Chad Jenkins, the first pick in last year's draft has impressed in camp.
Daniel Farquhar a reliever from AA New Hampshire has looked good too.
Toronto Sun Article:
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" Seventeen days into training camp, six days into Grapefruit League games, some impressions start to form. Now, in spring training, first impressions can quickly dissolve into false impressions, but there are a handful of players who are turning heads.
Some of those favourable impressions could turn into immediate benefits for the Blue Jays and for the individuals, but most will be banked and cashed down the road. That’s especially so with such a youth-oriented Toronto organization which no doubt will be in constant flux over the next couple of years as talent bubbles to the top of the system.
So, we present a highly subjective list of players who have perhaps been punching above their weight class, at least as far as their pre-camp expectations are concerned:
J.P. Arencibia C
After a disappointing 2009 season, we learned that Arencibia, Toronto’s first pick in 2007, had been dealing with kidney and eye ailments. He lost 30 pounds and suffered from poor night vision, resulting in a .236 batting average. In retrospect, his 21 home runs were a feat.
So far this spring, in full health and having had corrective eye surgery, Arencibia has been impressive, both at the plate and behind it. He has hit a pair of home runs, one of them a game-winner.
Arencibia is destined to go back to Las Vegas this year, with an ETA at the big-league level in 2011.
Chad Jenkins SP
Last year’s first-round draft selection came to camp looking like a five-year veteran.
He has impressed the Blue Jays brass — as well as his teammates — with his ability to throw predominantly strikes with his vicious hard sinker.
A college draft pick, Jenkins expects to start the season in the high-A Florida State League. Given his level of maturity and the impression he is making here, Jenkins could beat a quick path back into a Blue Jays uniform by mid-2011.
Dustin McGowan SP
Even though he is coming off two years of frustrating inactivity because of shoulder and knee injuries, the 27-year-old right-hander has had the best pure stuff in camp and has passed every test without pain.
The Jays are proceeding very carefully, trying to avoid a setback. Tuesday, he will pitch a simulated game against real batters and the next test after that will be to pitch an inning or two in a Grapefruit League game.
His progress could be a key to the composition of the Jays starting rotation and could push Brian Tallet back to the bullpen.
Dan Farquhar RP
After starting at class-A ball last season, Farquhar moved seamlessly into the closer’s role at double-A New Hampshire.
He comes at hitters from three different arm angles with nasty, moving sinkers and a sweeping slider that is almost unhittable by a right-handed hitter.
It’s uncertain if he will start the year at New Hampshire or Las Vegas, but Toronto could be on his itinerary by 2011."
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http://www.torontosun.com/sports/columnists/ken_fidlin/2010/03/07/13147686.html