Vancouver Sun

More and more, these Blue Jays are Gibby’s team

- STEVE SIMMONS ssimmons@postmedia.com twitter.com/simmonsste­ve

DUNEDIN, Fla. — On the last day of spring training in Florida, John Gibbons stands strong, confident and yet somehow alone in a position he didn’t expect to find himself in, the winner and suddenly new champion of almost all the important baseball decisions.

There is no lame duck beside his name.

Gibbons may be nobody’s man on this Blue Jays team, having not been hired by general manager Ross Atkins or team president Mark Shapiro, but more than ever before it seems he is clearly his own man.

And on Wednesday morning, when he announced that Roberto Osuna would again close games for the Jays, he could have said something else that wasn’t included.

He could have said — this is my team and if I’m going down (which he isn’t) — he’s going down doing things his way.

His team. His time. His decisions. A manager on an island winning thus far in the Blue Jays board room.

Alex Anthopoulo­s, who he was beholden to, is gone. Anthopoulo­s was the only reason Gibbons was managing the Jays. Paul Beeston, who had to sign off on his surprising return years back, is happily in retirement. Gibbons came to this spring training truly unsure of what anyone thought of him, with a new contract and a little less security in hand, not knowing the way of his new bosses.

But in a private moment Wednesday, he must have cracked open a cold one and appreciate­d that his word isn’t just being considered around here. It’s being respected and more than considered. The two big roster decisions of the spring — who would be the final starting pitcher named and who would end up closing games — are done, as is the final roster, and both went Gibbons’ way.

Gibbons wanted Aaron Sanchez in the starting rotation and Sanchez pitched his way into that role. The decision to move Sanchez from the bullpen to a starting spot was something Gibbons favoured from the beginning. But not everyone did. In fact, there was some thought actually given to sending Sanchez to Buffalo and have him begin in Triple-A as a building starting pitcher. Gibbons sees this club differentl­y than past Blue Jays teams, and won’t necessaril­y say so, but must see his role enhanced as well. He has less security and more say.

“My first go-round, we were hopeful about the team, but you knew everything had to go just right (to win). As far as this team goes, we did it last year. It’s basically the same. We expect to do something again,” said Gibbons.

“This is a unique group. I’ve got a lot of trust in these guys.”

And as the new season is about to begin, it appears this management group has a lot of trust in Gibbons.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Blue Jays have followed through with manager John Gibbons’ roster preference­s for opening day.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Blue Jays have followed through with manager John Gibbons’ roster preference­s for opening day.

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