bigpaulie Verified Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 We have a post about players whom have not lived up to their full potential and hype Why not list players who played for the Jays, but left and went onto great things Jeff Kent - 5 time all star, NL MVP Reed Johnson - I have always thought he was a great ball player to watch play Fred McGriff - I know we saw some his power, but he had a great career elsewhere ( I know Carter and Alomar came the other way ) Chris Carpenter - No Explanation needed Danny Ainge - He turned out to be a pretty good ball player ( wrong sport, but I wonder about if he choose baseball ) Cecil Fielder - Man could he hit a baseball John Olerud - I know we got a lot of his productive years
bigpaulie Verified Member Posted February 17, 2014 Author Posted February 17, 2014 Shawn Green leaving bothered me, why lie to a fan base, just say its about the money, not I want to go to a more diverse city
Grant77 Old-Timey Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 Not a star, but Casey Blake had a nice career. You could say David Wells too.
bigpaulie Verified Member Posted February 17, 2014 Author Posted February 17, 2014 David Wells is a great example, man was he dependable
Abomination Old-Timey Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 We have a post about players whom have not lived up to their full potential and hype Why not list players who played for the Jays, but left and went onto great things Jeff Kent - 5 time all star, NL MVP Reed Johnson - I have always thought he was a great ball player to watch play Fred McGriff - I know we saw some his power, but he had a great career elsewhere ( I know Carter and Alomar came the other way ) Chris Carpenter - No Explanation needed Danny Ainge - He turned out to be a pretty good ball player ( wrong sport, but I wonder about if he choose baseball ) Cecil Fielder - Man could he hit a baseball John Olerud - I know we got a lot of his productive years Some of those players didn't really blossom when they left, they just kept doing what they did here. In fact, some of them had their best seasons here. Kent I suppose, but was traded as a rookie so is probably a better discussion elsewhere. I would say Carpenter, Fielder, and Werth were the big ones that I can think of right now.
KingKat Old-Timey Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 John Farrell I'll accept Bobby Cox but Farrell... that's just trolling.
Dick_Pole Old-Timey Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 McGriff and Kent shouldn't count...talent for talent...might as well say Roberto Alomar and David Cone really blossomed while they were here. Carpenter was the one who irks me....let go for nothing. Although if he stayed in Toronto who knows what would have happened because apparently Dave Duncan took over his arm through telekinesis and taught him how to pitch.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 Noah Syndergaard and TDA
glory Old-Timey Member Posted February 17, 2014 Posted February 17, 2014 It still bothers me that Aaron Hill was trash for basically two seasons with the Jays while no one in the organization had a clue how to fix him, then he goes to Arizona and Don Baylor fixed his swing in about 35 seconds.
TDotttt2005 Verified Member Posted February 18, 2014 Posted February 18, 2014 McGriff and Kent shouldn't count...talent for talent...might as well say Roberto Alomar and David Cone really blossomed while they were here. Carpenter was the one who irks me....let go for nothing. Although if he stayed in Toronto who knows what would have happened because apparently Dave Duncan took over his arm through telekinesis and taught him how to pitch. I'd say Kent counts. Just as Padres fans would say Alomar counts. The talent was there for everyone to see, yes, but I dont think Gillick/McIlvane would've told you at the time that they expected their guys to blossom into HOF and marginal HOF talents. Cone and McGriff were known talents and established at the time, we knew what we were getting with Cone, same as the Padres/Braves knew what they were getting when they traded for McGriff.
Jimcanuck Old-Timey Member Posted February 18, 2014 Posted February 18, 2014 JP Arencibia You heard it here first
Jimcanuck Old-Timey Member Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 So will his flourish take him from "among the worst ever" to "among the worst in the league" defensively, or did you mean like 5-7 more HRs and X RBIz? Also, I'll come right out and say who/whom makes my brain hurt, but is it not being misused in this title/thread? He's gonna mash as Texas' DH
The_DH Verified Member Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 Mitch Webster was waived for nothing and then did well. I only include this because the other players had high expectations.
jaysblue Old-Timey Member Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 Jayson Werth Shawn Green Michael Young Shawn Green had some great years with the Jays before he left if I recall...
jaysblue Old-Timey Member Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 Eric Hinske. He went on to play in the World Series like 3 times in a row, winning one in 2007 with the Red Sox and one in 2009 with the Yankees.
jaysblue Old-Timey Member Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 Also, could say Danny Farquhar and David Carpenter - both had great years out of the BP last season.
jaysblue Old-Timey Member Posted February 19, 2014 Posted February 19, 2014 Ted Lilly was a fantastic signing by the Cubs after the 2006 season.
Arjun Nimmala Vancouver Canadians - A+ SS It's been slow going at the start of the season for Nimmala, but on Sunday, he was 3-for-5 with his 3rd home run and 3 RBI. Explore Arjun Nimmala News >
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