Not that amazing since Gonzales has only less home runs. His average is better, he has more RBIs, more doubles, more triples. 334 is great but 354 is better. Than extra 20 points in average between 334 and 354 is huge. With an average above 350, any small slump will significantly affect it.What is even more amazing is that SI picked Gonzales of the Bosox as MVP to this point of the season.
Seeing as Boston will make the playoffs and the Jays not, Bautista will have to be very significantly ahead in most major stats to win the award. AR has more RBI's (a hugely significant stat) mainly because he's had tons more men on base to drive in than J. Bats has.
Just wait 'til Bautista is hitting against the September callups of the non-playoff teams.
It's complete and utter b.s. I thought we were past wins and what team a player played for, as was evidenced by T. Lincecum, Z. Greinke and F. Hernandez winning Cy Young awards. ESPN's Jayson Stark, who I normally respect, also gave Adrian Gonzalez the All-Star break MVP award, too.What is even more amazing is that SI picked Gonzales of the Bosox as MVP to this point of the season.
Seeing as Boston will make the playoffs and the Jays not, Bautista will have to be very significantly ahead in most major stats to win the award. AR has more RBI's (a hugely significant stat) mainly because he's had tons more men on base to drive in than J. Bats has.
Just wait 'til Bautista is hitting against the September callups of the non-playoff teams.
Hell no! Just found that stat surprising and interesting.Please tell me you don't want to reverse the Brandon League trade.
When I first looked at the blown save stat I was surprised to see how many there actually were, Rivera has 4, for example, which is more than I would have expected from him. However, when you send a "closer" out with a lead you want to have that warm and fuzzy feeling he will get the side out, when Francisco comes out I pour another drink. The Jays have lost games they should have won cause their relief pitching SUCKS! (They have other issues as well, i.e.outfield defensively) I'm not sure how overblown the stats are or aren't but the quality of the closer is important to a teams W-L record.Yeah, but the Mariners, as a team, have 12 blown saves. The Jays, to put some perspective on the situation, are last in the majors in neither blown saves nor save conversion percentage. Is the closer situation bad? Yes. Critical? Considering they're not competing for a playoff spot this year, no, not really. Historically bad? Not even close. Half the teams in baseball have 12 or more BS, and all but a few have double digits. Saves is a HORRIBLY overblown stat.
Escobar would be considered an above average offensive player would he not? And Thames although early in his career looks very promising ( great bat speed).Only Adam Lind would be considered an above-average offensive player in the Blue Jays' lineup.
Escobar is having a good season and was trending that way early in his career, but he's coming off a terrible 2010 and has to prove himself as a day-in, day-out above average player. Thames is a rookie and no one has any idea how good he is. I get the feeling that he's a 4th outfielder/DH/platoon-type player.Escobar would be considered an above average offensive player would he not? And Thames although early in his career looks very promising ( great bat speed).
The second half could line up to be monumental for J.Bats if these players continue to play to their capabilities.
It's to the point for me that the first thing I check in the Box scores is whether Bautista had a good game or not. The rest is somewhat inconsequential. Of course that could also be because I'm a Yankee raised fanatic.
The Jays bullpen is inconsistent and in my opinion SUCKS. Kevin Gregg is not a great closer but compared to what the Jays currently have he would be an improvement. I was quite happy when Gregg signed with Baltimore until I saw what AA replaced him with. Out of the current group of relievers,Camp, in my opinion is the best and he can be shaky. Camp is a decent mop up set up but not a closer. Rauch has his moments and I can live with him. The rest are a nightmare, they can't or won't throw strikes, and the batters are ready for them. if they do throw a strike. Jansen should help when he returns. Agreed the bullpen started strong then everyone got to see them and now the batters are ahead of them. The Jays solutions in the minors are currently starters and it will take a while(maybe years) before a decision is made to convert one to a closer.The TO bullpen doesn't suck. It's pretty middle-of-the-pack. For the first month or two, it was easily the best in the AL. Recent woes have brought it back to earth - it's still above average in several categories.
Most closers flame out very quickly, even when they're very good. It would be nice to cherry-pick who the best closer in the league was going to be every year, but that ain't gonna happen. The Jays have several stop-gap solutions right now, one of which will probably emerge to be an average closer before the end of the year. Anyone who wants Kevin Gregg back is nucking futs. His control is just awful. Bona fide nuclear closers just never come on the market, but lots of fringe guys develop nicely for a year or two, and the Jays have solutions in the minors.
Going to disagree with you on Thames Cappy. I get the feeling he will be a solid everyday contributor. Time will tell I guess.Escobar is having a good season and was trending that way early in his career, but he's coming off a terrible 2010 and has to prove himself as a day-in, day-out above average player. Thames is a rookie and no one has any idea how good he is. I get the feeling that he's a 4th outfielder/DH/platoon-type player.
Sadly, Aaron Hill looks like he's done after a promising 2007 & 2009. The jury's still out on Travis Snider, but I think he's going to be good. JP Arencibia looks decent, but has some work to do. Brett Lawrie could be the next big thing.
(Biting tongue on the Yankees fan bit...)
Hill had a pretty good 2009. 36 HR, 108 RBI, .286 BA, .991 feilding %, Sliver slugger award and starting 2B at the All Star game. I'll take another one of those!Hill has never been the same since he suffered that concussion and I fear never will. The only thing than can stop Brett Lawrie is himself as he can be a bit of a wild child off the field.Snider is on the cusp right now and can be frustrating too watch.
You are right and I am wrong, upon checking he had his concussion in 2008. Thanks for correcting me, I should have been more thorough.Hill had a pretty good 2009. 36 HR, 108 RBI, .286 BA, .991 feilding %, Sliver slugger award and starting 2B at the All Star game. I'll take another one of those!
The problem is in averaging as it hides the worst performers.The stats argue against them "sucking". Don't know where you're getting this "nightmare" stuff, but I guarantee you pretty much every other team in the league is in the same boat.
exactlyMaybe if our guys just started throwing strikes it would work out better.
Whoa there, NBA all star games suck, there is no effort on defence , same goes for Hockey, Baseball work out a bit better as there is rarely player vs. player contact of any kind as that is the nature of the game.Wasn't a bad all star game. I think baseball is the only major sport where the all star game is a real game. (Maybe basketball too.) In both the NHL and NFL, their all star game is a "no contact" game.
Disagree with your no defense, Bautista's grab in right was outstanding.Whoa there, NBA all star games suck, there is no effort on defence , same goes for Hockey, Baseball work out a bit better as there is rarely player vs. player contact of any kind as that is the nature of the game.
It's still a joke as the "manager" can only play any given player an inning or two at most, and is under pressure to play as many players as possible.