There was a time in J.A. Happ’s career when he wouldn’t have been considered to start an opening day game.
And even if he was, he wouldn’t have remembered.
“The 2011 and 2012 years are something that I try to suppress a little bit,” the Toronto left-hander said with a laugh when a reporter asked if he had started an opening day with the Houston Astros during those seasons.
“It would be great if those years never happened but you live and learn. I might not be here if it wasn’t for that.”
Happ isn’t the same pitcher he was in 2011 and 2012. The Blue Jays’ decision Tuesday to name him their opening day starter is a testament to that.
Happ will pitch March 29 at 3:37 p.m. ET against the New York Yankees, the team heavily favoured to win the American League East, at Rogers Centre.
“It feels good, I haven’t always had that [confidence from organizations],” Happ said. “After being here the last few years and having great experiences for the most part, It’s nice to feel that confidence that they have in me and the trust level.”
Added manager John Gibbons: “There’s just something about opening day, you know? The focus and everything like that, and you have to be good to get those nods.”
Right-hander Aaron Sanchez, whose 2017 season was hampered by a finger blister, will start the second game against the Yankees on Friday night. Marco Estrada and Marcus Stroman will close out the four-game series and newcomer Jaime Garcia will open the next series against the Chicago White Sox on April 2.
Change in approach
Stroman, who finished eighth in Cy Young voting after going 13-9 with a 3.09 earned-run average last season, was the favourite to start the opener when camp began last month. A right shoulder injury changed that, limiting Stroman to just one start — two innings against Canada’s junior national team last week — so far this spring. He’s scheduled to pitch Wednesday against the Phillies.
Happ, a 20-game winner in 2016, was 10-11 with a 3.53 ERA last season.
The 35-year-old was 7-9 with a 4.83 ERA in 2012 before being traded from Houston to Toronto midway through that season. He finished 10-11 and continued to struggle on the mound over the next two years before switching up his approach.
“I watched a lot of other left-handers and I felt I was not far from getting to that level,” Happ said of the beginning of his changes to both his mechanics and his mindset.
I got a little renewed energy being in a playoff hunt [with Pittsburgh in 2015] and started having a little bit of success and positivity and that was a good thing for me.— Blue Jays pitcher J.A. Happ on his transition into of the game’s top left-handed starters
“I just felt like a few adjustments and I could be there. The repertoire was there. It was a work in progress, being more consistent, and the mental side of the game means so much.
“I think just the combination of those, as I grew and felt some confidence from the organization and got a little renewed energy from being in different places and had some success, those things kind of helped me grow into the pitcher I am and trusting that is enough to just go out there and try to repeat that.”
Happ was traded from the Blue Jays to Seattle in the 2014 off-season for Canadian outfielder Michael Saunders. He swapped teams again mid-season in 2015, going from the Mariners to the Pirates, before signing with Toronto as a free agent the following year.
Happ’s transition into one of the game’s top lefties began with the Jays — and countless conversations with pitching coach Pete Walker in 2014.
“I felt really good about how that season ended, and at the time I was disappointed when I got traded, or at least I didn’t expect I would get traded. … I got a little renewed energy being in a playoff hunt [with Pittsburgh in 2015] and started having a little bit of success and positivity and that was a good thing for me,” Happ said.
Gibbons said he’s been a fan of Happ’s “from Day 1.”
“Really he’s reinvented himself,” he said. “He’s become a different pitcher, more ground balls, and I think it really helped his breaking ball and his location.”
“He’s always been reliable,” Gibbons added. “He’s a work horse. He’s one of the good guys.”