Times Colonist

Versatile Biagini may be thrust into starting role with Blue Jays

- MELISSA COUTO

DUNEDIN, Florida — Six months after cracking the Blue Jays’ major-league roster, Joe Biagini had a dream he was back in spring training as an unknown pitcher trying to prove himself.

He still has trouble believing his 2016 success even now.

“You spend 15, almost 20 years dreaming about this and you get in a habit of thinking about making it [to the majors],” Biagini said Tuesday at the team’s spring training clubhouse. “I kept thinking throughout the year, ‘Oh it’ll sink in, it’ll sink in’ and it wasn’t really sinking in.

“In August I had a dream that I was trying to make the team. I woke up and I saw the interior of my apartment in Toronto and I had to take a second and realize, ‘OK I did make the team.’ ”

The 26-year-old right-hander, picked up by the Blue Jays in the Rule 5 draft before last season, became one of manager John Gibbons’s most steady options out of the bullpen. He threw 67 23⁄ innings, striking out 62 batters and allowing just three home runs all year, then followed that up with 7 13⁄ scoreless post-season innings.

It’s because of that success, however, that Biagini’s role with the team has become uncertain. With Toronto in need of starting rotation depth, the organizati­on has plans to stretch Biagini out over the course of the spring.

As Biagini described it, he’s insurance “in case something crazy happens or doesn’t go right or if there’s some sort of spot that opens up.”

“I’m going to be prepared as a possible option but there’s no guarantee on that,” he said. “I think they’re stretching me out early in camp, kind of just maintainin­g that and then preparing me to expect to go into the bullpen or also start if something happens where I need to do that.”

Biagini worked primarily as a starter throughout his minor-league career with the San Francisco Giants before joining Toronto. He was 29-30 with a 4.06 earnedrun average through 89 games — all but three of them starts — over four seasons.

Marco Estrada, who missed a handful of starts with a back injury last year, believes Biagini has what it takes to be an effective starter.

“Oh God yeah, he can definitely start,” Estrada said. “He’s a huge asset. What he did for us last year was incredible.”

 ??  ?? Joe Biagini pitched 7 13⁄ scoreless innings in the post-season last year.
Joe Biagini pitched 7 13⁄ scoreless innings in the post-season last year.

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