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Deploy that thing on every occasion, Doc, don't just save it for special occasions.
I admit, I've watched Farquhar more than maybe some, and I like what I've seen.  I've managed to catch him several times in the minors over the last couple of years in addition to his ML time, so his growth has kinda unfolded before my eyes.  It's been an impressive two years.
One thing I didn't state about Danny earlier: he's finding his swagger.  Danny, JUST NOW, is figuring out that his stuff is really good.  He's always had a rubber arm and been able to throw multiple innings with easy bounce-back the next day.  But he was an afterthought on the mound in high school, being more of a position player at his height.  They used him as a swiss army knife, not a surgeon's scalpel, and it took him a lot of years to figure out his approach and place on the mound.
Farquhar has grown like crazy the last two seasons.  He was claimed off waivers from the As by the Yankees, and then traded to us all in a few weeks time.  He'd literally started implementing the cutter maybe a month earlier, and has been tinkering ever since, trying to figure out how best to sequence the heat and the other heat together.
But he never threw the curve.  He only really started doing that this year.  The pitcher he was with Toronto a couple of years ago was a one-pitch dude.  The Yankees picked him up on a lark from Oakland because he might be developing a second pitch, but they weren't attached to him.
Now he has three quality offerings, and as you say that devastating breaking ball might be the difference-maker.  For me, though, it's the attitude adjustment he got in July.  That's the one that Putz found when he went from mid-90s starter with bleh secondary stuff and a bloated ERA to devastating bullpenner with an unhittable forkball. It's one thing to have good stuff, it's another thing to embrace what you can truly accomplish with it. Danny seems on the cusp of really becoming the sort of special pitcher we want Wilhelmsen, Pryor and Capps to be. 
Farquhar has the pitches to handle hitters on either side of the plate, the attitude to make those hitters uncomfortable instead of just throwing what makes himself comfortable, and he's now getting the swagger and self-belief required to mow down the heart of the order with the game on the line.
Beware of Danny Farquhar.  Anybody who jumps three plateaus in 2 years is worth a really long look - which is why the Ms seem to have made him the de-facto closer in an attempt to test his mettle and see his stuff. 
He ain't disappointing, even if he's still under the radar.  That anonymity won't last.  Even if we replace him as closer, he's a bullpen arm I want around in a big way.
~G

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