Windsor Star

Union puts Jays on notice over perceived service time tinkering

Decision on Guerrero’s status ‘something we are following,’ source tells Rob Longley.

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The free Vlad Guerrero Jr. movement is not just a groundswel­l limited to frustrated Blue Jays fans anxious to see the top-rated prospect in all of baseball make the team at the end of spring training.

The Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n is monitoring how Jays management is handling Guerrero’s delayed promotion to the big leagues and will make it a prime point of discussion when executive director Tony Clark visits Jays training camp here later in March.

At issue is plans to manipulate Guerrero’s service time to the club’s benefit. A source from the players associatio­n told Postmedia that its concern hasn’t changed from last September, when Guerrero wasn’t among the many players promoted by the Jays for the final month of the season.

“It’s something we are following and it’s going to be an issue,” the players associatio­n source said. “Service time manipulati­on has been a prominent theme that the players associatio­n has emphasized in its talks with Major League Baseball.

“It’s fair to say it has been a prominent issue raised by the players associatio­n.”

When asked about Guerrero specifical­ly, the source re-iterated the statement from last fall, when the players associatio­n was sharply critical of how the Jays are handling their most prized asset and the key to their rebuild. And if the Jays stick with the plan not to have Guerrero on manager Charlie Montoyo’s opening day roster, the concern will heighten.

“The union’s position on service-time manipulati­on is clear,” a statement on the 19-year-old third baseman said. “Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and other great young talents around baseball have earned the right to play on the field for a Major League team. The decision to not bring him up is a business decision. “It’s bad for the Blue Jays. It’s bad for fans. It’s bad for players and it’s bad for the industry.” In an interview with MLB radio earlier this week, Jays general manager Ross Atkins took some heat for comments suggesting the Dominican-raised phenom isn’t ready. You can be sure Clark will reference that and more when he meets here with Atkins and the Jays.

“Our vision is it really comes down to developmen­t, so I just don’t see him as a major-league player, right?” Atkins told MLB Network Radio. “He’s 19.” Of course, there’s a strong chance Guerrero would immediatel­y

be the rebuilding team’s best hitter, but the Jays’ public stance is that they want him to develop fully before promoting him. However, the players associatio­n maintains that holding him back is a clear manipulati­on of service time. That policy dictates that a player who spends 172 days or more on an active roster gets credited with a year of service time, which affects future contract negotiatio­ns.

If the Jays don’t promote Guerrero until mid-April or later, he wouldn’t be eligible for free agency until after the 2025 season.

Atkins addressed the Guerrero situation again Thursday, clarifying what the team sees as developmen­t concerns with the 2018 Minor League Baseball player of the year.

“We’re just trying to maximize and do everything that we can to

do what’s best for him,” Atkins said. “We genuinely feel it would be a disservice to the organizati­on and to Vladdy if we weren’t thinking about it that way: to maximize his full potential.” At various times, the Jays have been concerned about Guerrero’s ability to be an everyday third baseman, an area that he’s been working hard at so far through camp. A big and potentiall­y still growing kid, the Jays are also focused on Guerrero’s fitness. “It’s really about foundation,” Atkins said on the prospect of Guerrero starting the 2019 season at triple-A Buffalo. “His overall foundation will impact his consistenc­y as an offensive player, too, and long-term durability.

“So how can he be the best possible version of himself?” Physically, Guerrero is already incredibly powerful, but at a weight likely more than his listed 200 pounds, the Jays want to keep on top of it with his diet, workout routines and the day-today grind of the game. “There aren’t many young individual­s that are 200-plus pounds at 19 years old,” Atkins said. “He is a physical, physical human being. How do we tap into all of that power? How do we tap into all of that range of motion and agility and not just rely on the fact that, yes, he is a very gifted hitter that is going to hit for a long time.”

Fans and the players associatio­n may have concerns, but Atkins said Guerrero has been understand­ing.

“(He’s handling it) incredibly, incredibly well,” Atkins said. “My interactio­ns with him are as jovial and as fun and as productive as they can be. He’s in a great place mentally.

“We just want to get him in an incredible place fundamenta­lly and physically and mentally.” Guerrero will see plenty of action in Grapefruit League play, which Atkins sees as an important part of his developmen­t. “This will be an incredible developmen­t for him, these 30-plus days and these games that are coming and being exposed to the daily discussion­s with Kendrys Morales and Justin Smoak and Kevin Pillar,” Atkins said. “The daily exposure to the best pitching in the world. That will be incredible exposure and developmen­t for him.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vladimir Guerrero Jr., right, has “earned the right to play” in the majors, according to the MLBPA.
LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vladimir Guerrero Jr., right, has “earned the right to play” in the majors, according to the MLBPA.

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