We kick off our three-part Jays preview with a look at a couple of offense-related questions.
Feel free to chime in with your own opinions in the comments.
Adam
Lind will break camp as the first baseman and cleanup hitter. How long
do both of these arrangements last. If you were the manager, what would
your plan for 1B/Lind be?
Update:
A minor injury late in camp has derailed this slightly, and it looks
like there’s a chance Lind could hit fifth behind Encarnacion.
Anders:
Lind has put up a wRC+ of over 100 once in five major league seasons;
there have been lingering injury concerns, but that is, as they say, not
good. If the Jays would platoon Lind with Encarnacion that would
alleviate some of my concerns, but that pretty much makes Ben Francisco
the DH so it’s not a huge win. Lind should really be hitting below Brett
Lawrie, Encarnacion and probably Eric Thames at this point.
John
Northey: I think the two go together pretty much. If Lind can hit like
he did in the first part of last year then he is a great cleanup
hitter. If he can’t hit well enough to hit cleanup then he shouldn’t be
in the lineup anyways (1B who can’t hit well enough for the middle of
the order really don’t belong as regulars). Plus, of course, lineup
effects are minimal compared to playing the right guys in the first
place. So if I was GM Lind would hit, and probably in the cleanup to
start but I’d evaluate at the end of April (gotta give a guy a shot).
Matthew
E: I don’t mind giving Lind the whole season, unless he’s obviously
terrible, in which case I’d cut bait on him by the All-Star break. I
might move Bautista to first and put Snider in right, if I had to
replace Lind.
Alex
Obal: Lind gets the first-base job until (a) he has a six-week stretch
with an OPS below .700, or (b) someone forcibly removes him. And that
‘someone’ could be the general manager.
Gerry:
I think Lind’s recent back injury helps the team here. Lind will get a
day per week off in April and EE will cover first giving Davis or
Francisco a chance to play. I assume Lind will “rest” against a lefty
pitcher. Once
April is done the plan depends on how well Lind is hitting. I assume
he will hit OK against right handed pitchers and if he is not hitting
lefties I would start a platoon with EE with Davis/Francisco/Vizquel
covering DH. I
do think Lind will hit well against right handed pitchers. Even though
the Jays haven’t questioned his performance Lind knows it was a
problem. He even admitted he had to work out this winter. The big
issue is his hitting versus lefties. That is the plan B I have in my
pocket.
Thomas:
An interesting decision will arise if the Jays are hanging around the
AL East and/or wildcard leaders at the end of May and Lind has been
poor, but not awful. How long is Lind’s leash and does its length depend
on how well Snider is doing in Vegas? For the record, I think this
scenario is very plausible. And, in response to Matthew, if Lind is
moved or benched, I shift EE to first and Thames to DH. His solution is
probably the long-term one, but I don’t move Bautista mid-season.
Eric
Thames has won the starting Left Field job. We’ve discussed this ad
nauseum, but is it the right choice? Should the Jays trade Snider as a
result?
Obal: Thames might be my favorite non-pitcher on the team, so I’m thrilled to see him get a chance to play every day.
John
Northey: Thames has done enough to keep it for now I think. Snider has
too many holes (shown by his strikeouts) at this point in my opinion. I’d be
ready to bring him in, but Thames is the better choice for now.
Matthew
E: It’s not the obviously wrong choice. I wouldn’t trade Snider unless
it improved the team’s talent configuration... but then, that’s true of
anybody. As for Thames, I don’t expect him to be quite as successful as
last year, which may open the door for Snider if the Jays think he’s
playing well enough. And then we’ll see.
Gerry:
I am on the record as saying it is the best move. I do think Thames
will hit well in 2012. I believe Snider needs time in AAA to be
successful for an extended period and to make sure his new swing is fully
embedded.
Anders:
I don’t know, truthfully. I don’t want to give up on Snider, and he’s
still just 24, but where is he ever going to play for the Blue Jays?
Anthony Gose is going to be the Jays starting CF by the middle of 2013. I
think Bautista eventually moves to first base, but even if he does
Rasmus and Thames will still be in the picture, not to mention Jake
Marisnick and Moises Sierra. And what happens if Snider’s mashing in AAA
in June and Thames is an average player? This is a right shmozzle, and
the only way out may be to trader Snider for 50 cents on the dollar.
Brett Lawrie over/under: .875 OPS/27.5 HR/25.5 SB
Matthew E: Under. This year.
Anders: I love Lawrie, but lets say .850/25/20.
Thomas: Over, Under, Under.
Gerry: I have to go with the under. Anders numbers look good.
Obal:
I will cop out. I’m guessing consolidation year, and if that’s what we
get, I’m content. However, I won’t be shocked at all if he goes
ballistic.
John Northey: I’ll go with .900/30/20 - so over/over/under (have I said I’m an optimist?)
The Blue Jays 5 best hitters in 2012 will be (in order):
Thomas: Relative to position it will be Bautista, Lawrie, Yunel, Rasmus and Johnson.
Anders: Joey Bats, Lawrie, Yunel, Kelly Johnson and E5.
Obal: … each individually better than the Mariners’ best hitter.
John Northey: I’ll go with Bautista, Lawrie, Encarnacion, Thames, Rasmus
Gerry: Bautista; Lawrie; Thames, EE and Lind
Matthew
E: Going out on a bit of a limb here. Bautista, Rasmus, Lawrie,
Encarnacion, Johnson. I’d like to get Escobar in there but I suspect the
others will be ahead of him.
The
Blue Jays scored 743 runs in 2011, the sixth best in baseball (5th in
the AL). How does this number change? (Either total runs or relative to
league).
John Northey: More runs! More, more, more!!! I’ll go with 800 for 4th in the league.
Gerry: Better but not amazing, 782 runs.
Thomas: 767.
Matthew E: The total number goes up slightly, to 750, 760, but they slip to 6th in the league.
Obal: I want to take bets on whether total offense goes down yet again this year.
Anders:
I agree with Alex. Offense in 2010 was the lowest in 15 years, and 2011
was significantly below it. I think the Jays position relative to the
league stays about the same, but I’m going to predict a slight bump
overall, and say that lands the Jays at 775.
https://www.battersbox.ca/article.php?story=20120402131142322