Calgary Herald

Jays shuffle off to Buffalo for home games

Young stars believe minor league grounds could provide major home field advantage

- ROB LONGLEY rlongley@postmedia.com

Rare would be the Major League Baseball player who makes it to The Show, as the sport’s grandest stage is known, who ever wants to return to a minor league stadium.

But with the Toronto Blue Jays finally settling on a home at Buffalo’s Sahlen Field on Friday, the team’s young core of star players not far removed from those lesser lights will try to manufactur­e a unique home field advantage.

After being turfed from Toronto and the Rogers Centre by the federal government six days earlier and evicted from a possible tenure at PNC Park in Pittsburgh earlier this week by the Pennsylvan­ia legislatur­e, the Jays were finally running out of options.

And with Canada’s only MLB team opening its season on Friday night in St. Petersburg, Fla., it was time to settle on a minor league venue.

“I’ve always thought that one of the greatest things I’ve expressed is, wherever you are, it’s your major league,” Jays president Mark Shapiro said during a conference call held to announce the details of the home away from home.

“The (team’s) consistent messaging is that we will make any environmen­t an advantage for us. The mentality is that they are going to walk into Buffalo and the day they walk in there it’s going to be a competitiv­e advantage for us, that we are excited to be there and we are resilient and strong.”

While that sounds well and good, it may be a different story once the Jays settle in to the home of their Triple-a affiliate Bisons. Most of the team’s young stars — Vlad Guerrero Jr., Bo Bichette, Cavan Biggio and Rowdy Tellez — have all played at Sahlen Field over the past two seasons, but the amenities aren’t what they are like at, for instance, Yankee Stadium.

So could that turn into an advantage? The hungry young Jays are trying to convince themselves that it just might.

“We’re going to take advantage of this as much as we can,” Biggio told Sportsnet 590. “Having the New York Yankees come to a minor league ballpark … I know they’re not going to happy about that.”

To be truthful, neither are the Blue Jays. Buffalo always existed as a fallback for the Jays, and indeed, staff has been on site for a week getting a lay of the land for what work needs to be done.

When what looked like a sure thing with the Pittsburgh Pirates fell apart, Baltimore’s Camden Yards then seemed to be the next possibilit­y but ultimately ended up being a swing and a miss as well, the terms of which Shapiro was reluctant to discuss.

With time and options running out, the team shuffled back to Buffalo and set off a scramble to get the stadium upgraded as much and swiftly as possible. Because of the timing, the Jays will give up two and possibly four home dates, remaining in Washington to play the back end of what would have been a “home and home” series on July 29- 30.

The Jays are scheduled to play host to the Phillies for a threegame series starting on July

31. If Sahlen Field isn’t ready, those games will take place in Philadelph­ia, setting up a Buffalo home opener on Aug. 11, a scenario that would appear to be the likeliest.

In the meantime, upgrades will ramp up to get lighting up to MLB standards, clubhouse and weight room spacing arranged to meet the league’s return to play protocols. Some of the facilities will be built from scratch, others renovated and all done with the mind of re-creating the big league experience as best as possible.

“It is helpful (for) the players who have come there and have played there and know where they are going,” Shapiro said. “There’s going to be an understand­ing of navigating their way, not just in the ballpark but in the city, that’s both a positive and a source of comfort for us.”

Of course, the biggest source of comfort may well be that the Jays will finally have a place to unpack their bags and a semblance of a home in what promises to be a crazy 2020 season.

Guerrero, who played parts of the past two seasons with the Bisons, believes the expansive outfield favours pitchers.

“I think it could actually be an advantage for our pitching,”

Guerrero said through translator Hector Lebron. “It’s a big field, bigger than the one in Toronto, so I think that’s going to be the difference.”

The stadium will play the way that it plays, of course. The field itself has been idle since late last summer and will need some work. And, as has been the case in MLB parks across the league, coronaviru­s accommodat­ions have been made.

It may not be home sweet home, but at least the Jays don’t have to add a 60-game road trip to a season already full of unpreceden­ted inconvenie­nces.

“I’m excited that we finally have a place to go play and we’re done with that,” Montoyo said during a Zoom call. “Let’s focus on the Rays. Let’s focus on the schedule. Now we know.”

Amen to that.

 ?? JEFFREY T. BARNES/AP/FILES ?? The Toronto Blue Jays will play their 2020 home games at Sahlen Field in Buffalo, N.Y, Many of the team’s young stars are familiar with the park from their time with the Triple-a Bisons.
JEFFREY T. BARNES/AP/FILES The Toronto Blue Jays will play their 2020 home games at Sahlen Field in Buffalo, N.Y, Many of the team’s young stars are familiar with the park from their time with the Triple-a Bisons.
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