Today is the Birthdays of former Blue Jays Paul Molitor and Drew Hutchison. And, far more importantly, it’s my wife’s Birthday.

Molitor is 69 today (how come that makes me feel old).

Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, he was a first-round pick in the 1977 amateur draft, the third pick overall (Harold Baines and Bill Gullickson went before him) out of the University of Minnesota. The Jays’ first pick that year was Tom Goffena. Pat Gillick didn’t have the greatest record on draft picks. MLB’s way of sticking it to the Expansion teams was to have them draft at the bottom of the round.

Advertisement

After only 64 A ball games, Paul started the 1978 season with the Brewers. He finished 2nd in the Rookie of the Year voting to Lou Whitaker. He played 15 years for the Brewers, making the All-Star team five times and receiving MVP votes in 6 seasons, finishing 5th in the voting in 1987. Milwaukee’s ‘Harvey Wall Bangers’ made the playoffs in 1981 and made it to the World Series in 1982, losing to the Cardinals. Bill James called the Brewers’ infield of Cecil Cooper, Jim Gantner, Robin Yount and Molitor the best infield in the majors in the 1980s and the 5th best infield of all time.

Paul was moved around the infield and even played CF one season for the Brewers, as they didn’t seem to realize he was the sort of player for whom you moved the other guys around. Paul was also injury-prone during his time there (which likely wasn’t helped by moving him all around the diamond).

In 1993, the Jays signed him as a free agent to replace Dave Winfield at DH. Winfield went to the Twins as a free agent. At the time of the trade, I remember the anchor on the Sports Desk saying the Jays finally had a leadoff man, but Cito continued to use Devon White in the leadoff spot. Molitor came through with one of the best seasons of his career, batting .332/.402/.509, finishing 2nd in the league with 121 runs and driving in 111. He also led the league in plate appearances (725), hits (211), batting average in late innings of close games (.411), and with runners in scoring position (.384). At 36, he set a record for being the oldest player to drive in 100 runs for the first time. He also hit 22 homers and stole 22 bases. He finished 2nd to Frank Thomas in the MVP vote. Fangraphs credits him with a 5.2 WAR that year, his best number with the Jays.

Molitor was terrific in the playoffs, hitting .391 in the ALCS win over the White Sox, scoring seven runs and driving in five with one homer. In the Series, he hit .500 with two homers, two triples, and two doubles in our win over the Phillies, scoring 10 runs and driving in another 8 to win the Series MVP, and he was on base for Joe Carter’s series-winning home run. The enduring memory, for me, is him hugging Cito and crying after they won. It was his first and only World Series win in a long, terrific career.

Advertisement

In 1994, the lockout year, Paul was having just as good a season, hitting .341/.410/.518 before the owners locked the doors. He made the All-Star team for the 4th straight season and finished 18th in the MVP vote, but the Jays didn’t do as well. They ended up 55-60. At 38, the impressive stat was 20 for 20 as a base stealer. In the shortened 1995 season, Paul’s numbers declined, finishing at .270/.350/.423, and the Jays had a disappointing season that year, too, finishing 5th.

Rob Neyer picked Molitor as the Jays’ best DH ever, and we did in our Best DH poll. Bill James called Molitor the 3rd greatest leadoff man of all time behind Rickey Henderson and Tim Raines, and the 8th best third baseman of all time. One notable aspect of his career is that he was prone to injuries in the first ten years, yet he played almost every day in the second half of his career.

After the season, he signed with the Twins as a free agent to finish his career playing for his hometown team. Paul had a terrific career, ending with 3319 hits, 504 stolen bases, and a Hall of Fame Plaque.

Molitor became the Twins’ manager in 2015 and led them until the end of the 2018 season. He’s now a special assistant with the Twins.

Advertisement

One of the more notable facts about him is that he was the first (and only) MLB player to steal home ten times.

Hutchison turns 35 today.

He was our 15th-round draft pick in 2009. He quickly moved up our minor league system and was called up to the Blue Jays at the end of April 2012. He made 11 starts and then went on the DL. In August, he had Tommy John surgery. He wouldn’t pitch for a year, returning to the mound in August 2013, with the Bisons making 10 appearances.

Drew started the 2014 season in Toronto and made 32 starts for us. He went 11-13 with a 4.48 ERA.

In 2015, he was our opening-day starter, going six innings and winning against the Yankees. He finished the season with a 13-5 record but a 5.57 ERA in 30 games, 28 starts.

Advertisement

2016 could have gone better. Drew started the season in Buffalo and came up for a spot start at the end of April. He wasn’t bad: 5.2 innings, four hits, two earned, three walks, five strikeouts. The bad mark was two home runs. In early July, he was called up for a couple of appearances and then returned to Buffalo.

On August 1st, the Jays traded him to the Pirates for Francisco Liriano, Reese McGuire, and Harold Ramirez. The trade worked out for us. Liriano had a 2.29 ERA down the stretch, and we made the playoffs.

After the trade, Hutchison changed teams, moving from the Pirates, Phillies, Rangers, Dodgers, Twins, and Yankees to the Yankees and Twins again.

For two seasons, he was in the Tigers system. In 2022, he made 10 starts and 10 relief appearances, with a 4.23 ERA and a 1-6 record. He started against the Jays on July 30th, giving up two hits and one run in 5 innings without getting the decision in a Jays win. It was nice to see him again.

Advertisement

In 2023, the Jays signed him to a minor league contract, but he didn’t make it to the majors.

It is also the Birthday of Hall of Famer Carl Yastrzemski. He is 86. Carl was a favourite of mine when I was young. I tried to copy his batting stance (which changed as he aged; he simplified his stance to get to the ball quicker). Carl played 23 seasons in the majors, all with the Red Sox. He finished with 3419 hits and 452 home runs and won the Triple Crown in 1967. I thought he would be the last to do that, but then Miguel Cabrera did it in 2012.

His grandson, Mike Yastrzemski, is in his seventh season with the Giants. He has 119 career home runs, so he will have to go some to catch Granddad.

Also, former Jays Doug Bair (who pitched in 10 games of a 15-season MLB career with the Jays turns 76, and Ryan Feierabend, who pitched 5.2 innings for the Jays in 2019, turns 40.

Happy Birthday to Paul, Drew, Carl, Doug, Ryan, and, of course, my wife.