Friday, March 23, 2012
Bad Day For Pitchers
For the following three American League East pitchers it has been a really bad day, mostly because of poor, poor decisions they have made:
1. After a trampoline accident Joba Chamberlain has a bone sticking out of his ankle.
2. Bobby Jenks got arrested after deciding to get drunk, then drive an automobile, damage some property and flee the scene.
3. The normally well behaved Matt Bush got arrested after getting drunk, driving, running down a 72 year old man on a motorcycle and fleeing the scene.
Update: Add another pitcher to the list of having a bad day as Joakim Soria has opted to undergo season ending Tommy John surgery. Given the kind of day it has been, I wouldn't be surprised to hear Chris Carpenter is also done for the season, not to mention potential bad news for Ryan Madsen and Brian Wilson.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Playing General Manager
According to Danny Knobler of CBS Sports the Orioles are shopping Mark Reynolds and Kevin Gregg. My initial reaction was, of course they are, they are the OriLOLes and who would want those stiffs. Then I got thinking a little more, put on my GM hat and thought to myself 'self, would the Blue Jays be in a better position if they traded Adam Lind for Mark Reynolds?'
Adam Lind has a very team friendly contract at $5 million for this year and next, then team friendly options for 2014 through 2016. However, there is a real chance that he isn't a very good player and the team may be better off just getting out of the contract altogether.
Mark Reynolds, the king of the strike out, has a $7.5 million contract for this year with an $11 million team option for 2013 (with a $500,000 buyout). Reynolds hasn't hit much either for the past couple of seasons, however, the man still knows how to take a walk, and hit plenty of home runs. Because of this, he has been slightly more valuable over the past two seasons than Lind (0.9 rWAR vs. 0.3 rWAR). However, if you take Mark Reynolds off of 3rd base and stick him at 1st base, this might absorb some of the impact that his -2.5 dWAR had last season, and the Jays could find themselves with a 3 WAR value player.
I think if I'm the general manger of the Blue Jays I'd at least put in a call and offer Lind straight up for Reynolds.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
2012 Season Preview: Toronto Blue Jays
Note: This article was supposed to be the third part of a series for Baseball Digest, however, the site folded before it was ever published, therefore I'm posting it here three weeks after it was written. Enjoy!
2011 Review
In 2011 the Toronto Blue Jays finished out of the playoffs for the 18th consecutive season finishing 4th in their division with 81 wins and 81 losses. However, all was not doom and gloom for this team as the season was filled with positives such as the emergence of Canadian born Brett Lawrie, a repeat Hank Aaron award winning season for Jose Bautista and continued stockpiling of the farm system by GM Alex Anthopolous.
2012 Preview
There are remarkably few positions on the Toronto Blue Jays up for the taking this year, the rotation looks set, the revamped bullpen is full, and the only position on the field that could be up for grabs is left fields and even then the team has identified a clear front runner. Therefore, let’s take a quick look at the projected 25 man opening day roster:
The Rotation
- Romero, Ricky - The ace
- Morrow, Brandon – The guy who has the stuff to be the ace
- Alvarez, Henderson – The rookie coming off a strong 10 game audition in 2011
- Cecil, Brett – The guy looking to rebound and winner of this spring training’s “best shape of his life” award
- McGowan, Dustin – The remarkable talent without any remaining ‘options’
The Starter – On Deck
It has been said by numerous prognosticators and minor league evaluators that the Toronto Blue Jays have the greatest depth of minor league talent of any team in baseball and their strength is pitching. However, there aren’t that many we can expect to make an impact this season. One player who could play a role is Kyle Drabek who is coming off a disappointing season in both the majors and the minors, but with his talent it’s too early to give up on him yet, and with any young pitcher you never know when the light bulb turns on and he finally gets it.
The Bullpen
- Sergio Santos – The closer everyone wanted
- Francisco Cordero – The closer no one wanted in spite of great numbers last season, so he signed as a set up man
- Darren Oliver – The LOOGY, but not really (have you seen his splits? Under a .600 OPS against vs. Both lefty’s and righty’s)
- Casey Janssen – The stud from last season
- Jason Frasor – The Jays all time leader in appearances for a pitcher was reacquired in the off-season because we just couldn’t get enough of him
- Carlos Villanueva – The stud reliever who’s numbers get watered down every year because of mediocre spot starts
- Luis Perez – The guy who shouldn’t have a spot on the roster but there is a rule that all bullpens must have two lefty’s
I’ve left Jesse Litsch off the bullpen roster, who otherwise should be there. However he has recently been shut down due to shoulder inflammation, including having a visit to the dreaded Dr. James Andrews.
The Starting Infield
- Adam Lind (1B) – It seems everyone in Toronto has given up on this guy, but I still have hope
- Kelly Johnson (2B) – Underrated, or is he? Yes, yes he is! I think? Oh who the hell knows what to expect from him?
- Yunel Escobar (SS) – Someone said that Yunel is the best shortstop in the American League and my immediate reaction was disbelief. But then I couldn’t name anyone better than him?
- Brett Lawrie (3B) – The franchise! No pressure kid
The Starting Outfield
- Eric Thames – I expect big things this year from Thames, and not just because he showed up to camp with arms the size of my head. Although, many others think Travis Snider should be starting over him
- Colby Rasmus – With Tony LaRussa out of his head could this be the year he takes off? Probably not, but he should be better than last season
- Jose Bautista – The home run king who should have won the American League most valuable player award last season
The Designated Hitter
- Edwin Encarnacion – He put up monster numbers last season when he started at DH, let’s hope the team doesn’t need to put him anywhere else this season
The Bench
- Travis Snider – He may start the season in the minors so that he can play every day, however because he may also be the team’s starting left fielder, I’m leaving him on the roster
- Rajai Davis – I love having a guy like this on the bench!
- Jeff Mathis – The no hit, back-up catcher guy
- Omar Vizquel – The veteran presence on the bench
- Ben Francisco – The player acquired during the off season that didn’t make a lot of sense?
The Minors
As I mentioned above the Toronto Blue Jays minor league system is one of the highest rated in baseball, which is greatly due to its depth of talent. However, while there are many that could break out and become elite prospects this season, it is hard to pin point anyone that I would consider a “can’t miss” prospect (sorry Travis D’Anraud). I also don’t think there is really anyone in the minor leagues that will have a major impact with the big club in 2012, as almost all of the decent prospects are at least a year away. If I had to pick someone to make an impact with the Blue Jays this season, I suspect that it would be a starting pitcher, possibly a Deck McGuire or a Drew Hutchinson.
My Predictions
Blue Jays MVP – Jose Bautista
Blue Jays Ace (pitcher) – Brandon Morrow
Blue Jays's 2012 record – 85-77
Blue Jay's 2012 finish in division – 4th
In Conclusion
It seems this team is fully of guys that could be either elite, or horrible, so it really is difficult to project how they will do. Overall I see this team with fewer holes in their line-up than last season, a lot of young talent that will continue to improve, a much improved bullpen, and specifically I’m projecting better seasons from Brandon Morrow, Colby Rasmus, Kelly Johnson and Adam Lind. Regardless, it will be fun to watch.
Blue Jays logo, courtesy SportsLogos.net.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Blue Jays 2012 Projected Wins
On the weekend I decided to take my lovely wife out for a special Valentines Day dinner and a movie. Given that it took us until the last minute to find a sitter for our two children it didn't leave me any time to make dinner reservations...big mistake. We got to the restaurant strategically located close to the theatre and unfortunately the wait time for a table was much too long if we wanted to make it to the movie in time, so we decided to go elsewhere. Of course being the Saturday before Valentines Day everywhere we went there were no tables available. After finally ending up eating at a quicky soup and sandwich place, because there was just no time at left for anything else, we gobbled down our mediocre sandwiches and rushed back to the movie theater. The movie we settled on, being Valentine's Day weekend and all, was The Vow, which I figured would be pretty much like every other movie of that genre and just entertaining enough that I wouldn't fall asleep. Sometime though, very rarely of course, these types of movies can be surprisingly outstanding. Of course I never got a chance to find out as the movie was sold out and the entire night was a disaster.
As I can relate anything back to baseball this night got me thinking that the 2012 Blue Jays are kind of like the movie The Vow, in that I have very little expectations for this team heading into the season. Most likely this team is going to be middle of the road and just entertaining enough to keep my interest. However, every once in a while a team comes out of nowhere and surprises you in being much better than anyone ever expected. So could the 2012 Blue Jays be one of those teams that surprises everyone, and really what should we be expecting for this season?
Going into the 2012 season the general consensus seems to be that the Toronto Blue Jays likeliest outcome is another 4th place finish behind the Yankees, Rays and Red Sox. In fact, I've been pretty vocal that 2012 should be viewed as a season to figure out what this team really has, and used to determine their biggest needs. It feels like almost everyone on this team outside of Jose Bautista and Ricky Romero could be great, or horrible, making it really difficult to determine what positions are in the greatest need of an upgrade. But what do the numbers say, how many wins should we really be expecting from this team?
Last year I sat down and did this very exercise that I'm about to do today and I used projected Wins Above Replacement (WAR) to forecast the number of wins we should expect from the Blue Jays. I came up with with my own projections bases on my expectations, trending and past results to forecast players WAR values and in the end I came up with the projection that the Blue Jays would win 84 games in 2011. As it turns out if it weren't for a late season stumble I may have been bang on and as it was I wasn't far off as the Blue Jays won 81 games. This season, I'm going to do things a little differently which we will get into a little later, but first I want to look back on 2011 and using players WAR values see how many games the Blue Jays should have won this past season.
Looking Back on 2011
The principle theory behind the Wins Above Replacement (WAR) statistic is that it assigns a specific number of wins (positive or negative) to a player in relation to replacement level talent. Replacement level talent is defined as a combined set of players that would make up a team with a .320 winning percentage, which is equivalent to 52 wins over a 162 game schedule.
Below you will find a list of each 2011 Blue Jays players final season WAR values broken out by position player (table 1) and pitcher (table 2).
Table 1 - Total WAR by Batter for the 2011 Toronto Blue Jays
Player | WAR |
Jose Bautista | 8.5 |
Yunel Escobar | 4.3 |
Brett Lawrie | 2.8 |
Jose Molina | 1 |
Edwin Encarnacion | 1 |
J.P. Arencibia | 0.9 |
Kelly Johnson* | 0.9 |
Corey Patterson* | 0.9 |
John McDonald | 0.9 |
Eric Thames* | 0.8 |
Adam Lind* | 0.7 |
Mike McCoy | 0.5 |
Mark Teahen* | 0.1 |
David Cooper* | 0 |
Jayson Nix | 0 |
Darin Mastroianni | 0 |
Adam Loewen* | -0.1 |
Chris Woodward | -0.2 |
Aaron Hill | -0.4 |
Dewayne Wise* | -0.4 |
Travis Snider* | -0.8 |
Colby Rasmus* | -0.9 |
Rajai Davis | -0.9 |
Juan Rivera | -1.2 |
Total Offense | 18.4 |
Table 2 - Total WAR by Pitcher for the 2011 Toronto Blue Jays
Pitcher | WAR |
Ricky Romero* | 5.9 |
Carlos Villanueva | 1.9 |
Casey Janssen | 1.7 |
Brandon Morrow | 1.4 |
Henderson Alvarez | 1.3 |
Brett Cecil* | 1.2 |
Frank Francisco | 1.1 |
Jason Frasor | 1 |
Jesse Litsch | 0.7 |
Marc Rzepczynski* | 0.7 |
Joel Carreno | 0.5 |
Octavio Dotel | 0.4 |
Zach Stewart | 0.2 |
Shawn Camp | 0.2 |
Jon Rauch | 0.2 |
Chad Beck | 0.1 |
Trever Miller* | 0 |
Mike McCoy | 0 |
P.J. Walters | 0 |
Scott Richmond | 0 |
Dustin McGowan | -0.1 |
Luis Perez* | -0.1 |
David Purcey* | -0.1 |
Danny Farquhar | -0.1 |
Kyle Drabek | -0.3 |
Rommie Lewis* | -0.3 |
Wil Ledezma* | -0.4 |
Jo-Jo Reyes* | -0.6 |
Brian Tallet* | -0.6 |
Brad Mills* | -0.7 |
Total Pitchers | 15.2 |
From the tables above we see that the 2011 Toronto Blue Jays offense (and defense) represented a total of 18.4 wins above replacement level and the pitchers represented 15.2 wins for a combined 33.6 wins above replacement. Add this to the number of wins a replacement level team should win (52 or 51.84 to be exact), and this would suggest that the Blue Jays should have won approximately 85.44 games in 2011. Not that far off from the actual 81 games the team won, however from my limited experience doing these types of exercises I have found that when you add up a teams total player WAR value, it often does result in 3 or 4 more wins than the actual amount.
2012 Projection
This year when projecting each Blue Jays player WAR values, rather than make my own, probably biased, educated guess for each player, I decided to turn to the fine folks of Fangraph who polled the general public of their expectations for the majority of players in baseball. To see the results for the Toronto Blue Jays player projections go to Fangraphs here, or refer to the tables below for the projected WAR values by batter (Table 3) and by pitcher (Table 4).
Note: for any player who didn't have WAR projections for the 2012 season, I projected a repeat of their 2011 WAR value.
Table 3 - Projected WAR Values for Blue Jays 2012 Batters
Hitters | WAR |
Jose Bautista | 7.1 |
Brett Lawrie | 6.1 |
Yunel Escobar | 4.8 |
Kelly Johnson* | 3.8 |
Colby Rasmus* | 3.4 |
J.P. Arencibia | 2.8 |
Travis Snider* | 1.9 |
Adam Lind* | 1.6 |
Edwin Encarnacion | 1.6 |
Eric Thames* | 1.5 |
Jeff Mathis | 0.2 |
Rajai Davis | 0.1 |
Ben Francisco | -0.1 |
Omar Vizquel | -0.5 |
Total Offense | 34.3 |
Table 4 - Projected WAR Values for Blue Jays 2012 Pitchers
Hitters | WAR |
Brandon Morrow | 3.5 |
Ricky Romero* | 3.3 |
Henderson Alvarez | 2.7 |
Darren Oliver | 1.3 |
Brett Cecil* | 1.2 |
Sergio Santos | 1 |
Carlos Villanueva | 1 |
Dustin McGowan | 0.9 |
Casey Janssen | 0.7 |
Jesse Litsch | 0.6 |
Jason Frasor | 0.3 |
Francisco Cordero | 0.2 |
Total Pitching | 16.7 |
From the tables above we see that the 2012 Toronto Blue Jays projected offense (and defense) represent a total of 34.3 wins above replacement level and the pitchers represent 16.7 wins for a combined 51 wins above replacement. Add this to the number of wins a replacement level team should win (52), and this would suggest that the Blue Jays will win 103 games in 2012.
WTF??
The Blue Jays will win 103 games in 2012!
Something has got to be wrong here. Could someone please look over my numbers as I must have made a mistake, my calculations state that the Blue Jays will win 103 games this year. That this years team is actually the greatest Blue Jays team ever assembled. Next thing you will tell me is that The Vow will be the surprise Oscar winner for best movie.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
The Myth of the Blue Jays Offense
This off-season whenever the discussion turns to dissecting the Blue Jays greatest needs for improvement, on numerous occasions I've heard comments similar to, 'They don't need to improve their offense as they scored the 6th most runs in baseball', 'Their offense is good enough' or 'Their pitching was horrible and was the biggest reason for their lack of success'. Whenever I heard comments like this alarm bells went of in my mind as I suspected these assumptions may be based on faulty information. Therefore today I'd like to delve into the Blue Jays 2011 offensive runs scored and pitching runs allowed, compare them against the rest of the league and see if the common beliefs hold up.
The 2011 Results - Offense
Yes it is absolutely true the Toronto Blue Jays finished finished 6th in baseball in runs scored in 2011, however, with pitchers hitting in the National League you really can't use runs scored as a measure of comparison for teams from the different leagues. Therefore, to compare apples to apples I will only use American League team totals for the purpose of this article, where the Blue Jays finished 5th out of 14 teams in runs scored. Refer to Chart 1 for American League runs scored by team.
Chart 1 - American League Runs Scored by Team
The first thing that stands out to me is that although the Jays did finish 5th in the league in runs, they scored 132 less runs than the league leading Boston Red Sox. Additionally, they only scored 20 more runs than the league average. Thirdly, these totals ignore home park factors and could be misleading.
To combat any park advantage I decided to equalize each teams at home runs scored by taking their 2011 park factors and adjusting each to an equivalent of 1.00. Therefore, once removing home park advantages, the Toronto Blue Jays adjusted total runs scored was 692, which was 31 runs below the league average. Additionally, they now finished 10th out of the 14 teams in adjusted total runs scored.
Therefore, despite the common belief, the above analysis suggests the Blue Jays offense was below average for American League teams in 2011.
The 2011 Results - Pitching
The common belief is that the entire rotation outside of Ricky Romero and 10 starts for Henderson Alvarez, the entire Toronto Blue Jays rotation was a disappointment. Additionally the bullpen couldn't be counted on as they blew a league leading number of saves and Casey Janssen was the only reliable member that had any kind of success. Overall the pitching staff was a disappointment and needs improvement. On the surface the numbers support this argument as Toronto Blue Jays pitchers allowed 761 runs which was the 4th highest total in the American League. Refer to Chart 2 for American League runs allowed by team.
Chart 2 - American League Runs Allowed by Team
Again, the above totals ignore home park factors and when the number of runs allowed at home are adjusted to equalize any advantage/disadvantage, the totals look very different. The 2011 Toronto Blue Jays adjusted total runs allowed is now 706, which is good enough for 8th lowest of the 14 American League teams and 11 fewer runs than the league average number given up. Therefore, since both numbers are now right in the middle of the pack for the American League, you could say that the Jays pitching was league average in 2011.
Therefore, while I believe that both the offense and pitching needs some improvement before we can truly call the Blue Jays a team ready to compete for a playoff spot, the analysis above suggests that it is actually the Blue Jays offense that needs the greatest amount of improvement.
The 2011 Results - Offense
Yes it is absolutely true the Toronto Blue Jays finished finished 6th in baseball in runs scored in 2011, however, with pitchers hitting in the National League you really can't use runs scored as a measure of comparison for teams from the different leagues. Therefore, to compare apples to apples I will only use American League team totals for the purpose of this article, where the Blue Jays finished 5th out of 14 teams in runs scored. Refer to Chart 1 for American League runs scored by team.
Chart 1 - American League Runs Scored by Team
Team | Runs Scored |
Boston | 875 |
NY Yankees | 867 |
Texas | 855 |
Detroit | 787 |
Toronto | 743 |
Kansas City | 730 |
Baltimore | 708 |
Tampa Bay | 707 |
Cleveland | 704 |
LA Angels | 667 |
Chicago White Sox | 654 |
Oakland | 645 |
Minnesota | 619 |
Seattle | 556 |
Average | 723 |
The first thing that stands out to me is that although the Jays did finish 5th in the league in runs, they scored 132 less runs than the league leading Boston Red Sox. Additionally, they only scored 20 more runs than the league average. Thirdly, these totals ignore home park factors and could be misleading.
To combat any park advantage I decided to equalize each teams at home runs scored by taking their 2011 park factors and adjusting each to an equivalent of 1.00. Therefore, once removing home park advantages, the Toronto Blue Jays adjusted total runs scored was 692, which was 31 runs below the league average. Additionally, they now finished 10th out of the 14 teams in adjusted total runs scored.
Therefore, despite the common belief, the above analysis suggests the Blue Jays offense was below average for American League teams in 2011.
The 2011 Results - Pitching
The common belief is that the entire rotation outside of Ricky Romero and 10 starts for Henderson Alvarez, the entire Toronto Blue Jays rotation was a disappointment. Additionally the bullpen couldn't be counted on as they blew a league leading number of saves and Casey Janssen was the only reliable member that had any kind of success. Overall the pitching staff was a disappointment and needs improvement. On the surface the numbers support this argument as Toronto Blue Jays pitchers allowed 761 runs which was the 4th highest total in the American League. Refer to Chart 2 for American League runs allowed by team.
Chart 2 - American League Runs Allowed by Team
Team | Runs Allowed |
Baltimore | 860 |
Minnesota | 804 |
Kansas City | 762 |
Toronto | 761 |
Cleveland | 760 |
Boston | 737 |
Detroit | 711 |
Chicago White Sox | 706 |
Oakland | 679 |
Texas | 677 |
Seattle | 675 |
NY Yankees | 657 |
LA Angels | 633 |
Tampa Bay | 614 |
Average | 717 |
Again, the above totals ignore home park factors and when the number of runs allowed at home are adjusted to equalize any advantage/disadvantage, the totals look very different. The 2011 Toronto Blue Jays adjusted total runs allowed is now 706, which is good enough for 8th lowest of the 14 American League teams and 11 fewer runs than the league average number given up. Therefore, since both numbers are now right in the middle of the pack for the American League, you could say that the Jays pitching was league average in 2011.
Therefore, while I believe that both the offense and pitching needs some improvement before we can truly call the Blue Jays a team ready to compete for a playoff spot, the analysis above suggests that it is actually the Blue Jays offense that needs the greatest amount of improvement.
Photo courtesy of SI.com
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Why Prince Fielder Will Sign With the Blue Jays
Let me start by saying that I have never thought up until today that there was any real chance that Prince Fielder would sign with the Blue Jays. The team has never given any indication that they would, and I have been the first to tell others that it's not happening. Sure I would daydream every now and then what it would be like to have both Fielder and Jose Bautista in the middle of the Blue Jays line-up, however I never though it would happen, in spite of any reports to the contrary. That is until today, and for no other reason that when I started putting the pieces of the puzzle together in my head I realized that Toronto is really Prince Fielder's only option.
What you say??? What about all the other reports about numerous teams being interested in him. Well, we need to remember he is being represented by Scott Boras who is the king of spinning false interest in his clients and in early December he had even convinced a reporter to break the story that Fielder had narrowed his list of teams down to three, which also happened to included the Blue Jays. Additionally, when you start looking at the teams that are reportedly interested, all of them have denied any interest.
Let's go through the list:
1. Washington
According to MLB.com there's a "99 percent" chance that the Nationals will not sign Prince Fielder. Additional reports suggest that after the Jayson Werth signing last year which is not quite working out the way they expected, they are a bit gun shy to hand out another big contract, and they say the teams situation is settled at first base with Adam LaRoche.
2. Seattle
According to ESPN's Jerry Crasnick Seattle's interest in Fielder is "extremely overblown." and an agent reports are that they only have $3 to $4 million left for this years budget
3. Milwaukee
Prince's former team has moved on and signed Aramis Ramirez instead, and with Francisco Rodriguez accepting arbitration there is little money left to bring back Fielder.
4. Texas
According to Jon Paul Morosi of Fox Sports, if Texas signs Yu Darvish, there is reportedly no money left for Fielder
5. Miami
According to Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports a high ranking official in Miami has stated the team "is not and will not" be pursuing Prince Fielder
6. Baltimore
According to Roch Kubatko of MASN that there is "no way" the Orioles will give Fielder the kind of money he wants, and the teams General Manager Dan Duquette says they won't be players for Fielder.
8. Cardinals
Rather than paying a princely sum, the Cardinals have signed Carlos Beltran instead and Lance Berkman will be the teams 2012 1st baseman
9. Dodgers
The teams general manager Ned Colleti has said the team is likely done spending as "we are at our payroll"
That completes the list of team with reported interest in Prince Fielder, could there be others? Possibly San Francisco, however they have never been linked to Fielder and John Heyman of CBS sports reports that Fielder does not want to go to the West Coast. Maybe Arizona, but they've got Paul Goldschmidt at 1st base who is young, inexpensive and controllable for the next 6 years. I guess you can never count out the Red Sox and Yankees, but their 1st base and DH situations are filled. This really only leaves one team, the Toronto Blue Jays.
Also, the Toronto Blue Jays have never denied interest in Prince Fielder, they have just balked at his asking price and contract term demands. However, if they are the only bidder then Fielder will eventually have to give in to the demands of the Blue Jays and settle for a maximum 5 year deal. After all, Alex Anthopoulos has a value for all players and if a contact for Fielder meets what they believe is his value, and it makes sense for the team, then he's willing to make such moves.
Update: According to the Washington Post the owners of the Washington Nationals met with agent Scott Boras to discuss Prince Fielder, therefore the "99 per cent" chance that he won't sign with the team comment may have been nothing more than posturing. Something that a lot of teams may be doing to try to get the price down.
Update 2: According to Jon Paul Morosi the Blue Jays are "not a serious suitor for Prince Fielder" and that "Price/years would need to come way down". Well the hypothesis of my article is that since apparently no one is interested in Prince Fielder at his current demands, his price/years will have to come way down if he wants to play anywhere next season.
Picture “Photoshopping” courtesy Chris Creamer, baseball card template courtesy Andrew Meyer, via Getting Blanked
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