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Question time: Which former Jay doesn’t get talked about enough?

Toronto Blue Jays

Here is a question for you: What player from the Blue Jays past doesn’t get remembered enough? What player don’t we talk about enough? Give us your answer in the thread, but also, if you like, do a Fan Post about the player in the next couple of weeks, and we’ll move up to the ‘front page’.

So the idea is a player that you think we’ve forgotten or, if not forgotten, we don’t give him his due around here.My personal choice Ernie Whitt

Ernie Whitt was born June 13, 1952 in Detroit, Michigan. In the 15th round of the 1972 amateur draft by the Boston Red Sox, one pick before Jason Thompson, a terrific first baseman for the Tigers and Dodgers. Ernie blocked from making the Red Sox by Carlton Fisk, was left unprotected in the 1976 expansion draft, and we grabbed him up, making him an original Blue Jay.Whitt got 41 at-bats in our first season and got into a couple of games in 1978. In 1979 he spent the whole season in the minors. In 1980 he was finally given a role in the majors at the age of 28. He was the left-handed half of a catching platoon with Rob Davis. He didn’t hit very well, going .237/.288/.353. He hit left-handed pitchers better, getting a .283 average against them, though in only 60 at-bats.

In the strike-shortened 1981 season the Jays picked up Buck Martinez, who would become Whitt’s platoon partner for several years. Whitt again didn’t hit well, just .236/.307/.297 with just 1 home run.In 1982 Bobby Cox took over as manager, and Cito Gaston became hitting coach. I’m not sure if that was why, but Ernie found his hitting stroke that year, getting his averages up to .261/.307/.440 and suddenly finding home run power-hitting 11 in just 284 at-bats. Cito did have a way of finding the power in guys. In 1983 continued his improvement with the bat hitting .256/.346/.459, with 17 home runs in just 344 at bats. Combined with Buck Martinez the Jays got 27 home runs and 89 RBI out of the catcher platoon. In two seasons, with Cito’s tutoring, Whitt went from 1 homer to 11 to 17.

In 1984 Ernie continued the power hitting with 15 homers in 315 at bats. In our first playoff year, 1985, Whitt set a new career-high for homers with 19 hitting .245/.323/.444 in 412 at-bats and he made the All-Star team. But he didn’t do as well in our 7 game ALCS loss to the Royal, he hit just .190. Whitt started every game of the series against both left-handed and right-handed pitchers, as Martinez was injured (likely most of you remember that play, where he broke his leg and dislocated his ankle, and still tagged out the runner at home afterwards). Jeff Hearron was the back-up catcher for the series.

Whitt continued to be a very consistent player; in 1986 he hit 16 home runs. Before the 1987 season Buck Martinez retired, and Charlie Moore became Ernie’s catching partner. Whitt hit 19 home runs for the second time in his career, setting a career-high in RBI with 75 and a career-high of 24 doubles and hits with 120 with batting .269/.334/.455. 1987 was the season we fell apart at the end and allowed the Detroit Tigers to pass us for first place. Whitt missed the end of the season with a rib injury. Had he been able to play, we likely wouldn’t have been passed by the Tigers.He continued his consistent play in 1988, batting .251/.348/.410 with 16 home runs in 398 at bats. In 1989 the Jays made the playoffs for the second time, Whitt continued to be a consistent performer batting .262/.349/.416 with 11 home runs in 385 at-bats. Once again, Whitt didn’t hit well in our 5 game ALCS loss to the Oakland A’s, batting .125 with 1 homer in 16 at bats.

After the season, Ernie was traded to Atlanta with Kevin Batiste for Rick Trlicek to clear room at catcher for Pat Borders and Greg Myers. He played in Atlanta for one year, then played for Baltimore for part of 1991, and his playing career was over. For a guy who only got into 33 games before his 28th birthday, he had a terrific career. Ernie never had 300 at-bats in a season till he was 31. He was amazingly consistent; from 1983 to 1989, he had OPS+ numbers ranging from 104 to 121, on-base % from .323 to .349, and slugging averages from .410 to .459.He had a good career, playing 1328 games over 15 seasons and hit 134 home runs. He finished up with a .248/.324/.410 and 534 RBI and was an excellent defensive catcher with a decent arm. Our first manager Roy Hartsfield told didn’t think Whitt could make it as a major leaguer. Whitt proved him wrong. He had the longest career with the Jays of any player that played in our first season.

Whitt was a favorite of mine. I loved his all-out pull swing. Often he would end his swing on his left knee; he’d swing right off his feet. If you watched him swing, you would have sworn he couldn’t have hit the ball at all. His back knee would drop and drag on the ground, his bat should also have dropped, and he should have swung under the ball, but he had such an open stance he could see the ball well and, well, he was smart. He was a catcher, and he was a guess hitter. And as an intelligent catcher, he was a very good guesser. Fool him he’ll miss the ball, but he didn’t fool easy.He wrote a biography called ‘Catch: A Major League Life’ (which I have somewhere around the house). One of the controversial things he said in the book was that umpire Joe Brinkman was ‘incompetent’. Another thing he said in his book was that he shouldn’t have been just a platoon catcher. He was wrong. In his career, he hit just .223/.303/.311 against left-handed pitchers.

Rob Neyer, in his book “Big Book of Baseball Lineups” has Whitt as our all time best catcher and really, he is by far the best catcher we’ve ever had. He also says Whitt played the best defense of any catcher we had. Bill James in his “New Historical Baseball Abstract” has Whitt ranked as the 72 best catcher of all time. He likely would be moved down a few spots since then. He was arguably the most popular player among Jay fans when he was with Toronto. He played the game hard and did a ton of charity work in during his off-field hours.Ernie had been the Jay’s bench coach then the first base coach starting in 2005 and was fired with John Gibbons and most of the rest of the coaching staff in June of 2008. Whitt burned bridges behind him by ripping JP Richardi afterward and calling himself the ‘best manager the Jay’s never had’.

Whitt has been the manager of the Canadian national baseball team since 2004. He he is in the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. Whitt got everything off of his ability. You have to admire someone like that. He wasn’t a hot prospect in the minors and didn’t show power till he was in his 30’s.