Still paying dividends
You'll have to pardon the gratuitous Grateful Dead reference, but what a long, strange trip the season's been.
And somehow, it's still going.
We're working up to a piece that wraps up the season into a few pithy paragraphs, which we hope to have for you by the end of this week.
But given our recent fits of delinquency on the blog, we figured we'd pull out a couple of the lesser strands from that piece for their own post. It's a little like watching the deleted scenes before you see the movie.
The most notable thing about looking back this season is that it's hard to distinguish the beginning this year and the end of last year. In all likelihood, it went back before pitchers and catchers reported, and we suppose you could figure that the calendar truly flipped when the Jays named John Farrell as their manager on October 25th.
But truth be told, we're still not sure after almost a full season what Farrell is as a manager, or what he brings to the mix.
A strong jaw and a willingness to abide baserunning outs? But what else?
We're still trying to figure that cat out.
As we look back, we keep settling on that day back in January, when Vernon Wells was traded out of town. We can still picture the restaurant where we had just walked in for a meal with Mrs. Tao, and the feverish exchange of tweets and messages as the details came to the surface.
We suspect that the magnitude of that transaction has been lost somewhat over the past few months, to a point where we even saw tweets and heard Jays Talk calls that questioned how good a trade it was, usually after a bad outing by Frank Francisco or a good night by Mike Napoli.
Hopefully, Mike Wilner could back us up on that. We listened to A LOT of Jays Talk this year. It wasn't always like an exchange of discourse among gentleman and scholars at the Acropolis.
But with almost 10 months' distance since the trade was announced, it's still worth remembering what a momentous change for the franchise that single transaction represented.
It wasn't just about riding the team of a middling bat (though that helped) and a heap of cash (that was pretty nice as well). It wasn't just about opening up the middle of the diamond to a younger player with more upside, nor was it about re-working the middle of the lineup.
Simply, a franchise with Vernon Wells as it's begrudging centre piece doesn’t make the deal for Colby Rasmus, and the Jays don't take the hyper-aggressive approach to drafting amateurs and signing international free agents this year if they are still trying to find a dance partner for the Wells Jubilee.
There's a touch of unease in personifying all that has gone right with this franchise around Wells, because we fear that he's been made to be more of a villain than he deserves.
Many have filled in their own notion of how Vernon's intangible presence might have detracted from the team, but we wouldn't suggest that we know what occurs behind the closed doors of the Jays' clubhouse. Having said that, it's hard to conceive of Wells' presence in the middle of the raucous, Delta House atmosphere we've seen in the dugout as young stars with out-sized personalities made their way into the Jays’ lineup.
Regardless, the $25 million per annum that the Jays would have had to pay out to him through the end of the 2014 season would have cast such a shadow over all other moves they made that the team and its wunderkind general manager wouldn't have had the flexibility to take the calculated risks that they have since.
There's going to come a day when we write the book on how it all came together for the next great Toronto Blue Jays championship team.
We have a notion that the Wells trade will not only provide the jumping off point for that narrative, but that it will weave its way through many of the other strands.
The elasticity of the Jays' plan going forward depended on that single transaction.
latest MLB videos
latest MLB news
- Guerrero sets sights on career homer No. 500
- Big Papi goes on (expletive) leadership rant
- Blue Jays look for elusive victory in Tampa
- In the Zone podcast: Open spot on the Jays
- BoSox activate Youkilis; Sweeney on 7-day DL
- Juror questions McNamee's credibility
- Twins let struggling starter Marquis go
- White Sox sign IF Hudson for rest of season
- MLB Must C: Stanton damages scoreboard
- Lawrie happy to be back in Jays lineup
MLB analysis
Get your tickets to the next game at bluejays.com. Buy now!
headlines
-
Guerrero 'back where I started' -
Kings forgotten at home -
Toronto FC coming apart at the seams -
Kobe's big challenge -
NEWS, ANALYSIS, VIDEO & EXCLUSIVE STREAM







