Toronto Star

Sleepy GM lands ace, gets Price from Tigers

Jays trade three prospects for two months of top left-hander

- BRENDAN KENNEDY SPORTS REPORTER

Alex Anthopoulo­s could be forgiven for wanting a little shuteye. The Blue Jays general manager has been baseball’s most active executive in the week leading up to Friday’s trade deadline. So when his counterpar­t in Detroit, Dave Dombrowski, hadn’t called him back by the end of Wednesday’s game, Anthopoulo­s decided to head home.

“Figured I’d get a nice, early night’s sleep,” he said.

Fortunatel­y for Jays fans, Anthopoulo­s never got his early night.

Dombrowski eventually called back and, by 3 a.m., Anthopoulo­s had made another stunning trade, acquiring his second superstar this week in an attempt to end the longest post-season drought in profession­al sports.

David Price, the Tigers’ ace lefty, is a game-changer for the Jays, who boast the league’s highest-scoring offence but lacked a front-of-the-rotation starting pitcher. Until now.

“We feel we added a No.1starter and one of the best starters in the game right now,” Anthopoulo­s said Thursday in another of what seem like daily news conference­s.

“We really haven’t had a true No. 1 since Roy Halladay was here. You kind of forget what that was like.”

With Price, a five-time all-star and among the league’s best half-dozen pitchers over the last five seasons, the Jays — who have not made the playoffs since winning back-to-back World Series in 1992 and ’93 — can now be considered true contenders. Alongside Tuesday’s acquisitio­n of star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki, Anthopoulo­s has pulled off two of the biggest trades in franchise history within the same week.

“I did get a text from Jose Bautista with just, ‘Is it true?’” Anthopoulo­s dished to reporters Thursday in a rare, gleeful moment.

“And I said, ‘Yes,’ and he just wrote, ‘Yes’ with about a million exclamatio­n marks.”

But Price, who is a free agent after this season, didn’t come for free, of course. The Jays sent a package of three minorleagu­e pitching prospects the other way, headlined by Daniel Norris, the team’s top prospect and biggest trade chip. The 22-year-old lefty — famous for living in his Volkswagen camper van during spring training — actually broke camp with the Jays this season and made five starts before returning to the minors to refine his mechanics.

Joining Norris in the deal are 24-yearold left-hander Matt Boyd, who made two starts for Toronto this year, and Jairo Labourt, a highly touted 21-year-old who represente­d the Jays in the all-star Futures Game. Both Boyd and Labourt ranked among the team’s top 15 or 20 prospects.

If the Jays fail to make the playoffs this year, there will be much consternat­ion about how much they gave up. While Tulowitzki is under contract through 2020, Price’s time in Toronto could be limited to just a couple of months. Anthopoulo­s himself said earlier this week he is loathe to give up top prospects — who are under team control through their first six major-league seasons — for short-term rentals. He will make an exception, however, for aces like Price. “They can make you a great team all by themselves,” he said.

The Jays entered Thursday trailing the first-place Yankees by seven games and the second wild-card spot by two. Of their 60 remaining games this season, 13 are against the Yankees with another 13 against the teams ahead of them in the wild-card race. So while Anthopoulo­s said he doesn’t agree with the concept of go- ing “all in” — “We’re always focused on the short and the long term,” he said — a path to the pos-tseason is clearly in sight.

“We think we’re a good team and adding a guy like Price I think makes us that much stronger and will give us a chance to win,” he said. “It’s as simple as that.”

This marks the second straight season Price has been dealt at the deadline. The 29-year-old was sent to Detroit last year by the Tampa Bay Rays as part of a three-way deal that cost the Tigers Austin Jackson, Willy Adames and Drew Smyly.

He will likely make his Toronto debut on Sunday, which coincident­ally marks his regular five-day turn and is also where the Jays have a rotation opening. And if not Sunday, he would pitch Monday.

“Excitement at an all-time high. Get to compete and chill with one of my role models in baseball,” injured starter Marcus Stroman tweeted. “See you in September my man!”

“It’s getting hot up in the six!!” tweeted third baseman Josh Donaldson.

Price is owed roughly $7 million for the remainder of this year, which is about what most observers believe was left over in the Jays’ payroll budget for this season. So with still a few hours left until Friday’s 4 p.m. nonwaiver trade deadline, could Anthopoulo­s have another move up his sleeve? “We’re not close to anything,” he said. The smaller deals were put on hold while he landed the big fish. “I have to circle back.”

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