Jays president won’t set specific timelines for when team may contend again
Baseball prognasticators are predicting pain for the 2019 edition of the Toronto Blue Jays. What remains unclear is whether the team’s off-season teardown might result in a short-term malaise or an extended run of mediocrity.
Canada’s lone Major League Baseball team said goodbye to a number of veteran players in recent months and is prioritizing the development of a young core that it hopes will grow to a point where the Blue Jays become a consistent contender. It’s expected to take at least a year and most likely two or three before that might happen.
Team president Mark Shapiro has no plans to declare which season he hopes the corner is turned.
“I’ve got a range of timelines in my head because you just don’t know in this game,” he said Tuesday. “The beauty of the game is it’s being played by human beings and there’s just no certainty as to how fast, there’s no limit to how quickly it can happen. But there’s also no certainty to how fast it will happen. That’s why it’s important to not stake it on one or two or three players. You’ve got to have a lot of players and a lot of players coming.