DaveB - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 04:54 PM EDT (#235410) #

The Pierre errors are really staggering.  To put this in perspective, I was watching the Tampa Bay / Detroit game last night and they flashed a stat that the Rays have only committed 19 errors as a team so far this year.  WOW!  Maybe not a fair comparison, but I find it staggering non the less.

Pierre's error total is staggering, but you don't even have to use a MLB team to find an interesting comparison and a better perspective. New Hampshire, with one of the youngest groups of position players in the EL, has committed a total of 23 errors this year, and six of those are by pitchers. They're by far the best fielding team in the EL, one of the best defensive teams in all the Minor Leagues (only Triple A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre has committed fewer errors).  They've gone 7 or 8 games in a row without making an error, their catchers are throwing out base-runners at a 39 per cent clip. The outfield has speed, strong arms. With Stansberry taking over some of the 3B duties from Sobolewski they can put plus defenders at every position. Young pitchers like Stewart/Alvarez/Carreno really benefit from that environment and it will be interesting to see how McGuire and a groundball artist like Jenkins perform if/when they get promoted later this year.

sam - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 04:56 PM EDT (#235411) #

To pull a BA here, here's my preferred 2013 and beyond Blue Jay lineup with stats (avg, obp, slg).

1. Gose CF 265/320/400

2. Escobar SS 295/340/450

3. Bautista RF 310/400/700

4. Lind DH 290/315/650

5. Lawrie 3B 280/315/600

6. Snider/Thames LF 275/315/500

7. McDade 1B 240/275/425

8. Arencibia/d'Arnaud C 250/300/550

9. Hechevarria 2B 210/250/325

 Pitching (W-L, IP, ERA, SO, WHIP)

1. Romero 18-8, 210, 3.3, 190, 1.2

2. Morrow 16-7, 185, 3.65, 210, 1.3

3. Drabek 14-8, 190, 3.8, 160, 1.4

4. Cecil 12-10, 180, 4.4, 120, 1.4

5. Litsch 8-8, 140, 4.5, 100, 1.3

6. McGuire 5-3, 80, 3.8, 60, 1.2

7. Jenkins 3-3, 80, 4.2, 40, 1.3

8. Alvarez 2-1, 40, 4.4, 30, 1.3

 Bullpen

Stewart

Carreno

Zep

Villanueva

Farquhar

(I can't really see any of the guys in the pen right now sticking around for two more years)

 

To me that's an impressive lineup.  I think Jenkins will develop into an innings eater that really anchors the rotation and McGuire sounds like a Jon Garland-type. 

 

My stat predictions are quite poor, but I think they give ballpark numbers.   

Forkball - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 04:57 PM EDT (#235412) #
Thinking about Lawrie... are the Jays willing to do something ala the Rays and make a 10 year offer to him before he gets to the majors

Is there really a need to?  With the Rays, their budget is small so they have to take those risks.  There's no reason the Jays can't wait a year or two on Lawrie and still lock him in through his prime.  It might cost them a little more in the long run, but this isn't a team on a shoestring budget over the long haul.

You might have said the same thing about locking Travis Snider up a few years ago and that wouldn't necessarily been the best move.
sam - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 05:22 PM EDT (#235414) #

The Jays affiliates are all impressive.  Las Vegas has some very talented players and maybe even a few future allstars.  New Hampshire is probably the best all-around team with several players who could be allstars and gold glove winners.  Dunedin has an excellent pitching staff with two or three guys you could imagine starting in the major leagues.  Lansing has athleticism and guys who mash.  They're also incredibly young. 

 

Based on what we've seen so far, which team would you most like to see in person?

 

For me, it's New Hampshire.   

greenfrog - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 05:26 PM EDT (#235416) #
I think McGuire is in the 2013 rotation. So: Romero/Morrow/Drabek/McGuire and someone else - hopefully an effective Brett Cecil. But who knows? The composition of a big-league rotation can change a lot over the course of a couple of years.
greenfrog - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 05:34 PM EDT (#235417) #
Jenkins has had a great month of May: 2-1, 2.20 ERA, 32.2 IP, 29 H, 0 HR, 4 BB, 19 K, .230 BA against. The K rate could be better, but he seems to have outstanding control and gets a ton of GB outs. I would be interested in hearing what scouts are saying about him these days. Future #3 or 4 starter, maybe? Is he sneaking up on Zach Stewart on the depth chart?
wacker - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 07:00 PM EDT (#235418) #
I understand the staff is real impressed with talley's defense at first base, taken to it like a duck to water.
Gerry - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 07:40 PM EDT (#235419) #

If you want to see Las Vegas play, and if you don't want to fly out west, you can see them in Fort Wayne, Indiana from July 14 through 17.  Lugnut Fan was telling me that the new stadium for Tucson is not ready so they are playing some series on the road.  I am not sure how far Fort Wayne is from Toronto but I think it is probably about a five to six hour drive.

If you want to see New Hampshire play the closest they get to Toronto is Erie, Pa which is about an hour and a half from Buffalo.  The Fisher Cats are there from June 17-19.

There is no easy way to Dunedin but Lansing is a four to five hour drive from Toronto, depending on which side of Toronto you start from.

John Northey - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 07:46 PM EDT (#235420) #
Yes, the Jays can wait and see on Lawrie but I just thought of it as an interesting thing. What does a prospect need to show to make a team do something risky like what the Rays did?

Evan Longoria was in his age 22 season, just a few days into his first season when the Rays signed the 6-9 year deal (6 guaranteed, 3 option years). It was worth $17.5 million for 6, an additional $27 mil for the last 3 years. His minor league totals were just 300/386/541 with 1 short season, 1 full season, and 7 games to delay arbitration/free agency. 926 OPS in the minors, 889 OPS in AAA at 21 over 31 games, 930 in AA at 21 over 105 games.

For comparison, Lawrie at 20 in AA hit for a 797 OPS, and at 21 has hit 1057 OPS in AAA (PCL inflated) over 44 games.

Lawrie is basically a year ahead of Longoria. Is he going to be that good? Unlikely. But if I'm the Jays I would seriously look at that type of deal if my scouts are as happy as the stats seem to be. A 21 year old killing AAA is just not a normal thing.
Maldoff - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 08:35 PM EDT (#235421) #
John Northey, let's not get ahead of ourselves. Travis Snider also ripped up the minors, and has yet to show that consistency in the majors. Baseball is all about adjustments, and once you get to the show you need to be able to adjust quickly.
ComebyDeanChance - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 10:01 PM EDT (#235426) #
I think Anthopoulos' attitude conforms to your thinking, Maldoff. He stated in an interview when Lawrie was tearing it up, that they wanted to see him adjust when the league adjusted to him. So far he's doing well in that regard, but as you note it's an ongoing process. There is no point in rushing him to the majors out of impatience.
Mike Green - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 10:24 PM EDT (#235428) #
Ho hum. Another night, another 3-1 record for the affiliates.
85bluejay - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:32 PM EDT (#235430) #
Whatever the rationale the FO gives - Lawrie is not coming up until super 2 passes - last year I think it was June 5th, speculation this year it will be around June 8th -I agree with this approach as this is still regarded as a building year - if the Jays are still close a month from now then my view may change. 
85bluejay - Tuesday, May 24 2011 @ 11:41 PM EDT (#235431) #
What I'm really impressed about the Farm system this year is that so many of the hitters have improved plate discipline - Kudos to the coaching staff.
Mylegacy - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 01:41 AM EDT (#235433) #
At this point  - not counting Lawrie - who would be number 1 - no question...

The best prospect who's actually got a record of accomplishment and still further existing potential is - in my humble opinion - wait for it - Henderson Alvarez.

Henderson is just 21, throws in the mid to high 90's, is very mature for his age and has made it to AA. By this time next year he'll be the Lawrie everyone is antsy to see in the bigs. Henderson is the only Ace "Pitching Prospect" (among our at least several Ace pitching prospects) who is demonstrating enough of a track record for us to say he is more than just a "projectable Ace" - he has a SERIOUS chance to join Romero, Morrow and Drabek who will become a quartet of Aces or Near Aces at least. 

TamRa - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 05:36 AM EDT (#235435) #
I KNOW the sample size is too small and this is extremely fuzzy, it's just an off the cuff thing, but following the trend:

1. Lawrie - Sickels suggested he's probably in the top 5 prospects in all the minors right now.

2. Gose - as much as i'd like to put the next guy here (I think he has a higher ceiling) you gotta respect a 20 year old doing well in AA.

3. Marisnick - I think this guy has absolute superstar potential

4. d'Arnaud - VERY small sample at this level but absolutely murdering the ball right now. Answers a lot of question at least in a preliminary sense.

5. Alvarez - I'm kinda with Mylegacy on him - to reach AA at his age and with an inconsistant season last years shows how highly the team thinks of him.

6. McGuire - i had him as high as 4 when I started making this list but i think i'll hold out for a bit more data.

7. Perez - not going to let a slow start hurt my opinion of him too much.

8. Thames - proving himself.

9. Sanchez - no data (obviously) this year.

10. Stewart - this is really too deep a fall for such a short sample of struggle - it's as much a result of several of those above him doing so well as it is his inexplicable slow start.

11. Jimenez - earned it.

12. Adeiny - tools still there, but will want to see the offense come around with the tempratures.

13. Nestor Molina - getting on the bandwagon early.

14. Kencht - another guy who's been on fire.

15. Jenkins - for some reason I just can't get excited about him but the results are there.

HM - Justin Jackson - not #16, or even #20 - but he's intrigued me so far.

I think every guy in that top 15 has a REAL and SOLID chance to play and play at least reasonably well in the majors. I think most of the top 10 have a ceiling that's good enough to be an All-Star.

cybercavalier - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 06:14 AM EDT (#235436) #
Re 85bluejays and TamRa:

The Blue Jays is the only MLB franchise in Canada; if more Canadian kids could be fed into the Jays` minor system given these players are good prospects themselves,  many Canadian will be delighted. Why not take advantage of the MLB system to improve the level of play of Canadian baseball.

bpoz - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 08:09 AM EDT (#235438) #
Wonderful question and well answered.
Put me down as someone that will gush if/when these guys are doing it up here. Complete games & shut outs pitched, HRs & SBs, Defense... heated arguments in comparisons to this good player or that from our distant past.

Some prospects understandably did not make it, Sierra... throwing out runners at the plate.


Is it too early to gush about JPA? He seems to be constructing some sort of statement. Soon we must consider him in the same sentence as former Blue Jay & All Stat J Buck. I am not sure how high the bar is regarding that comparison.

I assume TamRa you were talking about Carlos, but Louis Perez may one day prove that he can pitch against someone besides Bos & NYY. Maybe the Phils will clobber the Jays enough for his nunber to be called because he won't come into close game situations.

I wrote with a little humor, I don't think it can be called Sarcasm or Irony, would it be classified as subtle maybe. Just curious.
Chuck - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 08:31 AM EDT (#235439) #

Is it too early to gush about JPA? He seems to be constructing some sort of statement. Soon we must consider him in the same sentence as former Blue Jay & All Stat J Buck. I am not sure how high the bar is regarding that comparison.

The deference shown to Buck is unnecessary, His career OPS+ is 89. His career year, in Toronto, was 115. In the first year of his highly questionable 3/18 contract in Florida he's giving the team an 84. I think you can safely file your pleasant Buck memories away without also mourning his departure.

Arencibia is at 130 right now. I would guess that this will drop as he starts going around the league a second time. Still, it's not impossible to imagine him ending his rookie season matching Buck's career season. Frankly, if Arencibia can end the year at 100 -- league average for hitting but above average for catchers -- he'll have done very well.

Ishai - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 11:45 AM EDT (#235455) #
I doubt Arencibia's production will decline much. He has good strike zone coverage, the ability to hit breaking balls, and the ability to spoil pitcher's pitches. Remember the at-bat to break up Verlander's perfect game? I think he's going to be an All-Star by 2013.
lexomatic - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 12:06 PM EDT (#235457) #
I don't think he's going to hit for enough average to be an all-star.. though I could see him having a super hot half one year and hitting a ton of HRs before the break. I could see him being a productive regular for a good 5-6 years, with the chance for more, if he keeps up this pace. He definitely buys the minor-leaguers some time.
cybercavalier - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 01:40 PM EDT (#235469) #
I don't think he's going to hit for enough average to be an all-star.. though I could see him having a super hot half one year and hitting a ton of HRs before the break. I could see him being a productive regular for a good 5-6 years, with the chance for more, if he keeps up this pace. He definitely buys the minor-leaguers some time.

After the success of the major league level coaching staff on Bautista in adjusting his swing, could it also be possible to adjust Arencibia's swing so JP could hit for a higher average ? Or JP could at least hit foul the pitches that he would have hit for a much lower average before adjustment, for example, grounding out.
uglyone - Wednesday, May 25 2011 @ 02:12 PM EDT (#235478) #
All-Star by 2013?

How about All-Star by 2011?

Here's the top-5 hitting starting catchers in the AL so far this year:

1) Avila: .395woba
2) Martin: .392woba
3) Arencibia: .358woba
4) Treanor: .335woba
5) Wieters: .333woba
TamRa - Thursday, May 26 2011 @ 02:18 AM EDT (#235507) #
JPA is sitting on an OPS+ right now that's higher that the best year ever by ANY Blue Jays catcher.



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