Vancouver Sun

Jays’ Zaun not about to ease up on players

Jays broadcaste­r ‘brutally honest’

- STEVE EWEN sewen@postmedia.com

When UBC Thunderbir­ds baseball enlisted Sportsnet analyst Gregg Zaun to headline their upcoming fundraiser, they couldn’t have guessed he would come complete with a news angle.

Toronto Blue Jays ace Marcus Stroman took to Twitter recently, stating Sportsnet needs a change in its on-air staff and he “can’t wait to have a home broadcast that defends its home players.”

Toronto struggled this season, finishing 76-86. Zaun, a former big-league catcher, was critical of several Blue Jays, including Stroman.

For instance, he balked at Stroman being overly animated after an April win versus the Los Angeles Angels, explaining: “There’s no reason for it. It’s an unsportsma­nlike way to behave. You just dominated somebody. Just high-five your teammates and go back in the clubhouse and celebrate.”

Zaun, in an interview to promote his Nov. 3 appearance at Boston Pizza on Beatty Street, didn’t mention Stroman specifical­ly when asked about how difficult it is to be hard on players and performanc­es, but it’s probably fair to suggest the one-time Vancouver Canadians right-hander was among those top of mind.

“It gave me a little pause my first year because some of the guys then were former teammates,” said Zaun, 46, who had a 16-year major-league career. “I looked at it two ways: I’m not saying anything that I wouldn’t say to your face as a teammate because I was brutally honest with my teammates and they were brutally honest with me and it’s the network and not the players that pay my bills.

“Now, I don’t feel bad at all. The players today are so thinskinne­d. They’re used to mommy and daddy telling them how pretty they are. I have no problem giving them a dose of reality. And I never criticize the man. It’s my job to analyze the performanc­e. Sometimes it’s good. Sometimes it’s bad. Apparently some of these guys have forgotten that it’s a game of failure, that the best hitters are only successful three of every 10 times. What am I supposed to do? Spin it positive all the time?

“The guys who play the game the right way never have to worry about me. Contrary to some people’s beliefs, I will never forget how hard it is to play the game. I wasn’t a great player. I was an average player at best. But it’s not hard to try to do the right things. It’s never hard to hustle.”

Zaun says he’s close friends with broadcast partner Jamie Campbell and contends their natural rapport means “the hardest part of my job some days is figuring out where Jamie and I are going to eat dinner afterwards.

“I have the second cushiest job in TV sports in Canada,” he continued. “Right after Don Cherry.”

Zaun has drawn comparison­s to Cherry, 83, the Hockey Night in Canada stalwart, for both his blunt assessment­s and some of the outlandish outfits he wears on TV. Zaun says they are friendly and he has called on Cherry for advice.

Zaun does talks like the one he’s doing for UBC across the country in the off-season and says he enjoys them because “there’s such a thirst for baseball knowledge in Canada.”

Tickets are $100. Check out gothunderb­irds.ca for more informatio­n. All proceeds will go toward UBC’s trip to Japan in August 2018. Prizes and silent auction items will be available.

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