The Welland Tribune

An underwhelm­ing ’ 17 for the Jays

- ROB LONGLEY

“One down, 161 to blow,” joked a veteran beat guy hoofing it to a tavern in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor after the Blue Jays dropped their season opener in painful fashion.

“This team won’t reach .500 all season,” quipped another. Yuks all around, none of it serious.

It was just gallows humour walking out of Camden Yards not long after the Orioles Mark Trumbo clobbered an offering from then Jays reliever Jason Grilli in the 11th for a walkoff, 3- 2 Baltimore win. Little did we know …

Manager John Gibbons and his team had barely brushed off the dirt from spring training and already they had plunged to a 1- 9 start — worst in franchise history — and never were they to recover.

Injuries. Slumps. Poor fundamenta­ls. More injuries. And ultimately a roster that had lost some of its swagger from back- to- back trips to the post season stumbled to a 76- 86 record, well below even the most pessimisti­c of projection­s.

Much of it was played out in front of a home dome audience that bought into the hype. More than 3.2 million watched the games at the Rogers Communicat­ions Cashbox, the best home attendance in the American League.

Still the low points, like the losses, piled up. From injuries to key players to some spectacula­r blown saves from all- star closer Roberto Osuna ( he had an MLBleading 10) to an offence that had regressed significan­tly form the previous year, it was a long, listless season.

The deeper the struggles went, the more players pressed for answers.

“The fact of it is that frustratio­n, in my opinion, comes from not knowing the answer or not knowing the direction you’re trying to push to,” star third baseman Josh Donaldson told us in a late- season interview. “It’s very easy to go out there in anything you’re doing if you’re having success.

“The time when you really have to check yourself is when things aren’t going your way.”

And now, with pitchers and catchers due to report to Florida in two months, Jays general manager Ross Atkins hasn’t made any significan­t additions this off season, perpetuati­ng a general sense of unease among the team’s followers, especially given how others in the AL East are loading up.

But while fans and players wait to see what unfolds in 2018, let’s rewind on an eventful yet dramatical­ly under- achieving season.

INJURY WARD

Yes, excuse are for you know how, but the Jays were hit particular­ly hard with devastatin­g injuries from the sidelight.

Donaldson and second baseman and would- be leadoff hitter Devon Travis were hampered in spring training, an ominous sign that was to be followed by a total of 25 players spending time on the disabled list.

And the injuries were notable. Donaldson played just 113 games the fewest in his career. Brilliant young starter Aaron Sanchez managed just 36 innings after a persistent blister on his throwing hand never healed.

Catcher Russell Martin had a couple of stints on the DL and shortstop Troy Tulowitzki missed the final two months of the season with an ankle ailment.

Back to the rotation, starters J. A. Happ and Francisco Liriano were sidelined early in the season. And on it went.

The season- long struggles to remain healthy called into question the team’s self- hyped highperfor­mance department, including Donaldson declaring that he’ll take care of his own off- season workout regimen.

STRO SHOW

With his former buddy Sanchez injured and mostly unavailabl­e, it was clear sailing for Marcus Stroman and the Jays resident spokesman for the Chip on the Shoulder Society responded sensationa­lly. He was easily the most reliable of Gibbons’ staff, topping 200 innings for a second consecutiv­e season, finishing with an ERA of 3.09, third best in the AL.

“It was a goal of mine when I got into the league,” Stroman said of the 200- inning mark. “The fact that everyone when I got into the big leagues said I was too short to be a starting pitcher … it shifted from that to ‘ He’s not a durable pitcher.’

“I’m strong. I can throw another 100 innings if I want to.”

Yes, Stroman doesn’t lack in confidence, from the strut, to the shimmy, to his on- mound histrionic­s he puts on a show.

Add an off- season Gold Glove Award — just the second Jays pitcher to capture one — and the diminutive one is walking even taller heading into 2018.

SMOAK SHOW

To think that at this time last year a good percentage of Jays fans across Canada were fuming at having the previously under- achieving switch- hitter as the team’s every day first baseman.

Instead, Justin Smoak had the type of year that was predicted of him since he was a college star at South Carolina. His 38 homers eclipsed his previous best of 20 and he also had career nights in RBI ( 90), plate appearance­s ( 637) and games played ( 158.)

So what clicked for the 31- yearold, who also went to Miami after earning his first trip to the MLB allstar game?

“I feel like at times I chased the numbers earlier in my career,” said Smoak. “I wanted to be the power guy. I wanted to hit 30 homers a year and drive in a hundred runs.

“I wasn’t a baseball player any more. I was searching and trying to be somebody I wasn’t.”

The potential question going forward, of course, is whether Smoak can back up the sensationa­l 2017 numbers. He struggled at the end of the season as he wore down physically ( from the workload and a bum leg) and had just one homer in his last 23 games, zip in his last 14.

LET IT RAIN

Despite the injuries and despite a season limited to just 113 games — hampered mostly by that 38- day stint on the DL in April and May — Donaldson flashed his MVP form through a sensationa­l August and September.

In doing so, it only highlighte­d one of the big decisions awaiting the team and it’s most valuable asset. Donaldson still was able to bang out 33 home runs, making it three consecutiv­e seasons he’s topped 30.

The massive question, of course, is what’s next for the would- be free agent in 2018. Atkins is keeping details of any talks close to the vest while Donaldson has left all doors open, including hit it big in free agency.

“I believe in this organizati­on and I enjoyed my time here,” Donaldson said on the final day of the season. “But on the other side of it, I understand it. I feel like if you’re to ask all 29 other teams, they’d probably say, yeah they’d want to be pretty interested in me as well. That’s my take on it.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Toronto Blue Jays’ third baseman Josh Donaldson makes his way back to the dug out at the end of first inning American League MLB baseball action against the Houston Astros, in Toronto on Sunday, July 9.
CHRIS YOUNG/ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Toronto Blue Jays’ third baseman Josh Donaldson makes his way back to the dug out at the end of first inning American League MLB baseball action against the Houston Astros, in Toronto on Sunday, July 9.

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