The 2007 Jays Pre-Season Roundtable-Part 1- The Offence
Thursday, March 29 2007 @ 06:49 AM EDT
Contributed by: Mike Green
The Batters Box Roster convened for its biannual meeting in mid-March
to talk about the Jays. The virtual sandwiches were stale, the
beer was flat, but the conversation was, as usual, lively. In
Part 1, we mooted about some questions about the Jay offence.
1. What should we expect from the additions to the lineup, Royce Clayton and Frank Thomas?
Gerry- I think Frank Thomas will hit well as long as he is healthy. Thomas
struggled in 2005 and the first part of 2006 but now he has his
confidence and stroke back. Thomas did play all of 2006 so maybe the
injury tag is unfair but he is getting older so injuries are always a
risk. I think Thomas will have a good season, although he might only
play 125 games due to various minor injuries.
I am not as hopeful for Royce Clayton. Clayton is not an elite
hitter but he needs to separate himself from Johnny Mac territory, if
Clayton hits .220 or so then why not use John McDonald? The best case
if for the Jays to win, for Clayton to provide excellent defense and
for his hitting to be an afterthought. The reality is that Clayton will
probably be in the spotlight all season as his average hovers in the
.240's. Clayton might play 5 times a week if John McDonald gets hot.
Pistol- I think the Jays decided last year that McDonald wasn't cut out to play
every day. That's really where Clayton's value is - he's pretty
durable.
Mike Green- Frank Thomas will give the Jays 400 productive plate appearances,
and as for Royce Clayton, he would make a fine back-up middle infielder.
Magpie- Clayton will be a small upgrade on the 2006 shortstops - he'll be
adequate defensively and that will be an upgrade. And he'll hit as much
as Adams and McDonald did last year (Adams and Hill were not, and
Johnny Mac's glove work fell off sharply when he started playing ever
day.).
Frank Thomas will like hitting in the RC a whole lot better
than McAfee Associates or whatever it's called now (he hit .242 at home
last season, and .302 on the road.) I think he'll play 140 games, and
his hit 500th homer in mid-May and pass Ted Williams before the year is
over.
MatthewE- One thing about Clayton is that Ricciardi's Jays seem to have some kind
of mojo that helps out veterans shortstops. Bordick, Gomez and even
McDonald to an extent have played a lot better for the Jays than I
expected them to. Maybe Ricciardi knows something.
...Nah. I don't see Clayton at all. I hope he loses the job quickly and someone else steps up.
As for Thomas, I'm hopeful. Hey, if you're going to take that kind of
plunge on any 39-year-old, it may as well be a Hall-of-Famer like
Thomas.
Thomas- Not very much and a lot, respectively. The Jays don't need Frank Thomas
to have a great year to be successful, but it'd help a lot. I see
Thomas giving the team about 450-475 productive plate appearances,
although overall he'll drop a bit from last year's production.
Clayton's OBP will hover around .300 and he won't slug .350. I don't
think much more needs to be said.
Leigh- I expect that if Clayton is in the lineup for any longer than Edgardo
Alfonzo was in 2006, the Jays will be closer to the Orioles and Devil
Rays than to the Red Sox and Yankees. One hitter can hurt a lineup
that much - the difference between Royce Clayton and the average
shortstop is larger than the difference between Vernon Wells and the
average centre fielder.
Russ Adams, Ryan Roberts and Ryan
Klosterman could probably out-hit Clayton. So could have Craig
Counsell, Alex Gonzalez, Julio Lugo, Ronnie Belliard, Mark DeRosa, Ray
Durham, Marcus Giles, Chris Gomez, Adam Kennedy, Mark Loretta and Jose
Valentin (among free agents), not to mention countless trade targets.
Some have been critical of the fact that J.P. Ricciardi brought Frank
Thomas on board a year too late: the Thomas that the Jays are getting
is one year older and much more expensive than the Thomas that Billy
Beane brought to the Athletics last year. While those facts are
technically true, they are irrelevant. The merits of Ricciardi's
signing exist independently of Beane's signing and any other front
office machinations - either in Toronto or Oakland - that happened
before November 17, 2006.
Thomas' 2006 (.270/.381/.545) is a
better season than has been posted by a Jays' designated hitter since
Paul Molitor's 1993 campaign (.332/.402/.509). May those who find
fault with the Thomas signing be haunted by the ghosts of Shea
Hillenbrand, Eric Hinske, Josh Phelps, Brad Fullmer, Willie Greene, and
the 1997 Joe Carter (.234/.284/.399 in 612 at bats).
Dave Till- Clayton: good field, no hit. Thomas: good hit, no field.
Thomas
could conceivably go totally nuts in April. The ball tends to fly out
of Ted's Shed when the roof is closed, and the park has always favoured
right-handed power. That's why he signed here, of course.
MatthewE- I was thrilled when the Jays signed Thomas, because I thought the
offense could use a boost, but in my mind their most important
acquisition of the offseason was:
Alan Ashby.
2. What is the batting order going to look like?
Leigh- My preferred lineup would probably look something like: Hill, Overbay,
Wells, Thomas, Glaus, Lind, Rios, Zaun, Adams/Roberts/Olmedo.
The more likely lineup will be: Johnson, Overbay, Wells, Thomas, Glaus, Rios, Zaun, Hill, Clayton.
Gerry-
I don't think there will be much change to the lineup, against righties it will be:
Johnson
Overbay
Wells
Thomas
Glaus
Rios
Zaun
Hill
Clayton.
Against lefties Overbey will drop to six or seven and Rios or Hill will move up.
MatthewE- I wonder if all the righties in the lineup is going to mean fewer opposition pitching changes, and therefore shorter games.
Dave Till- Apparently, they're putting Overbay in the #2 slot, at least against
righties. Other than that, it's mostly right-handed power hitters,
which you can arrange in just about any order you want. The opposition
are going to get their outs in pairs this year.
3. What should we expect from the bench in 2007?
Thomas- Not a lot. Stairs is going to be productive, I've decided. I like him
and he's Canadian. What other criteria does he need to meet? I think
he'll enjoy the RC to the same tune he enjoyed Kauffman and I expect
him to put up a high 700's OPS. I hope the Jays use him frequently to
pitch-hit for the SS against late-inning right-handed relievers and
then gets the odd start to fill in for the regulars at OF and DH. Smith
and McDonald won't play much either, as at least Clayton shouldn't be
far off his career average and the Jays have already decided to live
with that. Phillips is the most essential reserve, as he figures to get
40 starts a year for Zaun. If we need any bench player to meet
expectation, it's him.
Alex Obal- It'll be better than expected, for two reasons: Russ Adams and Reed Johnson.
Leigh- The following should be a near-daily occurrence:
"Now hitting for Royce Clayton: Matt Stairs"
"Now replacing Matt Stairs at shortstop: John McDonald"
By
giving Clayton's fifth plate appearance to Stairs every day, the
shortstop sinkhole is somewhat mitigated. 80% of Clayton's career OPS+
combined with 20% of Stairs' is 85.2, a greater-than-nominal
improvement on Clayton's 77 and significantly better than the 48 and 54
posted last season by McDonald and Adams, respectively.
Mike Green- Don't you mean Clayton's third plate
appearance? You wouldn't want to miss an opportunity, and besides if
the lineup has turned around five times, it probably means that the
team has scored a bunch of runs...Heck, if it was the top of the 5th or
6th and Clayton was leading off against Justin Verlander in a 0-0 game
against Roy Halladay in his second plate appearance, I wouldn't
hesitate to pull the trigger.
MatthewE- Don't you mean Clayton's first plate appearance?
Dave Till- This year, the bench should provide plenty of comfort for the Jays'
scrubeenies. No expense has been spared, which ensures that major
league tushes will bask in ergonomic comfort.
You probably meant to ask what to expect from the Jays' bench players this year. The answer: pretty much the same as the above.
Gerry- Other than Matt Stairs, the bench won't be counted on for much. The Jays
top nine will probably play a lot of games, unless there is an injury.
Stairs will be used to spell the outfielders and Thomas. Smith to spell
Glaus and Overbay, and McDonald for Hill and Clayton. Each of those
bench guys will be lucky to play a game a week.
4. Alex Rios- budding superstar, average rightfielder or something in between?
MatthewE- Dances on the sand! Rios's strong September reassured me about whether
his early-season success was a fluke or not. I mean, I'm still going to
be a bit nervous until I see him dial 9 a few times in April, but
basically I think Rios is The Guy.
Dave Till- Rios's early 2006 was no fluke: he was getting around on every single
fastball thrown at him, treating the American League's best pitchers
like an extra round of pregame batting practice. I think he'll get it
back this year, but you never know.
Alex Obal- Superstar might be pushing it, but it's very reasonable to expect him
to revert to his 30-homer pace this year. He was hitting the ball in
the air more in the first half, and doing so with much more power,
while putting the ball in play at the same rate he did in 2005 and
2006. I think it's unrealistic to expect a .300 average or a
particularly good OBP until Rios shows he can be counted on to
regularly beat the league average BABIP. However, his good bat and
outstanding defense should send him to a few more all-star games in the
near future.
Pistol- I'm sold on Rios. If you take out the first few weeks after returning
from his staph infection he was great the entire year. I think the
Jays will regret not signing him to a long term extension this
offseason.
Magpie- Sold. I don't know about superstar, but all-star for sure. I think he'll have a better year with the bat than Wells.
Mike Green- It looks like there is a consensus so far among the roster about Alex
Rios' prospects. Great hitter coming into his prime, if you ask me.
5. Will Adam Lind make a contribution at some point in 2007?
Pistol- No doubt. If any of the starting OFs or Thomas hit the DL I think Lind
will be called up and inserted in the lineup. The chance of that
happening are pretty high.
Thomas- Yes. I don't think the Jays will mess around; if there is any sort of
medium or long-term injury to an OFer or Thomas Lind will get the call.
The one scenario he might not would be something resembling an early
season 15-day DL stint that is guaranteed to be short-term and ends up
being retroactive a couple of days. Then the Jays might call up
Mottola, but otherwise Lind will get the first call and he'll certainly
be up in September. If he's not up before then it means the 4
outfielders and Thomas are all healthy, are all producing and that the
offence has been a huge plus. If that's the case, the Jays season will
have been going about as well as expected.
Alex Obal- Yes. The sooner, the better.
Magpie- It depends a little on Reed Johnson's play, and a little on the health
of Frank Thomas. But I think that if we see Lind before September, it's
either because he's hitting .375 in AAA or someone went down.
Gerry- Wells, Rios and Johnson have been durable so it is not certain that
Lind will get a shot. Lind is a much younger version of Matt Stairs, a
lefty DH/outfielder so if Thomas is injured it might not be Lind called
up, Stairs could fill in.
Mike Green- That is precisely what worries me. Service time preservation seems to
be behind the decision to send Lind down, and it might extend as far as
using Stairs as a medium-term DH or (gasp) outfielder should the need
arise before June 15 or so. As Alex said, the sooner the better for
Lind.
Dave Till- Lind's contribution depends on what Johnson does. If Reed is reaching base, there'll be no place to put Lind.
MatthewE- A couple of other factors: Lind's defence, and the Jays' performance
against righthanders. I think they're sending him down to work on his
defence, and they feel they can afford to do so because Reed Johnson is
now an everyday player. If Johnson isn't an everyday
player, that's different. If Lind can play defence, or if he can't at
all, those are different too. And if the Jays struggle against
righthanders and need another lefty bat, that's different yet again.
6. The offence was horribly inefficient in 2006 (league
average in runs scored despite superior rate statistics) and very
efficient in 2005. Will they find a happy medium in 2007, or was it the
clutch hitting of Shea Hillenbrand that was the missing ingredient in
2006 (!)?
Mike Green- The inefficiency of the offence last year was, in my view, mostly
fluke. This year, the club is likely to find its way close to average efficiency.
Magpie- I also think it was largely a fluke, so in 2007 they should be closer
to the medium. The double plays will have us all gnashing our teeth,
though.
Gerry- The one area that worries me is speed on the bases and double play
tendencies. Glaus and Thomas are big guys who are slow to get going,
Stairs is also slow. Rios might find his way blocked on the bases
behind those two. On the other hand Rios might not hit into as many
double plays if he can get loft on the ball.
MatthewE- It better get more efficient, because I have a hunch the rate statistics are going to take a step back.
Dave Till- I am horribly inefficient, so I expect the team I root for to be, too.
Thomas- If the solution is Shea Hillenbrand, you're asking the wrong question.
7. The Jays scored 809 runs in 2006. How many in 2007?
Gerry- The Jays score 844 runs thanks to Frank Thomas and a healthy Alex Rios.
Magpie- They've probably lost a little bit from the catcher, as Molina's at
bats are split between Zaun and Phillips. Not much. Shortstop is a
wash. Thomas is a HUGE upgrade, and Rios and Hill are quite capable of
having bigger seasons. If they both do, and the big boppers are healthy
and productive, this team scores 875 runs. That probably won't happen,
and people will get hurt, so I'll settle for 848.
Pistol- Thomas will certainly be a big improvement but there'll be at least a
slight downgrade at catcher. The Jays were relatively healthy last
year and got strong years out of the OF. It won't be hard for there to
be a slip in any of those area either. I'll go with a similar number
as last year - 825.
MatthewE- If they clear 775 I'll be happy. I think it's 50-50 whether they will or not.
Mike Green- Increased efficiency, a boost from Thomas, and big years from Rios and Hill lead to 860 runs scored.
Thomas- I'm going to split the difference between Gerry and Mike and say 852.
Dave Till- The upside for the Jays' offense is frightening. Think of last spring,
but with Thomas in place of Hillenbrand. I have no idea whether they'll
get there, though. It depends who gets hurt and who goes into a slump,
I suppose.
Tomorrow, the Roster ponders the state of the Jay pitching staff.
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