Edmonton Journal

Upton should see action against lefties with Jays

- KEN FIDLIN

TORONTO On the occasion of their first trip to Toronto, the San Diego Padres are going to leave a legacy behind when their plane takes off on Wednesday evening.

The Blue Jays and Padres finalized a deal that sent outfielder Melvin Upton Jr. to Toronto in exchange for short-season Class A pitcher Hansel Rodriguez. As part of the deal, the Padres are believed to be paying $17 million of the $22 million owed to Upton through 2017.

While GM Ross Atkins was unwilling to discuss the financials, if the $17-million figure is accurate, it means that after they pay him for the rest of this season, the Jays get Upton virtually free for 2017.

Later Tuesday, the Blue Jays traded right-handed reliever Drew Storen and cash considerat­ions to the Seattle Mariners for reliever Joaquin Benoit. Storen, 28, was 1-3 with three saves and a 6.21 ERA with 32 strikeouts in 38 relief appearance­s with Toronto this season. He was designated for assignment by the Blue Jays on Sunday.

How Upton fits into the Toronto scheme remains to be seen. Atkins made it clear the vision from the front office is that Upton will be in a support role unless circumstan­ces change.

“I would say that we have a very good outfield right now,” said Atkins. “It would likely take an injury for him to turn into an everyday outfielder with us. He could possibly play every day but that would mean coming in in the seventh inning and that would be up to Gibby (manager John Gibbons). Having someone who can spell all three of the outfielder­s and complement Zeke (Carrera) very well from a right-handed standpoint works well.”

Gibbons plans to find a way to get Upton’s bat in the lineup against most left-handed starters. On those days, first baseman Justin Smoak would sit, Edwin Encarnacio­n would be at first base and either Upton, Michael Saunders or Jose Bautista would be the DH. Against left-handed pitching this year, Upton has hit .282 with a .913 OPS.

He has played predominan­tly in centre field during his career but it’s expected he would see time in all three outfield spots with the Jays, operating more or less as a fourth outfielder.

Upton is a quality defender and his presence will no doubt relegate Ezequiel Carrera to fifth-outfielder status, yet Gibbons says he can still find a role for him as well.

As an offensive weapon, Upton has never quite lived up to his advance billing over the course of his 12-year career that started in Tampa Bay. He has a career .245 batting average with 1,512 strikeouts in 5,027 career at-bats.

He has some power, topping out at 28 home runs in 2012, his last year in Tampa Bay. His best asset is speed on the basepaths, a commodity that the Jays do not have, beyond Kevin Pillar and Carrera. This year, he has stolen 20 bases for the Padres and figures to add some value in that area. He also has 16 home runs and, given the friendlier confines of the Rogers Centre as compared to cavernous Petco Park, he could be some help there.

Rodriguez, just 19, has been in the Blue Jays organizati­on for three seasons. He is 2-1, with a 3.06 ERA this year at Bluefield of the Appalachia­n League. A native of the Dominican Republic, Rodriguez has a career record of 3-6, with a 4.61 ERA.

Talks regarding a deal for Upton began back in the middle of June when Bautista went on the disabled list with a case of turf toe

“We’ve been talking with San Diego since then because we thought that he would have complement­ed us well then,” said Atkins. “It finally got to the point that the acquisitio­n cost was right this week. We’re adding depth and control at a price we’re comfortabl­e with.”

 ??  ?? Melvin Upton Jr.
Melvin Upton Jr.

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