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You need to tap your left arm to summon someone from the Jays' all-time bullpen. In your vision, which 20th-century lefty comes trotting to the mound?

Dennis DeBarr, 1977 0 (0.00%)
Balor Moore, 1978-80 0 (0.00%)
Dave Geisel, 1982-83 0 (0.00%)
Gary Lavelle, 1985 4 (2.72%)
Jeff Musselman, 1987-88 5 (3.40%)
Bob MacDonald, 1990-92 1 (0.68%)
Tony Castillo, 1993-95 8 (5.44%)
Paul Spoljaric, 1994-97 15 (10.20%)
Dan Plesac, 1997-99 108 (73.47%)
Graeme Lloyd, 1999 6 (4.08%)
You need to tap your left arm to summon someone from the Jays' all-time bullpen. In your vision, which 20th-century lefty comes trotting to the mound? | 14 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Mick Doherty - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 02:21 PM EDT (#149454) #
In writing this question, I came to the conclusion that "LHRP" is perhaps the weakest position in Jays' history. BJ Ryan is so far and away the best that it's silly -- or did I miss someone? (Ryan, of course, does not qualify under this question's parameters.)
DiscoDave - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 02:30 PM EDT (#149456) #
I remember Randy Myers back in '98 going to be the "man" out of the pen that year.  Didnt work out that well.  At least we got Brian Loyd in the deal to SD. ;-)
AWeb - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 02:34 PM EDT (#149458) #
How about David Wells? He had a few good years out of the pen and as a starter/reliever combo.
Geoff - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 02:36 PM EDT (#149459) #
In the spirit of trivia, I can think of two Blue Jay left-handed relievers who would later throw a no-hitter and a perfect game, respectively, in the latter part of the 20th century.
Mick Doherty - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 02:51 PM EDT (#149463) #
Wells threw a perfecto. Righetti? But he threw his no-no before his brief stint in TO, I'm sure.
smcs - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 02:57 PM EDT (#149466) #
david cone
Four Seamer - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 03:09 PM EDT (#149469) #
I don't think Jimmy Key ever threw a no-hitter, but didn't Al Leiter no-hit the Rockies at one point?
Geoff - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 03:10 PM EDT (#149470) #
uh, David Cone is not a left-handed pitcher. 
Geoff - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 03:11 PM EDT (#149471) #
Al Leiter and David Wells are the correct answers.
smcs - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 03:12 PM EDT (#149472) #
thats what happens when you dont read the question
Magpie - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 03:48 PM EDT (#149482) #
Cone was a left-handed hitter, though. Which kind of makes him a 20th century lefty.
Mike D - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 04:41 PM EDT (#149494) #

Paul O'Neill had no chance against Dan Plesac's slider.  None.  Since I moved to New York in '98, I have never been able to rest easy at a Jays-Yankees game in the Bronx -- except when Plesac got summoned to face Paulie.

Mike Green - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 05:01 PM EDT (#149497) #
For the benefit of out-of-towners, Paul Spoljaric is still pitching for the Maple Leafs in the Intercounty League.

It is true that LHRP would be the weakest position for the 20th century Blue Jay team. 

Magpie - Wednesday, June 21 2006 @ 11:56 PM EDT (#149530) #
One of my many, mostly devious, reasons for voting for Tony Castillo (1995 edition) is his reverse platoon split. You bring in the lefty reliever and the other manager pinch-hits. But Tony was actually tougher on RH batters...

But mostly because I miss seeing him wandering around on the mound, looking like he just woke up and is trying to remember where he put his car keys... No player ever looked more at home on a baseball field.

You need to tap your left arm to summon someone from the Jays' all-time bullpen. In your vision, which 20th-century lefty comes trotting to the mound? | 14 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.