L K
Active member
Saint Nik said:Dustin Parkes, fast becoming my favourite Blue Jays writer, has this terrific article about the "need" for a closer.
http://blogs.thescore.com/mlb/2011/11/10/theres-no-need-to-spend-money-on-a-proven-closer/
First of all, of the 25 blown saves that Blue Jays relievers committed last season, three times two blown saves occurred in the same game. Of the 23 games in which a blown save occurred, seven of those games still resulted in a Toronto Blue Jays victory. Of the sixteen losses resulting from a blown save, only half of the blown saves occurred in the ninth inning or later, when a ?proven closer? type would be more likely to have been used. Of the eight saves blown in the ninth inning or later, two were blown by non-closers who were only pitching because the closer wasn?t available. This leaves us with six losses in which the team?s closer blew a save or was taken out of the game in the ninth inning and the replacement reliever blew a save.
That I will agree with...but I wouldn't be opposed to adding a guy at the top of the pen which helps push guys back down a slot or two. They need a few arms added to the bullpen to improve it and if they can get a guy who's reasonably affordable (obviously don't break the bank to sign Papelbon) it adds to the depth, even if it's for the generally over-valued closer.
Say they went after Huston Street and ran a closing platoon of Street and Francisco. One closes, the other is the 8th inning guy. That pushes Janssen down to be a guy who can bridge the 6th/7th inning more often. Adding depth never hurts the pen. They also need a good 2-3 inning guy and it probably wouldn't hurt to have another 6th starter in the bullpen either.