This is the write-up on the Blue Jays. Doesn't really say much:
http://espn.go.com/prod/styles/pagetype/otl/20150220_analytics/images/circle_mlb_tor.png
TORONTO
BLUE JAYS
In the epilogue to "Moneyball," the Blue Jays were anointed as the direct descendants of Billy Beane's A's, having hired Beane protege J.P. Ricciardi as their GM and Keith Law, an alum of both Harvard and Baseball Prospectus, as a special adviser. Four years later, Ricciardi was the keynote speaker at the inaugural MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference.
But Ricciardi -- who is revered for his scouting acumen -- never embraced sabermetrics to the extent that Beane did. He and Law (now an analyst for ESPN.com's Insider) had a falling out around the time of Law's departure in 2006, and the Jays fired Ricciardi in 2009.
These days the team's analytical operation is run by Joe Sheehan, who also has experience in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization.
Last year, the Jays lost assistant GM Jay Sartori -- who had overseen Sheehan's development of the Jays' baseball information system -- to Apple, but solidified their development team by plucking Jason Pare from the Indians. While the Sheehan-Pare pair make a formidable combo and current GM Alex Anthopoulos has indicated interest in expanding even further, the promise of a mid-market, Canadian version of the "Moneyball" A's has never been fully realized.