Been reflecting on status of our team and looking back on lots of 2016-17 media interviews with Shapiro, talking about investment in development and perpetual waves of impact talent coming up from the Minors. It all sounds awesome. His thesis that you don’t need to be a “window” team because we will build a sustainable competitive team is tantalizing. What actually happened?
I remember not really liking him chucking AA under the bus at the time, but I was excited that we were going to have a cutting edge kick ass sustainable winner based on these waves. I had hoped that he was going to renovate the team, and not just the stadium. It’s a popular myth on this board that Shapiro is not involved in baseball operations. I know for certain that is inaccurate. Anyone who has worked at higher levels in in a big pubco knows that any GM has very rigid approval thresholds on decisions that impact asset valuations and capex. There are good reasons for this reality that should be obvious. The buck stops with the guy who is accountable for the valuations, forecast and budget he sold the Board. He has to review, give input and approve all material decisions.
This team has become the exact inverse of what Shapiro promoted. The Emperor has no clothes. It’s an old, very expensive team jacked up on Free Agents predominantly. They won 92,91,89 games 21-23. They benefitted from expanded wildcard. Pretty dam solid, but it’s a sustainability mirage without more drafting & development success. The 9 year sample size objectively is not good. A lot of their top picks and prospects were traded to create the past and current roster construction.
The point being I don’t know why we would trust them to do another reboot/rebuild and handle the end of this era, which is now right in our windshield. We all know only 26% of ’24 is complete, and we can all look at fangraphs playoff odds. Obviously they could get on a roll, but its bad bet. At a minimum Ross needs to go. Sooner the better to prep for deadline.
Shapiro has acknowledged that while the 2017 season was a disappointment, it was not unexpected, terming the club “fragile” because of the age of the 25-man roster, and a lack of upper level minor league talent. Shapiro has an eye of the future, stating that, “We’re trying to construct a development system that maximizes the potential of our players,” and he says that he’s encouraged by this year’s draft, the work of Assistant GM Andrew Tinnish (who heads up international scouting and player development), and by the development being done at the minor league level. “That building effort is a long-term play,” he added for good measure. Shapiro does not believe in taking short cuts when it comes to building a winner.
"We are close to getting a significant renovation that I think has a chance to be a game-changer on both resources and culture for our player development system…ultimately, it’s shifting Dunedin away from just being a spring training site, where we prepare our players for the season, to a 365 days of the year, state-of-the-art training and rehabilitation centre, and a base for our US operations." - October 2017
Mark Shapiro says his club’s farm system is better than it was two years ago, but still largely a work in progress. “Not where it needs to be,” Shapiro told MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand in a recent Q&A. “I think we’re really excited about what’s happening at [high Class A], at Dunedin, the Florida State League and below. Still concerned about Double-A and Triple-A, the depth of prospects there.”
Shapiro said he would rank Toronto’s farm “probably in the upper half, maybe closing in on the upper third” of all MLB organizations and highlighted the success of top prospects Bo Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who both began the season in Lansing before advancing to Dunedin. “You don’t just need two guys, you need waves of guys,” said Shapiro. “And behind them, you need another wave of guys. I feel like that’s coming. It’s probably two to four years away that it’s going to get here, but when it comes, what we’ve continued to execute on whether it’s [assistant GM] Andrew Tinnish leading us in international, we’ve got waves of guys coming. “I’m encouraged by that.” August - 2017