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Top 55 All-Time Greatest Blue Jays: #40 Otto Velez

Otto Velez (Getty Images)

Otto Franceschi Velez | DH,RF,LF | 1977-1982

Here is a name from the distant past. Otto Velez was born November 29, 1950 in Ponce, Puerto Rico. He was signed as an amateur free agent in 1968, by the New York Yankees. In 1973 he made it to the majors playing in 23 games as a September call up for the Yankees. For the next 3 seasons he played a handful of games for the Yankees but he was blocked from a full time job by the Yankee's fondness for signing free agents.

The Jays picked Otto up in the major league expansion draft in 1976. That first year the Jays were awful, finishing with a 54-107 record and didn't get much better in the years Otto was with the team. But, he was pretty good, in 1977 he hit .256/.366/.458 with 16 home runs and 62 RBI in 120 games. He had a good eye at the plate leading the team in walks. He mostly played right field that year and he was, well, terrible as a RFer. Rob Neyer says that Velez was the worst right fielder in team history and I can't argue that. He had little range and basically no arm at all. But the team had a 38 year old Ron Fairly and a handful of other guys that really couldn't field, so the DH spot was filled. A typical right handed slugger he crushed lefties, hitting them at a .318/.420/.527 rate.

In 1978, the Jays weren't any better, but Velez still hit quite well batting .266/.380/.448 with 9 homers and 38 RBI in 91 games. His playing time was split between left and right field, he also DHed some and played a game at first. He continued to crush LHP, hitting .302/.421/.560 against them.

In 1979 he hit .288/.396/.529 in 99 games with 15 home runs and 48 RBI. He again played mostly left and right field, DHed in 9 games and played first 6 times. Fangraphs has 1979 as Otto's best season, giving him a 2.8 WAR. Otto had a reverse split that year.

1980 saw Velez become a full time DH, playing 97 games as a DH and 3 at first base. He set career highs in home runs (20), runs (54) and tied his high for RBI (62). He hit .269/.365/.487 and an OPS+ of 127 his 4th straight year with the Jays with an OPS+ over 120. On May 4th he hit four home runs in a doubleheader against Cleveland and he hit one of each type, solo, two run, three run and grand slam.

1981, the strike year Velez had a poor season batting .213/.363/.404. When he was a young player he had old player skills and turning 30 those skills diminished quickly. 1982 he played in just 28 games, hitting just .192. He was replaced at DH by Dave Revering and a cast of thousands. After the 1982 season the Jays released him and he signed with the Cleveland Indians. He played just 10 games for the Indians and that was the end of his major league career at 32.

The early Jays were a pretty poor group, Velez was one of the few reasonable players they had. He was a pretty good DH type, had a really good eye at the plate and good power.

There is very little information on the web about Otto. He coached the Puerto Rico National Team in the 1992 Olympics and the 1994 Baseball World Cup. And that's about all that can be found about his post major league life. If anyone has any more information about Otto Velez, let me know.

Otto Velez' ranking among Jay batting leaders:

Batting Average (>1500 AB): 32nd, .257
On Base % (>1500 AB): 7th, .372
Slugging % (>1500 AB): 13th, .461
OPS (>1500 AB): 7th, .834
Games Played: 38th, 522
At Bats: 4th, 1531
Runs: 40th, 214
Hits: 42nd, 394
Total Bases: 37th, 706
Doubles: 38th, 76
Home Runs: 25th, 72
RBI: 32nd, 243
Walks: 17th, 278
Adjusted OPS+: 6th, 127

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Otto as a Chief

Your description of Velez is spot on. I saw him play many times as a Syracuse Chief (when the Chiefs were the Yankees’ Triple-A farm) and followed his career with the Yankees and Blue Jays. He used to play a lot of first base with those Chiefs teams. He was indeed a horrible outfielder, but his bat had some pop.

I believe that MLB expansion gave him a major-league career. I doubt he would have played many games or lasted very long if not for the existence of brand-new teams like the Jays with little or no depth. In those days, the expansion draft rules made it much harder for an expansion team to build a serviceable team quickly. The Jays and the Seattle Mariners, who started in 1977 with the Jays, were essentially Triple-A teams that were in over their heads. They did have a few familiar names, but even those were old major leaguers who would otherwise have been forced into retirement.

by CuseJay on Jan 7, 2012 4:22 PM EST reply actions  

4st?

Wiz dat?

by brent in Korea on Jan 7, 2012 5:38 PM EST via mobile reply actions  

really? this guy is 40th? never heard of him. from a WAR perspective, wouldn’t Overbay rank higher than him? Did you already mention Damaso Garcia? would rank damo ahead of this guy too.

by Gerry71 on Jan 8, 2012 2:09 AM EST reply actions  

The list so far is on the home page.

And you’ve probably never heard of him because he played a long time ago.

by Defense Counts! on Jan 8, 2012 7:21 PM EST up reply actions  

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