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10. George Bell

The Philadelphia Phillies first signed George Bell in 1978, but the Blue Jays nabbed him in the Rule 5 Draft, forcing Bell to play his entire season in the Majors, arguably before he was ready.  After a season-and-a-half in the Minors, Bell was called up for good to play in Leftfield as Toronto's starter, and he quickly turned heads with his power.  

Bell hit 26 Home Runs in his first full year and 28 the year after when the Blue Jays made it to their first postseason.  After another year of improvement (1986, 31 HR, 108 RBI, .309), where he was fourth in MVP voting, Bell had his best year in Baseball, and though Toronto had already made the playoffs before, many felt that this was when the Jays had arrived.

In 1987, Bell won the MVP and the Major League Player of the Year when he blasted 47 Home Runs, batted .308, and led the AL in RBIs with 134.  He was also an All-Star for the first time that year.  It was the first time that any Blue Jay was considered the best Baseball player, and it was huge for a young team outside of the United States.  Bell might not have repeated those metrics, but his offense was still solid over the next two years, with a fourth-place finish in MVP voting in 1989.

Bell went to his second All-Star in 1990, but his inconsistency and temperament began to distance him from the fans, and he left for the Cubs at the season's end.

As a Blue Jay, Bell smacked 202 Home Runs and had 740 RBIs with a .286 Batting Average, and was later inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.  Bell is also a member of the Blue Jays Level of Excellence.

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