Thursday, 1 October 2015

Blue Jays Clinch AL East....Finally!

  
              It was somewhat of an anti-climactic ending considering the excitement that has been generated over the past few months, but when Toronto Blue Jays’ catcher Russell Martin squeezed the foul tip off the bat of Baltimore’s Ryan Flaherty in his glove, the wait was finally over.
                Toronto’s 15-2 win over the Orioles in the first game of a double-header on Wednesday, clinched the American League East Championship for the Jays, their first in a long 22 seasons. Back in 1993, for a franchise that had won five AL East crowns in nine years, and four of those in the last five of those nine years, it would have seemed unfathomable that the team would have to wait more than two decades before drinking from the post-season cup again.
                And no one could have predicted at the end of July (on the 28th of that month, they were 50-51, eight games behind the Yankees) that on the final day of September, the Jays would be dancing onto the field in celebration of a division championship.
                But I’m sure you’ve read everything that can be written about the division title, the rout of the Orioles and the length of time the Blue Jays and their fans have had to suffer one disappointment after the other. I’m not about to add to that.
                What I would like to do is to give some thought as to where the 2015 division championship ranks in comparison to the other five, as a Blue Jays’ fan. I’m sure everyone will have their opinion, and some might not even be old enough to remember all or even one of the previous five titles. But here are my thoughts.
                Now, I’m talking AL East championships here, not World Series titles. I believe the 1992 and 1993 division crowns, and to some extent the 1991 title, were not met with as great a sense of accomplishment as they should have been and therefore are ranked in the bottom half of the six. But that’s because so much more was expected of those teams in the early 90s. The regular season was just a prelude to more drama and more expectations in the post season. World Series Championships were expected and, given the fact that AL East banners were coming with such frequency, most media and fans adopted a ho-hum approach when the Jays won their division.
                I would rank the 1991 division crown ahead of the other two in the nineties, simply because the game in which they clinched, they came from behind and scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning. When Joe Carter singled up the middle against the California Angels’ Bryan Harvey to drive in Roberto Alomar with the winning run, it marked the only time the Jays had won the division on a walk off hit. The clincher in 1992 ended on an infield pop up to first baseman John Olerud and the 1993 game, played on a wet and cold night in Milwaukee before a few thousand fans, ended on a double play.
                The 1985 division championship can’t be ranked anything but number one. It was the first in the team history, after only nine seasons in the league. Expansion teams back in the 1970s didn’t have as easy a road to building their teams as did the Florida Marlins and Arizona Diamondbacks did in the nineties. The Jays were basically just a group of cast-offs with only a fistful of players who were true major leaguers. The 1985 team was built from the ground up, and still has the team record for wins in a season (99).
                So that leaves the 1989 team, that bears a little bit of resemblance to this year’s squad. I say little bit because the 1989 team was ten games out of first place in the beginning of July. They went on a run as well, but not nearly to scale that the 2015 team did, and the 89 Jays also had the luxury of playing in a weak division and only needed 89 wins to win the title. If it weren’t for slump by the first place Baltimore Orioles at the end of July and in the month of August (19-24 while the Jays were 26-14 over that time) Toronto likely would not have won that season.
                Therefore I would put the 2015 division championship second on the team’s list. While the comeback reminds me of 1989, this year’s team is much more talented. The starting pitching is better, the bullpen a little lagging but sufficient and the offense is the best in the team’s history. Only time will tell if they have as much success as the 1992 and 1993 teams.
                But for now, let’s just enjoy the moment. It took a while to get here. Well worth the wait, though.

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