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Question time: Which player in Blue Jays history did you have high hopes for, but didn’t live up to your expectations?

Tampa Bay Rays v Toronto Blue Jays Photo by Abelimages/Getty Images

We are at the playoff time low ebb for Blue Jays news. I understand that baseball doesn’t like teams to make news during the playoffs, but it makes life hard for us that write about baseball.

Which player in Blue Jays history did you have the highest hopes for but didn’t live up to your expectations?

There are several ways you can go with this question, but I’m picking Brandon Morrow.

His first season, as a Jay, back in 2010, pitching coach Bruce Walton tinkered with his delivery some and tried to get him throwing strikes. It didn’t go great. He finished with a 4.49 ERA but struck out 10.9 batters per 9 innings. The following year the Bruce worked with him to throw more ‘quality strikes,’ but he wasn’t very successful, putting up a 4.72 ERA. Finally, in 2012, Morrow put it all together. He had a 2.96 ERA. It looked like we’d have a star pitcher for years to come.

After that, things fell apart, with a mess of injuries and, in those rare moments when he was healthy enough to pitch, ineffectiveness.

There were great moments. August 8th, 2010, was the biggest. That was when he came within an out of a no-hitter, striking out 17 along the way. It might have been the best pitching performance I’ve ever seen. He was so good. I thought there would be more shots at no-hitters in his future. When he was on, he seemed unhittable.

He had some good moments in the bullpen since leaving the Jays, but he was still injury-prone and last pitched in 2018.

Who would you pick?