Blue Jays' payroll 'will continue to rise' coming off 91-win season
Team president Shapiro says team will have resources to spend to remain competitive
Toronto Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro is very proud of how his club did in 2021.
But he's also bitter.
"Every team that is not the team that wins the last championship game played is bitter," said Shapiro on Monday, hours before Game 3 of the American League Championship Series.
"The fact that we're not playing right now leaves me more determined, and all of us here more determined that we continue to get better."
Toronto just missed on the post-season, winning six of its final 10 games, finishing one game back of the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox in a thrilling finish to the AL's wild-card chase that included the Seattle Mariners and came down to the final game of the regular season.
The Blue Jays' 91-71 record was a sharp turnaround from the last full Major League Baseball season, when they went 67-95 in 2019.
"I'm going to remember this year for a long time, just because the team was so good and believe so strongly in the group of guys that we had," said Shapiro. "But I do think yeah we need to continue to build, you know I'm encouraged by that improvement from 95 losses to 91 wins."
WATCH | Announcer Dan Shulman looks back on 2021 season:
Boston beat New York 3-1 in the AL's wild-card game, then beat the AL East champion Tampa Bay Rays three games to one in the best-of-five division series. The Red Sox are now playing the Houston Astros in the AL Championship Series with a World Series berth on the line.
Shapiro noted Boston and New York's records were only one game better than Toronto.
Productive off-season
"I do feel like when I watch these teams play, not those two in particular but all of them, that if we had found a way to get in that we were going to be a team that would have been very tough in the post-season," said Shapiro.
Toronto was 32-28 in a 2020 season shortened by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Blue Jays front office elevated the team with a productive off-season.
Over $185 million US was added to the roster, highlighted by the acquisitions of outfielder George Springer, infielder Marcus Semien and starting pitcher Robbie Ray.
Springer struggled with injuries but finished the year with 22 home runs, 50 runs batted in and a .264 batting average.
Semien hit 45 homers -- a new MLB record for a player who played most of his season at second base -- with 102 RBI and an MLB-leading 86 extra-base hits.
Ray also had a career season with a 2.84 earned-run average and 248 strikeouts over 193.1 innings pitched.
But both Semien and Ray were signed to one-year deals and Shapiro said the Blue Jays will have to spend again to remain competitive.
Mental toughness
"We'll have the resources to do it, both in young talent that we could trade and in payroll," said Shapiro. "It may not be the exact same shape and form, but we're going to get better.
"I feel like we can continue to raise the payroll as we already have to unprecedented levels. And our team and our fans and this city and this incredible market, which is a country, can support us continuing to raise it."
Shapiro was especially pleased with the mental toughness of the Blue Jays, who played the entire 2020 season in the United States, using the team's minor league stadium in Dunedin, Fla., and its triple-A affiliate's ballpark in Buffalo, N.Y. The Blue Jays again started the 2021 season in Florida and western New York, but finally got to return to Rogers Centre on July 30 when the Canadian government eased border restrictions.
"They took the attitude 'It is what it is but not what it should be, and we just have to find a way to get better,"' said Shapiro. "I do think that we will build upon that perseverance, we'll build upon that resilience.
"That will be a trademark we'll have with this team moving forward, that we endured things that no one else had to endure."
The Blue Jays completed their player development complex in Dunedin last off-season, creating a larger training facility for players at all levels within the organization.
Shapiro said Monday with the impressive 65-acre complex squared away, his next major infrastructure project will be improving Rogers Centre, starting with a new scoreboard in 2022. In the long run, the team is going to consider major renovations to its ballpark in downtown Toronto or building a new stadium for the major league club.