Journal Pioneer

End of the line

Jays GM confirms slugger Bautista not coming back in 2018

- BY MELISSA COUTO

The Blue Jays won’t be picking up the mutual option on Jose Bautista’s contract for 2018, but GM Ross Atkins wouldn’t rule out the possibilit­y of the all-star slugger returning to Toronto in the future.

Atkins, in a season-ending media availabili­ty at Rogers Centre on Tuesday, said he sat down with Bautista a couple of weeks ago to tell him the option on the contract he signed before the 2017 season would not be picked up.

But while the team won’t be bringing back the 36-yearold right-fielder right now – a move long expected after Bautista struggled through 2017 – Atkins said he was moved by the outpouring of fan support showered on Bautista during his final home game, and that moment will not be the last time he’s celebrated in Toronto.

“Jose’s career, it’s remarkable, and the last home game of the season speaks to what he’s meant to this city and this organizati­on,” Atkins said. “We wanted to make sure that when he comes back here he’s going to be celebrated in a very strong way. That could be in the form of wearing a Toronto Blue Jays uniform again, it could be that he’s traded for or signed in the future at some point, but there will be a day that we make sure we celebrate him in a significan­t way, knowing that he’s going to be celebrated for years by the fans for his accomplish­ments.”

Bautista, a six-time all-star and three-time silver slugger who spent 10 years with the Blue Jays, finished the year with a .203 batting average, 23 homers, 65 RBIs and a franchise-record 170 strikeouts. With an aging roster – the Blue Jays had the American League’s oldest starting lineup last season – Atkins said the plan now is to trend younger. Keeping Bautista would contradict that.

“We’re not getting any younger if we add him to our fold and guarantee him our right-field spot,” Atkins said.

Bautista was far from the only Toronto player that failed to meet expectatio­ns this season. The Blue Jays, who reached the ALCS in back-to-back years in 2015 and 2016, ended 2017 in fourth place in the American League East (17 games back of first-place Boston), leading Atkins to characteri­ze the season as a “massive disappoint­ment.”

Part of Toronto’s struggles had to do with injuries that plagued its position players and rotation from the very start of the season.

Aaron Sanchez pitched just 36 innings over eight starts because of blister and fingernail issues, J.A. Happ missed time with inflammati­on in his throwing elbow, Troy Tulowitzki, Devon Travis, Josh Donaldson and Russell Martin all sat out significan­t stretches of the season, and the team scuffled offensivel­y and defensivel­y with replacemen­t players inserted into everyday roles.

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