Monday, December 23, 2019

What's in my Christmas stocking ?



 

The Blue Jays reportedly signed free-agent starting pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu Sunday night to a four-year deal worth US$80 million, according to the MLB Network’s Jon Heyman.

The Korean lefty gives the Blue Jays a front of the rotation starter, joining the likes of off-season acquisitions Chase Anderson and Tanner Roark.
 Ryu led the majors in earned-run average during a breakout 2019 season, finishing at 2.32, and he was the runner-up for the National League Cy Young Award and a mid-season all-star.

The 32-year-old went 14-5 with 163 strikeouts in 182.2 innings with the Dodgers.

In six seasons with the Dodgers, Ryu went 54-33 with a 2.98 ERA. He was a star in the Korea Baseball Organization before joining the Dodgers, going 98-52 in seven seasons.
News of the signing comes the same day as the Jays inking infielder Travis Shaw to a one-year-contract.

Ryu was an All-Star for the first time in 2019, seven years after leaving the Korean Baseball Organization for U.S. free agency and, eventually, a six-year, $36 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers. He played last season with the Dodgers after accepting the $17.9nmillion qualifying offer and was healthy enough to make 29 starts for the first time since 2013, his rookie year.

He also changed his dietary and conditioning habits for the better, a process that included reconnecting with a coach he’d worked with in Korea.



His best season resulted. Ryu stood among National League leaders in ERA (2.32) and wins (14). He was third (to Jack Flaherty and Jacob deGrom) in WHIP, second (to Max Scherzer) in strikeouts per walk and led in walks per nine. His leading asset was command — 163 strikeouts and 22 unintentional walks in 182 2/3 innings — and he rode that as frontrunner for the NL Cy Young Award well into August, when his ERA after 22 starts was 1.45.

His next four starts likely cost him that recognition.  Over those 2 1/2 weeks, against the Atlanta Braves, New York Yankees, Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies, Ryu allowed 31 hits and 21 runs in 19 innings. His ERA, bordering on historic, rose to 2.45. He was more effective to finish September and was just so-so in a division series start against the Washington Nationals.

Important, for Ryu and the Dodgers, was a season without injury. He’d missed significant time in 2015 and 2016 because of shoulder surgery and setbacks related to it. He was on the disabled list in 2018 because of a groin injury. Since his return in the middle of August of that season, Ryu has made 38 starts. In them, he is 18-8 with a 2.22 ERA.

It was commonly believed Ryu would prefer to remain on the West Coast, even in the Los Angeles area, which offered re-signing with the Dodgers or signing with the pitching-poor Angels.
Ryu will turn 33 before the start of the 2020 season and has yet to prove he can put one full season after the other, representing some risk.

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