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OOTP Dynasty Reports Tell us about the OOTP dynasties you have built! |
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#1 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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Nice to Meet Yu: A whirling Darvish hits Toronto [2012 Toronto Blue Jays]
A little bit of disclosure off the top here: this is my first attempt at a dynasty using OOTP, having just picked the game up when it was on sale most recently. As such, I'm still doing my best to get totally familiar with everything. I'm totally excited to dig in and hope I can provide something here that people will want to read. Anyway, on with the show!
Dynasty Settings:
Dynasty Concept: Being a Blue Jays fan, I entered the 2012 season with the belief that Toronto could feasibly compete for one of the two wild card spots and potentially play some meaningful baseball in September for the first time since they won back-to-back titles in 92-93. Yes, I bought into the pre-season hype. Unfortunately, injuries took hold, key contributors didn't play up to the level that was expected of them and Ricky Romero went from being a solid #2 or #3 option on most teams (but de facto "ace" of Toronto's staff) to a guy who looked like he shouldn't have finished the year in the majors. Lack of pitching depth was clearly one of the downfalls of this team, and it certainly made me wonder how things might have been different if the Texas Rangers hadn't outbid Toronto and the Blue Jays had been able to acquire Yu Darvish. To that end, this dynasty will begin under the following auspices:
My formatting may fluctuate based on readers' opinions and suggestions, so by all means speak up if you have something to say. I hope this soon-to-be wild ride is enjoyable for everyone involved, and our next stop is the postseason! ...whether that happens in 2012 or not will remain to be seen, I think, but that's neither here nor there. Let's begin! |
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#2 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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Reserved for annual results
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#3 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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March 27-April 5, 2012
![]() March 27, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Baseball World Shocked by Resignation of Toronto GM Anthopoulos After bringing a boatload of excitement to Toronto with the signing of Japanese pitching sensation Yu Darvish a few months ago, the baseball world was shocked today by the sudden resignation of Blue Jays general manager Alex Anthopoulos. Reading from a prepared statement, Anthopoulos was as characteristically vague about his reasons for leaving as he typically was in his dealings with the media and other major league executives. "This day isn't about my resignation, it's about leaving the Toronto Blue Jays organization in the best possible position moving forward. My reasons for leaving are wholly personal and won't be disclosed to the public," Anthopoulos said, before introducing his successor, seated to his right. "The future of Blue Jays baseball is in good hands with my colleague and the new general manager of the Toronto Blue Jays, Winston Neumayer." What followed was arguably the standard in new GM introductory press conferences, replete with glowing praise for his predecessor, confidence in the team's prospects and a firm stated plan. The only difference being that such press conferences don't generally come barely a week before the season opener, and Neumayer was quick to acknowledge this fact. "The timing certainly isn't the greatest, but it couldn't be helped. We want to thank Alex for all the hard work he put into the organization. He's put the building blocks in place that are putting us well on the road to consistent contention." When asked if he could handle the job, Neumayer was blunt, "That's why they hired me. If I wasn't qualified I wouldn't be standing here." Time will tell how the Blue Jays will do with Neumayer at the helm, but for now it's hard to feel anything but some sense of confusion until the reasons for Anthopoulos leaving are eventually revealed. ![]() March 28, 2012 Bradley J. Michaels, MLB Insider 2012 AL East Preview: Toronto Blue Jays 2011 Record/Finish: 81-81, 4th Place in AL East Manager: John Farrell (2nd season; 81-81) Arrivals: RHP Yu Darvish (Free Agency), RHP Sergio Santos (Trade, CHW), RHP Francisco Cordero (Free Agency), RHP Jason Frasor (Trade, CHW), LHP Darren Oliver (Free Agency), IF Omar Vizquel (Free Agency), OF Ben Francisco (Trade, PHI), CA Jeff Mathis (Trade, LAA) Departures: RHP Jon Rauch (Free Agency), CA Jose Molina (Free Agency), RHP Frank Francisco (Free Agency), OF Dewayne Wise (Free Agency), RHP Nestor Molina (Trade, CHW) Projected Rotation:LHP Ricky Romero, RHP Yu Darvish, RHP Brandon Morrow, RHP Henderson Alvarez, RHP Kyle Drabek Bullpen: RHP Sergio Santos, RHP Francisco Cordero, RHP Jason Frasor, LHP Darren Oliver, RHP Casey Janssen, RHP Carlos Villanueva Regulars: SS Yunel Escobar, 3B Brett Lawrie, RF Jose Bautista, 1B Adam Lind, DH/1B Edwin Encarnacion, CF Colby Rasmus, CA J.P. Arencibia, 2B Kelly Johnson Positional Battles: Left Field (Travis Snider, Ben Francisco) Role players: CA Jeff Mathis, IF Mike McCoy, IF Omar Vizquel, OF Rajai Davis Rundown: Prior to his sudden resignation on Tuesday, Alex Anthopoulos quietly rebuilt the farm system in Toronto and changed the atmosphere since his hiring as General Manager in 2009. The club is now left in the hands of newcomer Winston Neumayer, who has been toiling in a number of front-office jobs in Toronto but for all intents and purposes is an unknown quantity. Whether the appointing of a rookie GM to take over a team with lofty expectations and aiming for their first whiff of playoff baseball in more than a decade remains to be seen. The bullpen has been dramatically remade since the end of 2011—when they led the AL in blown saves–with the acquisitions of emerging closer Sergio Santos, veteran Francisco Cordero and the return of past bullpen anchor Jason Frasor. Offensively, the Jays finished 6th in runs scored and 10th in slugging percentage in 2011, and the prospect of further development from young starters Brett Lawrie, J.P. Arencibia and Colby Rasmus looks to keep them at that same level. The big question going into the season is whether one of Adam Lind or Edwin Encarnacion, who have ranged from unimpressive to staggeringly disappointing over the last two years, can provide some measure of protection for 2-time home run leader Jose Bautista. For the Jays to truly contend, however, one of Travis Snider, Ben Francisco or Eric Thames (who starts the year in AAA after Travis Snider's phenomenal showing in Spring Training) will have to take the reins in left field and run with it to provide at least league average production from the other corner. The top of their rotation looks to be solid, with newcomer Yu Darvish slotting in at #2 behind incumbent ace Ricky Romero, taking a bit of the pressure off of Brandon Morrow to continue his progress into the inning-eating strikeout machine the Blue Jays envisioned when they acquired him from Seattle. Otherwise, they'll be faced with another middling season at the .500 mark or lower, perpetually stuck in fourth place in the AL East. Breakout Candidate: Sergio Santos could become one of the game's dominant closers. Rookies to Watch: CA Travis d'Arnaud, OF Anthony Gose, SS Adeiny Hechavarria Predicted Record/Finish: 72-90, 4th Place in AL East ![]() April 1, 2012 Joan C. Ramirez, Phillies Beat Reporter Victorino Signs For 6 Years ![]() April 4, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Blue Jays Add Pieces, Land Oswalt and Kendall Team insiders were tight-lipped prior to today's deal that brought 34-year-old starting pitcher Roy Oswalt to Toronto for $8M in 2012 with a $10M team option for 2013. Oswalt is considered one of the league's A-list players and certainly will enhance any chances the Blue Jays have to win a playoff spot this year. "There's been a lot of talk about tumult in Toronto since Mr. Neumayer came on the job, but the bottom line for me was looking at this roster and the commitment the front office has to contending for the playoffs, it was an easy decision to commit to being a part of the Blue Jays this year," Oswalt said. "I'm prepared to be here for two years, and fully expect us to be playoff-bound both years. We'll see how the year goes." "Roy gives us a 5-man rotation that I feel stacks up favourably against any rotation in the league," Jays GM Winston Neumayer said when asked by reporters how the signing of Oswalt improved his team. "With 5 starters who we feel have the stuff to go deep into games on a regular basis, how can I not be thrilled?" Meanwhile, the addition of 37-year-old Jason Kendall on a $1M deal for 2012 looks to be a low-risk signing for Neumayer to shore up the lineup against lefties and provide some additional catching depth at the major league level, limiting the danger of rushing top catching prospect Travis d'Arnaud to the big leagues before he's ready. In order to free up spots on the 25-man roster, Toronto sent Kyle Drabek down to AAA Las Vegas, where he figures to anchor their rotation and start knocking on the door at some point during the season, while waiving 25-year-old starter Joel Carreno and designating him for assignment. If he clears waivers he figures to slot into the rotation in Las Vegas as well. ![]() April 5, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Romero Gets Opening Day Start, Confident of Team's Prospects For the second consecutive year left-hander Ricky Romero will take the mound for opening day as Toronto visits the Cleveland Indians. Coming off a 15-11 season in 2011 with a 2.92 ERA, excitement was evident in the 27-year-old's voice about the game. "I'm just excited to get out there and start winning ball games," he said. "We've got a fun, exciting young group here and we're going to keep the teams ahead of us in the standings looking over their shoulders all year." When asked about the additions of recent acquisition of Roy Oswalt, Romero spoke of the level of confidence a strong rotation would give the positional players during the long grind of the MLB season. "I started watching Roy work out when I heard the rumors of us signing him, and he's still got he stuff to be a #1 guy on a lot of teams. Having that veteran presence is going to help us out in spades," he said. "I've been working on my Japanese a bit to try and understand Yu [Darvish] a bit more, but it's honestly not going very well. Luckily, the way he pitches says a lot more than my attempts at speaking his language does." ![]() April 5, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Question Marks Abound as Blue Jays Enter Season of Promise As we enter the 2012 MLB season the Toronto Blue Jays probably have more uncertainty than a lot of the clubs out there. If the Jays are to compete for the playoffs in 2012, there are three things they need answers to right away: 1) Left Field. One way or another, the situation in left field has to be resolved. Whether the answer is perpetually rubber-banded Travis Snider (who enters the season as the everyday left fielder), Eric Thames (who was outplayed by Snider in Spring Training and will start the year in AAA Las Vegas) or some combination of veterans Rajai Davis and Ben Francisco, the Blue Jays need the revolving door in the corner of their outfield settled. And if none of those options work, Winston Neumayer needs to have the resolve to go out and plug that hole, even if it means upsetting a particularly vocal part of Toronto's fanbase who have backed Snider for years. 2) Brett Lawrie. The youngster put up scorching numbers in 2011 after being called up, with a slash line of .293/.373/.580 in 43 games. Expectations are high that he'll put up those kind of numbers over a full season and keep incumbent home run champ Jose Bautista in right field where he's most comfortable, but it's easy to forget that he's only 22 and may have some maturing to do. 3) Pitching. Both the starting rotation and the bullpen have been totally remade in the offseason, and with such a high level of turnover comes the potential for the group not to mesh. From an objective standpoint, Toronto's pitching corps is a definite upgrade over the 2011 model with the additions of Yu Darvish, Roy Oswalt, lefty-specialist Darren Oliver and closer Sergio Santos. The question is, can they deliver? Last edited by Daletiel; 10-22-2012 at 11:32 PM. |
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#4 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Spencerville, ON, Canada
Posts: 25,870
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Reading along!
(Does everyone who plays the 2012 Jays sign Oswalt? I know I did...) |
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#5 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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Thanks for the support! In terms of Oswalt, I almost feel like any team that has budget room and a need for starting pitching goes after him. There's really no reason not to, and budget room for a year or two is a bit more palatable than giving up assets.
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#6 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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Week 1: April 6-13
![]() April 6, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Romero Implodes in 4th, Jays Lose in Walk-Off Fashion ![]() April 8, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Bluebirds Even Record, Encarnacion Day-to-Day ![]() April 8, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Darvish Shaky in North American Debut as Jays Triumph The Toronto Blue Jays spent $112 million and waited 82 days for Yu Darvish to make his major league debut. Despite some first-game jitters, the 25-year-old Osaka native anchored Toronto's effort in a 9-5 victory in Cleveland last night. "When I stepped on the mound for the first time, I felt calm and my mind felt calm," Darvish said through an interpreter. "My body felt like it wanted to go, go, go. It took everything I had to rein it in and keep focused. I felt like I placed my pitches well and gave us a good chance to win. I would have enjoyed making it all the way to the end, but by the 9th I was pretty exhausted. It's nice to have someone like Sergio behind me to come in and shut the door." Darvish pitched 8 innings, giving up 6 hits while striking out 8 in his debut. The three home runs he gave up to the Indians could be construed as troubling, but manager John Farrell seemed unconcerned, chalking it up to nerves. "It was Yu's first game. Of course there would be some emotion affecting him, but he was pitching phenomenally through 5, and even with the homers he was still great with his pitch placement. Once he has a few games under his belt to get comfortable I think the sky's the limit on how well he'll do." Toronto's offense was driven by a 3rd inning Grand Slam courtesy of third baseman Brett Lawrie, after Cleveland starter Derek Lowe gave up three straight singles to begin the inning. Lowe was swiftly given the hook after the slam, lasting a mere two innings and giving up 5 runs off 8 hits. Right fielder Jose Bautista left the game in the 5th with what sources are calling a torn meniscus. He'll be out of the lineup until early July. Ben Francisco is expected to start in right field with veteran infielder Chris Woodward being called up to take the open roster spot. The Blue Jays will look to rely more on Edwin Encarnacion, who will slide down to Bautista's usual #4 spot in the lineup, while their offensive leader is out. ![]() April 9, 2012 Bradley J. Michaels, MLB Insider Bad News for Toronto, Bautista Out For Two Months The fanfare of Yu Darvish's first start yesterday was overshadowed by grim news on the injury front as slugger Jose Bautista left the game on a botched defensive play in the 5th inning of Toronto's 9-5 victory over the Cleveland Indians. Team doctors met with the 31-year-old to evaluate the injury and discovered the problem to be a torn meniscus. He'll be out for two months. ![]() April 9, 2012 Chuck Scholten Injured Slugger Named AL Player of the Week ![]() April 10, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Morrow Fans 9, Gives Up 3 Homers as Jays Win Slugfest ![]() April 10, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Francisco Making the Most of Opportunity ''You never want to see a teammate get knocked out of the lineup, but I'm just doing what it takes to keep us rolling until Jose [Bautista] comes back,'' Blue Jays outfielder Ben Francisco said, and if his first two games are any indication he plans to make good on his statement. Francisco has smacked three home runs in the first two games Bautista has been out, and while experts are sure he'll regress to his career averages, Blue Jay fans are hoping he'll be able to keep up the slugging until Bautista returns. Toronto acquired the outfielder during the Winter Meetings in December from the Phillies for a player to be named later, and entered the season fighting with Rajai Davis to be the fourth outfielder. With the injury to Bautista, he has stepped into the starting lineup, leaving Davis with sole possession of 4th outfielder/pinch hitting/running duties. ![]() April 11, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Alvarez Atrocious, Toronto Comeback Falls Short ![]() April 11, 2012 Bradley J. Michaels, MLB Insider Snider Hits DL, Thames Gets Called Up ![]() April 11, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Lester Befuddles Toronto ![]() April 12, 2012 Randy Triana, Tigers Beat Reporter Verlander Out 4 Months Last edited by Daletiel; 10-26-2012 at 12:20 PM. Reason: Incorrect score |
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#7 | |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Spencerville, ON, Canada
Posts: 25,870
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Quote:
I think you might have the score wrong there. ![]() |
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#8 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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#9 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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Week 2: April 13-19
![]() April 14, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter 9th Inning Comeback Falls Short, Jays Lose Third Straight ![]() April 15, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Losing Streak Snapped in 10 Inning Thriller, Santos Goes Down ![]() April 16, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Morrow Gives Up 3 Home Runs, Jays Still Manage to Hang On ![]() April 18, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Rays Decimate Jays 16-2 ![]() April 18, 2012 Viola Garcia, Blue Jays Minor League Correspondent Syndergaard Hears From Medical Staff, Out For Season ![]() April 19, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Blue Jays Lose Squeaker in 12, Look to Avoid Sweep Tomorrow ![]() April 19, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Karma Swings Back 'Round, Jays Avoid Sweep in an Ugly One |
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#10 |
Minors (Single A)
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 80
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Week 3: April 20-26
![]() April 21, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Darvish Notches First Complete Game of Career, Jays Trounce Royals ![]() April 22, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Toronto Loses Close One, Johnson Day-to-Day ![]() April 23, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Romero and Cordero Combine For Complete Game Shutout ![]() April 23, 2012 Viola Garcia, Blue Jays Minor League Correspondent McGowan Gives Up 5 Runs, Pulled Before Getting a Single Out in First Rehab Start ![]() April 24, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Jays Double Up Royals, Take 3 of 4 ![]() April 25, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Toronto Offense Comes Alive, Picks Apart Orioles Pitching ![]() April 26, 2012 Jan Hayes, Blue Jays Beat Reporter Darvish Goes Distance Again, Jays Outlast Baltimore |
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Tags |
2012, blue jays, toronto, toronto blue jays, yu darvish |
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