The Toronto Blue Jays
are a professional baseball team located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Blue Jays are a member of the Eastern Division of Major League Baseball (MLB)'s American League.
The "Blue Jays" name originates from the bird of the same name. They are nicknamed "the Jays
", which is featured on the team's logo and on the front of the home uniform.
An expansion franchise, the club was founded in Toronto, in 1977. Originally based at Exhibition Stadium, the team began playing its home games at the SkyDome, upon completion of its construction in 1989. As of 2009, the Blue Jays are owned by Rogers Communications, and in 2004, the SkyDome was purchased by the company, which renamed the venue to Rogers Centre. They are the first and only team outside the United States to win a World Series, the first team to win a World Series in Canada, and the fastest AL expansion franchise to win a World Series (winning in their 16th year, beating the Kansas City Royals' record by one year). With the fellow Canadian franchise Montreal Expos relocating to Washington, D.C. after the 2004 season, and becoming the Washington Nationals, the Blue Jays are currently the only MLB team outside the United States.
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TORONTO BLUE JAYS TICKETS
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History
1977–1994: The Pat Gillick era
1977–1981
The Blue Jays played their first game on April 7, 1977, against the
Chicago White Sox, before a home crowd of 44,649. The game is now perhaps best remembered for the minor snowstorm which began just before the game started. Toronto won the snowy affair 9–5, led by
Doug Ault's two
home runs. That win would be one of only 54 of the
1977 season, as the
Blue Jays finished in
last place in the AL East, with a record of 54–107. After the season,
Pat Gillick became general manager of the team, a position he would hold until 1994.
In
1978, the team improved their record by four and a half games, but remained last with a record of 59–103. In
1979, after a 53–109 last place finish, shortstop
Alfredo Griffin was named American League co-
Rookie of the Year. In addition, the Blue Jays' first mascot,
BJ Birdie, made its debut in 1979.
In
1980,
Bobby Mattick became manager, succeeding
Roy Hartsfield, the Blue Jays' original manager. In Mattick's first season as manager, although they remained at the bottom, Toronto almost reached the 70-win mark, finishing with a record of 67–95, a 14-win improvement on 1979.
Jim Clancy led with 13 wins and
John Mayberry became the first Jay to hit 30 home runs in a season.
In the
strike-divided season of
1981, the
Blue Jays finished in last place in the American League East in both halves of the season. They were a dismal 16–42 in the first half, but improved dramatically, finishing the 48-game second half at 21–27, for a combined record of 37–69.
1982–1988
Under new manager
Bobby Cox, Toronto's first solid season came in
1982 as they finished 78–84. Their pitching staff was led by starters
Dave Stieb,
Jim Clancy and
Luis Leal, and the outfield featured a young
Lloyd Moseby and
Jesse Barfield. 1982 was also the
Blue Jays first season outside the bottom, as they finished sixth in the East out of seven teams.
In
1983, the
Blue Jays compiled their first winning record, 89–73, finishing in fourth place, 9 games behind the eventual
World Series champions, the
Baltimore Orioles. First baseman
Willie Upshaw became the first Blue Jay to have at least 100
RBIs in a season.
The
Blue Jays' progress continued in
1984, finishing with the same 89–73 record, but this time in a distant second place behind another World Series champion, the
Detroit Tigers. After 1984, Alfredo Griffin went to the
Oakland Athletics, thus giving a permanent spot to young Dominican shortstop
Tony Fernández, who would become a fan favorite for many years.
In
1985,
Toronto won their first championship of any sort: the first of their five American League East division titles. The Blue Jays featured strong pitching and a balanced offense. Their mid-season call up of relief pitcher
Tom Henke also proved to be important. They finished 99–62 (the franchise record for most wins), two games in front of the
New York Yankees. The Blue Jays faced the
Kansas City Royals in the
American League Championship Series (ALCS), and took a 3 games to 1 lead. However, Kansas City won three consecutive games to win the series 4 games to 3, on their way to their first, and only, World Series championship. Painfully ironic, prior to 1985, MLB
League Championship Series (both the ALCS and NLCS) were best of 5, so, had the Blue Jays been in the same position in previous years as they were in 1985, leading Kansas City 3 games to 1, they would have won the League Championship and been on to the World Series.
With
Jimy Williams now the skipper, the
Blue Jays could not duplicate their success in
1986, sliding to a fourth-place tie at 86–76.
Jesse Barfield and
George Bell led the way with 40 and 31 home runs respectively and
Jimmy Key and
Jim Clancy tied for the team wins lead with 14 each.
In
1987, the
Blue Jays lost a thrilling division race to the
Detroit Tigers by two games, after being swept on the last weekend of the season by the Tigers. The Blue Jays finished with a 96–66 record, second best in the major leagues, but to no avail. However,
George Bell was named
Most Valuable Player (MVP) of the
American League, the first and only Blue Jay to be named so.
In
1988, however,
Toronto could not duplicate the successes of the previous season, tying the
Milwaukee Brewers for third in the division at 87–75. Still, the season had numerous highlights. First baseman
Fred McGriff hit 34 home runs, and Dave Stieb had back-to-back starts in which he lost a
no-hitter with two out in the ninth inning.
1989–1991
In 1989, the Blue Jays' new
retractable roofed home,
SkyDome, opened in the mid-season. It also marked the beginning of an extremely successful five-year period for the team. In May, management fired manager
Jimy Williams and replaced him with
Cito Gaston, the team's hitting instructor. The club had a dismal 12–24 record at the time of the firing, but went 77–49 under Gaston to win the American League East title by two games with an 89-73 record. George Bell's walk-off home run, off
Bobby Thigpen, marked the end of the Exhibition Stadium era. The first game at the new stadium took place on
June 5 against the Milwaukee Brewers. The Jays lost 5–3. In the
1989 American League Championship Series,
Rickey Henderson led the
Oakland Athletics to a 4–1 series win.
In 1990, the Blue Jays again had a strong season, but finished in second place, two games behind the
Boston Red Sox. Dave Stieb pitched his first and only no-hitter, beating the
Cleveland Indians 3–0 in front of a less than capacity crowd at
Cleveland Municipal Stadium. This was also, s of {{MONTHNAME 2008
[], the only no-hitter ever pitched by a Toronto Blue Jay pitcher. During the offseason, the Blue Jays made one of the two biggest trades in franchise history, sending all-star
shortstop Tony Fernández and
first baseman Fred McGriff to the
San Diego Padres in exchange for
outfielder Joe Carter and
second baseman Roberto Alomar. The Jays also obtained center fielder
Devon White from the
California Angels. These deals, particularly the trade with San Diego, were instrumental in the team's future success.
Carter, Alomar and White would prove to be extremely effective additions, as the Blue Jays again won the division in 1991, as Carter drove in the division winning run. Once again, however, they fell short in the postseason, losing to the
Minnesota Twins, who were on their way to their second
World Series victory in five seasons, in the
ALCS. In 1991, the Blue Jays became the first Major League club ever to draw over four million fans in one season.
- Team record 1989: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- 0.549
- Team record 1990: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 2 games behind Division Leader
- Team record 1991: 91 wins–71 losses, W%- 0.562
1992–1993: World Series Champions
After the 1991 season had ended, the Blue Jays acquired pitcher
Jack Morris, who had led the
Minnesota Twins to victory in the World Series by pitching a 10-inning
complete game shutout in Game 7 and had been named the
World Series MVP. To add veteran leadership to their explosive offense, Toronto signed future Hall of Famer
Dave Winfield to be the team's designated hitter.
The 1992 regular season went well, as the Jays clinched their second straight AL East crown with a final record of 96–66, four games ahead of the
Milwaukee Brewers. They also went the entire season without being swept in any series. The Blue Jays met the
Oakland Athletics (who had the same record as the Jays and led the division by six games over the defending champion Twins) in the
ALCS, winning 4 games to 2. The pivotal game of the series was Game 4, considered by many to be one of the most important games in Blue Jays history: the Blue Jays rallied back from a 6–1 deficit after seven innings, capped off by
Roberto Alomar's huge game-tying 2-run homer off Hall of Fame A's
closer Dennis Eckersley in the top of the ninth. This paved the way for a 7–6 victory in 11 innings, a 3 games to 1 lead in the series and an eventual 4–2 ALCS series win.
The Blue Jays then faced the
Atlanta Braves in the
World Series. The Braves returned after being beaten by the Twins the previous year. The pivotal game in this series turned out to be Game 2, in which reserve player
Ed Sprague hit a 9th-inning 2-run home run off Braves closer
Jeff Reardon to give the Blue Jays a 5–4 lead, which would hold up. After winning Game 3 thanks to Candy Maldonado's ninth inning RBI hit and Game 4 due to Jimmy Key's superb 7 1/3 inning pitching effort in which he retired 15 straight batters (five innings), the Jays could not win the Series on home turf as the Braves struck back with a 7–2 win in Game 5. Game 6 in Atlanta, with the Blue Jays leading 3 games to 2, was a very close game. Toronto was one strike away from winning in the bottom of the 9th inning, 2–1
[1], but
Otis Nixon singled in the tying run off the Blue Jays' closer
Tom Henke. It was the first run the Toronto bullpen had given up in the series. The game was decided in the 11th inning, when
Dave Winfield doubled down the left-field line, driving in two runs. The Braves would again come within one run in the bottom of the 11th, but Jays reliever
Mike Timlin fielded
Otis Nixon's bunt, throwing to Joe Carter at first base for the final out. The Blue Jays became the first team based outside of the United States to win the World Series.
Pat Borders, the Jays' catcher, was the unlikely player who was named MVP after hitting .450 with one home run in the World Series. Oddly, Morris was acquired in large part for his reputation as a clutch postseason pitcher, but he went 0–3 in the playoffs. Morris, however, pitched well in the regular season, becoming the Blue Jays' first 20-game winner, with a record of 21–6 and an ERA of 4.04.
After the 1992 season, the Blue Jays let World Series hero
Dave Winfield and longtime closer
Tom Henke go but signed two key free agents: designated hitter
Paul Molitor from the Milwaukee Brewers and perennial playoff success
Dave Stewart from the Oakland Athletics.
In 1993, the Blue Jays had seven All-Stars: outfielders Devon White and Joe Carter, infielders
John Olerud and Roberto Alomar, designated hitter Molitor, plus starting pitcher
Pat Hentgen, and closer
Duane Ward. In August, the Jays acquired former nemesis
Rickey Henderson from the Athletics. The Blue Jays cruised to a 95–67 record, one less win than 1992 and seven games ahead of the
New York Yankees, winning their third straight division title. The Jays beat the
Chicago White Sox 4 games to 2 in the ALCS, and then the
Philadelphia Phillies, 4 games to 2, for their second straight
World Series victory. The World Series featured several exciting games, including Game 4, played under a slight rain, in which the Blue Jays came back from a 14–9 deficit to win 15–14 and take a 3 games to 1 lead in the series. It remains the highest scoring game in World Series history. Game 6 in Toronto saw the Blue Jays lead 5–1, but give up 5 runs in the 7th inning to trail 6–5. In the bottom of the 9th inning Joe Carter hit a one-out, three-run
walk-off home run to clinch the series, off Phillies closer
Mitch Williams. Only the second World Series-winning walk-off home run in the history of Major League Baseball (following
Bill Mazeroski's in Game 7 in
1960), Carter's hit differed from the first in that Toronto, while not facing elimination, was trailing in the bottom of the 9th. The home run is also memorable for late Blue Jays broadcaster
Tom Cheek's call:
"A swing, and a belt! Left field! Way back! Blue Jays win it! The Blue Jays are World Series champions as Joe Carter hits a three-run home run in the ninth inning and the Blue Jays have repeated as World Series Champions! Touch 'em all, Joe, you'll never hit a bigger home run in your life!"
In the regular season, three Blue Jays - John Olerud, Paul Molitor and Roberto Alomar - finished 1-2-3 for the AL
batting crown.
- Team record 1992: 96 wins–66 losses, W%- 0.593
- Team record 1993: 95 wins–67 losses, W%- 0.586
1994 season
Expectations were high for the Blue Jays for the 1994 season, following back-to-back championships, but they slumped to a 55–60 record and a third place finish (16 games back of the New York Yankees) before the
players' strike. It was their first losing season since 1982.
Joe Carter,
Paul Molitor and
John Olerud enjoyed good years at the plate, but the pitching fell off.
Juan Guzmán slumped considerably from his first three years (40–11, 3.28 ERA), finishing 1994 at 12–11 with a 5.68 ERA. Three young players,
Alex Gonzalez,
Carlos Delgado and
Shawn Green, did show a lot of promise for the future.
Labatt Breweries was bought by
Belgian-based brewer
Interbrew (now
InBev), making the Blue Jays the second baseball team owned by interests outside of
North America. Interestingly, the first was the Blue Jays' expansion cousins, the Mariners, which was owned by
Nintendo.
- Team record 1994: 55 wins–60 losses, W%- 0.478, 16 games behind Division Leader
1995–2001: The Gord Ash era
Before the 1995 season, Pat Gillick, the longtime Blue Jays general manager, resigned and handed the reins of the team to Toronto native
Gord Ash, who would lead the team in its most tumultuous era yet.
In the 1995 season, the Blue Jays proved that they had lost their contending swagger of the past 12 years. Although they had most of the same cast of the World Series teams, the Blue Jays freefell to a dismal 56–88 record,
last place in the AL East, 30 games behind the
Boston Red Sox. Attendance also tailed off dramatically during the 1995 season, and has never recovered since. During SkyDome's first four-plus seasons, Blue Jays tickets were among the toughest in all of baseball. While attendance suffered throughout the majors in the years immediately after the strike, the dropoff was especially pronounced for the Canadian teams, the Montreal Expos and Blue Jays.
1996 was another mediocre year for the Blue Jays, despite
Pat Hentgen's
Cy Young Award (20–10. 3.22 ERA).
Ed Sprague had a career year, hitting 36 home runs and driving in 101 runs. However, their 74 wins did put them in 4th place, improving over their last place finish in 1995. They improved their record by 18 victories as they played the full 162 game schedule for the first time since 1993.
The Blue Jays started 1997 with high hopes. Not only did the Jays drastically change their uniforms, they signed former
Boston Red Sox ace
Roger Clemens to a $24,750,000 contract. Clemens had one of the best pitching seasons ever as he won the pitcher's
Triple Crown, leading the American League with a record of 21–7, a 2.05 ERA, and 292 strikeouts. This was not enough to lead the Blue Jays to the postseason, however, as they finished in last place for the second time in three years with a record of 76–86.
Cito Gaston, the longtime manager who led the team to 3 division titles and 2 World Series crowns, was fired five games before the end of the season.
Before the start of the 1998 season, the Blue Jays acquired closer
Randy Myers and slugger
José Canseco. Gaston was replaced with former Blue Jay
Tim Johnson, a relative unknown as a manager. Despite mediocre hitting, strong pitching led by Clemens' second straight pitching Triple Crown (20–6, 2.65 ERA, 271 strikeouts) sparked the Blue Jays to an 88–74 record – their first winning season since 1993. However, this was only good enough to finish a distant third, 26 games behind the
New York Yankees, who posted one of the greatest records in all of baseball history at 114–48. They were, however, in contention for the wildcard spot until the final week.
Before the 1999 season, the Blue Jays traded Clemens to the Yankees for starting pitcher
David Wells, second baseman
Homer Bush and relief pitcher
Graeme Lloyd. They also fired manager Tim Johnson during spring training after he lied about several things (including killing people in the
Vietnam War) in order to motivate his players. The Blue Jays had initially been willing to stand by Johnson. A blizzard of questions about his credibility during spring training, however, led Ash to fire him less than a month before opening day. Johnson was replaced with
Jim Fregosi, who managed the Phillies when they lost to the Blue Jays in the
1993 World Series. The offense picked up somewhat in 1999, but the pitching suffered without Clemens, as the Blue Jays finished at 84–78, in third place. After the 1999 season, the Blue Jays' original mascot for 20 years, BJ Birdie, was replaced by a duo named
Ace & Diamond.
On November 8, 1999, Toronto traded star outfielder
Shawn Green to the
Los Angeles Dodgers for left-handed relief pitcher
Pedro Borbón and right-fielder
Raúl Mondesí. Green had told the Jays that he would not be re-signing when his contract was up at the end of the year (he wished to play closer to his home in
Southern California).
2000 proved to be a similar season, as the Jays had an 83–79 record, well out of the wild card race but only a slim 4½ games back of the three-time defending World Series Champion Yankees in the AL East, the first time since 1993 they had contended for the division.
Carlos Delgado had a stellar year, hitting .344 with 41 home runs, 57 doubles, 137 RBI, 123 walks and 115 runs. In addition, six other players hit 20 or more home runs, an outstanding feat.
José Cruz Jr.,
Raúl Mondesí,
Tony Batista,
Darrin Fletcher,
Shannon Stewart, and
Brad Fullmer all contributed to the powerful heart of the lineup.
On September 1, 2000,
Rogers Communications Inc. purchased 80% of the baseball club with Interbrew (now
InBev) maintaining 20% interest and the
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce relinquishing its 10% share. Rogers eventually acquired the 20% owned by Interbrew and currently owns 100% of the team.
Buck Martinez, a former catcher and broadcast announcer for the Blue Jays, took over as manager before the 2001 season. The Blue Jays were back under .500 for 2001, finishing at 80–82, with mediocre pitching and hitting. Delgado led the team again with 39 home runs and 102 RBI. After the 2001 season ended, the Blue Jays fired Gord Ash, ending a seven-year tenure as general manager.
J. P. Ricciardi, then director of player development under
Oakland Athletics general manager
Billy Beane, was named the Blue Jays' General Manager and was expected to slash the payroll immediately, in order to stem the tide of red ink. During the off-season, the team traded or let go several popular players, including
Alex Gonzalez,
Paul Quantrill,
Brad Fullmer and
closer Billy Koch to let talented youngsters such as
Eric Hinske and
Felipe Lopez get a chance to develop into major leaguers.
2002–present: The J.P. Ricciardi era
2002 season
The Blue Jays started the 2002 season with slow progress in performance.
Buck Martinez was fired about a third of the way through the season, with a 20–33 record. He was replaced by third base coach
Carlos Tosca, an experienced minor league manager. They went 58–51 under Tosca to finish the season 78–84.
Roy Halladay was relied on as the team's ace and rose to the challenge of being the team's top pitcher, finishing the season with a 19–7 record and 2.93 ERA. The hitters were led once again by
Carlos Delgado. Promising young players were assigned to key roles; starting
third baseman Eric Hinske won the Rookie of the Year Award at the season's conclusion, and 23-year-old
centre fielder Vernon Wells had his first 100 RBI season.
- Team record 2002: 78 wins–84 losses, W%- 0.481, 25.5 games behind division leader, third in division
2003 season
The 2003 season was a surprise to both team management and baseball analysts. After a poor April, the team had its most successful month ever in May. Carlos Delgado led the majors in RBI, followed closely by Wells. Despite their hitting successes, poor pitching continued to plague the team. Halladay was an exception, winning his first
Cy Young Award, going 22–7, with a 3.25 ERA. In July,
Shannon Stewart was traded to the
Minnesota Twins for
Bobby Kielty, another outfielder with a much lower batting average than Stewart's. Delgado was second in the voting for the
American League MVP Award, although the Jays were in third place in their division. In the off-season, Kielty was traded to the
Oakland Athletics for
starter Ted Lilly.
- Team record 2003: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 15 games behind division leader, third in division
2004 season
The 2004 season was a disappointing year for the Blue Jays right from the beginning. They started the season 0–8 at SkyDome and never started a lengthy winning streak. Much of that was due to injuries to All-Stars Carlos Delgado, Vernon Wells and Roy Halladay among others. Although the additions of starting pitchers Ted Lilly and
Miguel Batista and reliever
Justin Speier were relatively successful, veteran
Pat Hentgen faltered throughout the season and retired on July 24. Rookies and
minor league callups
David Bush,
Jason Frasor,
Josh Towers and others filled the void in the rotation and the
bullpen; however, inconsistent performances were evident. With the team struggling in last place and mired in a five-game losing streak, manager
Carlos Tosca was fired on August 8, 2004, and was replaced by first base coach
John Gibbons. Long-time first baseman Carlos Delgado became a free agent in the off-season. Nevertheless, prospects
Russ Adams,
Gabe Gross, and
Alex Ríos provided excitement for the fans. Rookie pitchers
David Bush,
Gustavo Chacín and
Jason Frasor also showed promise for the club's future. The Blue Jays' lone MLB All-Star Game representative was Lilly.
- Team record 2004: 67 wins–94 losses, W%- 0.416, 33.5 games behind division leader, fifth in division
2005 season
The Blue Jays had a good start to the 2005 season. They led the AL East from early to mid-April and held their record around .500 until late August. The Jays were hit with the injury bug when third baseman
Corey Koskie broke his finger, taking him out of the lineup, but the club was pleasantly surprised with the performance of rookie call-up
Aaron Hill in his stead. On July 8, just prior to the All-Star break, Blue Jays ace Roy Halladay was struck on the shin by a line drive, resulting in a fractured leg. Though Halladay's injury was hoped to be minor, the recovery process was met with constant delays, and eventually, he was out for the rest of the season. Prior to his injury, the Blue Jays were in serious
wild card contention, but soon fell out of the playoff race. The team received glimpses of the future from September call-ups
Guillermo Quiróz,
John-Ford Griffin, and
Shaun Marcum. Marcum made himself noteworthy by posting an ERA of 0.00 over 5 relief appearances and 8 innings in September. Josh Towers also stepped up, showing largely unseen potential by going 7–5 with a 2.91 ERA in the second half of the season.
- Team record 2005: 80 wins–82 losses, W%- 0.494, 15 games behind division leader, third in division
2006 season
In 2006, the team experienced its most successful season in years. On July 2, Troy Glaus, Vernon Wells, Roy Halladay,
B. J. Ryan, and Alex Ríos were picked to represent the Blue Jays at the All-Star Game.
[2] It was the largest number of Blue Jay All-Stars selected for the game since 1993. The team played well in the critical month of September, going 18–10. This, combined with the slumping of the
Boston Red Sox, enabled the Blue Jays to take sole possession of second place in the American League East by the end of the season. This marked the first time that the Jays had finished above third place in their division since their World Championship season of 1993, and with the most wins since the 1998 season. On December 18, the Blue Jays announced that they had re-signed centre fielder Wells to a seven-year contract worth $126 million, which came into effect after the 2007 season.
- Team record 2006: 87 wins–75 losses, W%- 0.537, 10 games behind division leader, second in division
2007 season
The 2007 season was blighted by persistent injuries, with 12 Blue Jays landing on the disabled list. The most serious injury was that of B. J. Ryan, who was out for the entire season having had
Tommy John surgery. Prior to the season, the team signed starting pitchers
John Thomson,
Tomo Ohka, and
Victor Zambrano; each of them were released before the end of the season. However, young starters
Shaun Marcum and
Dustin McGowan had breakout years, with 12 wins each. On June 24, McGowan pitched a complete game one-hitter. On June 28,
Frank Thomas became the 21st major league player to hit
500 career home runs. Aaron Hill also had a breakout year, setting a team record for second baseman with 47 doubles.
- Team record 2007: 83 wins–79 losses, W%- 0.512, 13 games behind behind division leader, third in division
2008 season
The Blue Jays' 2008 season featured a strong pitching staff, which led the major leagues with a 3.49 ERA. For much of the season, however, the team struggled to hit home runs and drive in runs. On May 24, starter
Jesse Litsch set a team record, with 38 consecutive innings without giving up a walk. On June 20, following a five-game losing streak and with the Jays in last place in the AL East, management fired
John Gibbons and several members of his coaching staff, and re-hired
Cito Gaston. Meanwhile, Alex Ríos had 32
stolen bases, making him the first Blue Jay with 30 since 2001. On September 5, Roy Halladay earned his 129th career win, moving him into second spot on Toronto's all-time wins list. Halladay also came second in the voting for the Cy Young Award, after posting a 20–11 record and 2.78 ERA. From August 30 to September 9, the team had a 10-game winning streak.
- Team record 2008: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 11 games behind behind division leader, fourth in division
2009 season
The 2009 season saw the addition of two new patches on the Blue Jays' uniforms: on the right arm, a bright red
maple leaf (part of the
Canadian flag), and on the left arm, a small black band with "TED" written on it, in reference to team owner
Ted Rogers, who died in the off-season.
The Toronto Blue Jays took on the Detroit Tigers, for Opening Day, at the Rogers Centre on April 6, 2009, beating the Detroit Tigers 12–5. Roy Halladay was matched up against the Tigers' pitcher, Justin Verlander, and the "Doc" Halladay went seven innings striking out two and walking one, but he did give up two home runs, and five runs overall.
[3] The game was briefly interrupted when fans started throwing objects onto the field (including baseballs, a golfball and an AA battery). The Tigers were pulled from the field in the bottom of the eighth inning, causing a nine-minute delay. A statement was also read over the public address system reminding fans of the consequences of such actions (including the possibility of forfeiture of the game).
[4]
In another turn of events, the Rogers Centre was dry on April 7th, as the province of Ontario imposed the first of a three-day alcohol suspension at the stadium, for "infractions (that) took place at certain past events," according to the press release.
[5] The Jays beat the Tigers 5–4 for their second win of the season.
[6]
2009 is the first year that the Blue Jays began counting their in game attendance by the ticket and not by numbers sold or given away. This was done to accurately reflect fans paying for the seats they sit in.
On June 9th, in the MLB draft with the 20th pick, the Jays selected RHP Chad Jenkins, a power pitcher that has drawn comparisons to
David "Boomer" Wells and
Gustavo Chacín.
[7] In addition, it was announced on the same day that Jesse Litsch will miss the remainder of the season with Tommy John surgery.
[8] Aaron Hill and Roy Halladay both have excellent years and represented the Blue Jays at the 2009 All-Star game in St. Louis. It is rumoured that J.P. Ricciardi may be relieved of his duties as general manager of the Toronto Blue Jays in the near future.
[9] In mid-August, J.P. Ricciardi allowed the
Chicago White Sox to claim
Alex Ríos off the waivers.
Radio and television
The Toronto Blue Jays have the largest geographical home market for radio and television in all of baseball, encompassing all of Canada. The Blue Jays' former radio play-by-play announcer,
Tom Cheek, called every Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7,
1977 until June 3,
2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father – a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular season games and 41 postseason games. Cheek died in 2005, and the team commemorated him during their
2006 season by wearing a circular badge on the left sleeve of their jerseys. The badge was adorned with Cheek's initials, as well as a stylized
microphone. Cheek is also honoured with a place in the Blue Jays' "Level of Excellence" in the upper level of the Rogers Centre; the number 4,306 is depicted beside his name. In 2008 Cheek received the third highest amount of votes by fans to be nominated for the
Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasting excellence. This is the fifth year in a row Cheek has been named a finalist.
[10]
Today,
[when?] radio broadcasts of Blue Jays games are on
CJCL, known as The Fan 590.
Jerry Howarth is the lead play-by-play announcer, with former Blue Jays catcher
Alan Ashby serving as the colour commentator and secondary play-by-play announcer.
On television, most Blue Jays games are carried on
Rogers Sportsnet (which, like the Blue Jays, is owned by Rogers Communications).
Jamie Campbell is the play-by-play announcer, with colour analysis rotating between
Pat Tabler,
Rance Mulliniks, and
Darrin Fletcher.
TSN, which was formerly the chief television outlet for the Blue Jays, still carries a handful of Jays games; on these telecasts,
Rod Black handles play-by-play while Tabler serves as colour commentator.
CBC has carried Blue Jays games intermittently throughout the team's history, most recently in 2007 and 2008; those broadcasts featured
Jim Hughson as the play-by-play announcer, and former Blue Jays
Rance Mulliniks and
Jesse Barfield on colour commentary.
[11]
Quick facts
Uniform colours:
Blue, Black, Graphite, Silver, White
Logo design:
A blue jay's head coming out of a "J".
Alternate logo design:
Stylized "T" using uniform colours.
Team motto:
"You Belong at the Game" [12]
Mascot:
Ace, an anthropomorphized blue jay.
Theme song:
"OK Blue Jays"
Local radio:
The Fan 590
Local television:
Rogers Sportsnet, TSN, TSN2
Spring Training Facility:
Dunedin Stadium, Dunedin, Florida
World Series Champions:
1992, 1993
Current roster
|
40-man roster
| Spring Training non-roster invitees
| Coaches/other
|
Pitchers
- 49 Jeremy Accardo
- -- Bryan Bullington
- 57 Shawn Camp
- 39 Jesse Carlson
- -- Fabio Castro
- 37 Scott Downs
- 54 Jason Frasor
- 32 Roy Halladay
- -- Dirk Hayhurst
- 44 Casey Janssen
- 22 Brandon League
- 51 Jesse Litsch
- 28 Shaun Marcum
- 29 Dustin McGowan
- -- Bill Murphy
- -- Luis Perez (baseball)
- 25 David Purcey
- -- Robert Ray (baseball)
- 48 Scott Richmond
- 50 Davis Romero
- -- Ricky Romero (baseball)
- 52 B. J. Ryan
- -- Reid Santos
- 56 Brian Tallet
- 40 Brian Wolfe
|
| Catchers
- 20 Rod Barajas
- 7 Curtis Thigpen
Infielders
- 8 Russ Adams
- 23 José Bautista (third baseman)
- 2 Aaron Hill (baseball)
- 1 Joe Inglett
- 6 John McDonald (baseball)
- 17 Lyle Overbay
- 33 Scott Rolen
- 19 Marco Scutaro
Outfielders
- 21 Buck Coats
- 26 Adam Lind
- 15 Alex Ríos
- 45 Travis Snider
- 10 Vernon Wells
Designated hitters
|
| Pitchers
|
| Manager
Coaches
- 38 Brad Arnsberg (pitching)
- 55 Brian Butterfield (bench)
- 16 Nick Leyva (third base)
- 41 Dwayne Murphy (first base)
- 18 Gene Tenace (hitting)
- 53 Bruce Walton (bullpen)
* Not on active roster
† 15-day disabled list
updated 2008-12-12
•
|
Baseball Hall of Famers
No one has yet been inducted into the
Baseball Hall of Fame based primarily on service with the Blue Jays. Four Hall of Famers have worn the Blue Jays uniform:
Additionally,
Bobby Doerr, a second baseman with the
Boston Red Sox, served as a coach with the Jays early in their history, and was the first person associated with the franchise to be elected to the Hall, in 1986.
Early Wynn, the Hall of Fame pitcher and 300-game winner, was a broadcaster for the Blue Jays during their first few years.
Minor league affiliations
- AAA:
Las Vegas 51s, Pacific Coast League 2009–present
- AA:
New Hampshire Fisher Cats, Eastern League 2004–present
- Advanced A:
Dunedin Blue Jays, Florida State League 1978–present
- A:
Lansing Lugnuts, Midwest League 2005–present
- Short A:
Auburn Doubledays, New York-Penn League 2000–present
- Rookie:
Gulf Coast Blue Jays, Gulf Coast League
- Rookie:
DSL Blue Jays1, Dominican Summer League
Former teams:
- AAA:
Syracuse Chiefs, International League 1978–2008 (renamed to Syracuse SkyChiefs
1996–2006)
- AA:
New Haven Ravens, Eastern League 2000–2003
- AA:
Knoxville Smokies, Southern League 1980–1999
- High A:
Kinston Eagles/Kinston Blue Jays, Carolina League 1979–1981
- High A:
Ventura County Gulls, California League 1986
- Low A:
Florence Blue Jays, South Atlantic League 1981–1985
- Low A:
Myrtle Beach Blue Jays, South Atlantic League 1986–1992
- Low A:
Hagerstown Suns, South Atlantic League 1993–2000
- Low A:
Charleston Alley Cats, South Atlantic League 2001–2004
- Short A:
St. Catharines Blue Jays/St. Catharines Stompers, New York-Penn League 1986–1998
- Short A:
Utica Blue Sox/Utica Blue Jays, New York-Penn League 1977–1980
- Short A:
Queens Kings, New York-Penn League 1999
- Rookie:
DSL Blue Jays2, Dominican Summer League 2007–2008
- Rookie:
Pulaski Blue Jays, Appalachian League 2003–2006
- Rookie:
Medicine Hat Blue Jays, Pioneer League 1978–2002
Franchise records
Season records
- Highest Batting Average: .363, John Olerud (1993)
- Most Games: 163, Tony Fernández (1986)
- Most Runs: 134, Shawn Green (1999)
- Most Hits: 215, Vernon Wells (2003)
- Highest Slugging %: .664, Carlos Delgado (2000)
- Most Doubles: 57, Carlos Delgado (2000)
- Most Triples: 17, Tony Fernandez (1990)
- Most Home Runs: 47, George Bell (1987)
- Most Grand Slams: 3, Carlos Delgado (1997) and Darrin Fletcher (2000)
- Most RBIs: 145, Carlos Delgado (2003)
- Most Stolen Bases: 60, Dave Collins (1984)
- Most Wins: 22, Roy Halladay (2003)
- Lowest ERA: 2.05, Roger Clemens (1997)
- Most Strikeouts: 292, Roger Clemens (1997)
- Most Appearances: 89, Mark Eichhorn (1987)
- Complete Games: 19, Dave Stieb (1982)
- Saves: 45, Duane Ward (1993)
Career records
- Highest Batting Average: .307, Roberto Alomar
- Most Games: 1450, Tony Fernández
- Most Runs: 889, Carlos Delgado
- Most Hits: 1583, Tony Fernández
- Highest Slugging %: .556, Carlos Delgado
- Most Doubles: 343, Carlos Delgado
- Most Triples: 72, Tony Fernandez
- Most Home Runs: 336, Carlos Delgado
- Most RBIs: 1058, Carlos Delgado
- Most Stolen Bases: 255, Lloyd Moseby
- Most Wins: 175, Dave Stieb
- Lowest ERA: 3.42, Jimmy Key and Dave Stieb
- Strikeouts: 1658, Dave Stieb
- Complete Games: 103, Dave Stieb
- Saves: 217, Tom Henke
Season by season record
Retired numbers
Level of Excellence
While the Blue Jays have never retired a number (except for the number 42, retired by the entire league for
Jackie Robinson), they have instituted a "Level of Excellence" on the 500 level of the
Rogers Centre, where the following Jays personnel are honoured:
Tony Fernández SS: 1983–1990, 1993, 1998–1999, 2001
| George Bell LF: 1981–1990
| 260px Roberto Alomar 2B: 1991–1995
|
Joe Carter RF,1B: 1991–1997
| Dave Stieb P: 1978–1992, 1998
| Cito Gaston M: 1989–1997, 2008–present
|
Tom Cheek Broadcaster: 1977–2005
| Paul Beeston VP: 1976–1989; President: 1989–1997, 2008–present
| Pat Gillick GM: 1978–1995
|
See also
- Toronto Blue Jays all-time roster
- Toronto Blue Jays award winners and league leaders
- Toronto Blue Jays managers
- Pearson Cup
- List of baseball teams in Canada
- 2007 Toronto Blue Jays Draft
References
- October 24, 1992 World Series Game 6 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium Play by Play and Box Score - Baseball-Reference.com
- Five Jays named to AL All-Star squad
- http://ca.sports.yahoo.com/mlb/boxscore?gid=290406114
- http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090406&content_id=4144306&vkey=news_tor&fext=
- http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/April2009/03/c7531.html
- http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5j6P4o5oAo7TLqX_rn84qME4UOz6A
- Baseball Rumor Mill
- Jays' Jesse Litsch needs 'Tommy John' surgery
- http://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2008/06/wondering-about.html
- Cheek among finalists for Frick award, http://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/2008/10/06/cheek_frick/
- Mulliniks, Barfield join CBC's Blue Jays booth
- Title Unavailable