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Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

David Wells was not the best Pitcher in most of the staffs he appeared on, but the man known as "Boomer" was often the most known.

The Blue Jays released Wells in 1993 before the season started, but he gradually got better and became one of Baseball's most potent lefthanded starters.  Wells began his career with the Blue Jays, with the first strictly in the bullpen.  The southpaw split his next three years as a starter and reliever and won a World Series Ring with Toronto but saw limited action in the playoffs.

Roger Clemens wanted to play for a contender, and Wells, who was in New York, was traded to the Jays as part of the deal.  In his second run with Toronto, Wells won 37 Games in two seasons, including 20 that led the AL in 2000.  That year, Wells was an All-Star and was third in Cy Young voting, despite a 4.11 ERA, but it was a hitter’s era.

The still-struggling Jays traded Wells to the White Sox after 2000, and with the Blue Jays, he went 84-55 with 784 Strikeouts.  

Shannon Stewart's MLB career began with the Blue Jays in 1995, after their back-to-back titles, but still, an era where the SkyDome was rocking.

Stewart worked his way to starting at Center in 1998, swiping 51 bases with a .279 Batting Average.  His basepath acumen dipped afterward, but Stewart batted over .300 for the rest of his four-and-a-half years in Toronto and showed good power with six straight 10-Home Run years.  

The Blue Jays were no longer a contender in the early 2000s, and Stewart was traded to Minnesota for their playoff run.  Stewart collected 1,082 Hits, and batted .298 with 74 Home Runs with 166 Stolen Bases for Toronto.

Ernie Whitt was in the Red Sox organization when the Toronto Blue Jays were formed, and they used one of their Expansion picks to take the Catcher, who would appear in 23 games for the parent club that year.

Whitt's ascension was slow, playing only 2 Games for the Jays in 1978 and zero in 1979, but the decade of the 1980s was Whitt's time to shine behind the plate.  After becoming the primary Catcher in 1980, Whitt often was in a platoon situation as a Jay against right-handed Pitchers, which granted him the heavier load.  

A favorite of Blue Jays' ace Dave Stieb, he had the opportunity to catch him in his lone All-Star appearance in 1985.  That was the season when Whitt and Jays made their first post-season appearance.  Whitt also collected over 100 Hits for the first time and would accomplish that in the next five years while also having a nine-year run of 10-plus Home Runs.  

Whitt was traded to make room for younger Catchers, and when it was all said and done, the popular player managed 888 Hits with 131 Home Runs.  He is also a member of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.

The son of Baseball Hall of Famer, Vladimir Guerrero, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., was an expected superstar based on his pedigree and skill.  He did not disappoint.

Guerrero was signed as an amateur Free Agent with Toronto in 2015 and was called up four years later in the 2019 Season.  The dynamic First Baseman was sixth in Rookie of the Year voting and belted 15 Home Runs.  Guerrero was solid in the COVID-shortened 2020 season, but his 2021 campaign was MVP-worthy had there not been Shohei Ohtani.  Guerrero won the Hank Aaron Award, went to his first All-Star Game, captured the Silver Slugger, and led the AL in Runs (123), Home Runs (48), OBP (.401), Slugging (.601), and OPS (1.002).

The First Baseman was not as potent with his bat in 2022 (32 HR, .818 OPS), but he shored up his defense and won the Gold Glove.  In 2023, was also a disappointent with an OPS of less than .800, and 26 Home Rune, but after a slow atart in 2024, he exoloded with a sixth-place MVP finish, a fourth All-Star, and 30 Home Runs

Vladdy is entering his contract year in 2025, but if he stat=ys, this a top-five franchise player.