Pitcher, Number 34

A.J. Burnett was a bad pitcher for two and a half years, then a good pitcher for half a year. That earned him $82.5 million, but is he worth it?
Sep. 29, 2009
Eric Rosenhek





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Your time with the Blue Jays will always remain a mystery.


How on Earth did you convince JP Riccardi that you were worth all that money?
55 million over five years.
Better question: How did you convince New York you were worth even more?
82.5 million over five years.


I guess it all has to do with your potential.
That was the word the experts used to describe you:
Potential


The conspiracy theories about you will always come up.
But a more proper term would be irony.
It was ironic that you had your best season,
the same year you could opt out of your contract


We all finally learned to love you in '08.
No one cared about the bad start or the sarcastic tip-of-the-cap,
or your poor choice to use "Hanging Tough" as your official song.
There was never a mention of your first two seasons and the injuries.
But you left us for New York: The ultimate stress test


Tell us what it's like to play for New York.
Does the owner mind the tattoos?
And would you ever say something like,
"We played scared. We managed scared. We coached scared," in New York?


Maybe it was all for the best.
Your departure gave Richmond, Romero, Cecil, Tallet and Ray an opportunity to prove themselves.
A minor benefit, but a benefit nonetheless.


Current Comments

1 comments so far (post your own)
Mike says:

Wow, is this really an article?


Posted by Mike on Monday, September 28, 2009 @ 11:45pm

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