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    Will We Ever See Brendon Little Back With the Blue Jays?

    Striking out Triple-A hitters is great, but Little needs to do more to prove he's ready to return to Toronto.

    Sam Charles
    Image courtesy of Stephen Brashear-Imagn Images via Reuters Connect

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    Stats in this article were updated prior to games on April 27.

    The question being asked by the Blue Jays as April turns to May isn’t whether Brendon Little can find the strike zone, it’s whether the organization realistically has a place for him anymore.

    Buffalo has done exactly what a Triple-A assignment is supposed to do for a broken reliever: It slowed the world down and stripped away the daily urgency of the major league bullpen carousel. Through eight games and 8.0 innings with the Bisons, Little has been statistically perfect where it counts most, posting a 4-0 record and a 0.00 ERA with 13 strikeouts. On paper, it is the "come and get me" performance fans expected. But the front office isn't just looking at the zeroes on the scoreboard. They’re looking at why those numbers didn't materialize with the big league squad.

    Little isn't a prospect anymore. At 29, the book on him is a manual on how to hit him. The Blue Jays did not option him lightly on April 5. They did it because the same problems that began in 2025 recreated themselves almost immediately in 2026.

    In his brief major league stint this year, the sinker didn't sink. It leaked back toward the middle of the plate. Statcast data from the Chicago series wasn’t great. His hard-hit rate was north of 50 percent, and his expected ERA over 7.00. When batters don’t bite on the knuckle curve, Little is forced to challenge with a fastball that, currently, is a magnet for barrels.

    Thirteen strikeouts in eight innings is dominant, sure, but the 1.25 WHIP in Buffalo tells a different story. He is still playing with fire. In Triple A, you can get away with a curveball that starts in the zone and tumbles out. Minor league hitters tend to flail. At the major league level, batters simply won’t offer at it.

    To understand why the Jays aren't rushing to call Little back, you just have to check fellow southpaw Joe Mantiply’s stat line so far. While Little dominates Triple-A hitters, Mantiply is providing the predictability the Jays need and crave. In 9 games at the MLB level this season, Mantiply has posted a 3.38 ERA over 10.2 innings with 15 strikeouts and a 1.22 WHIP. Mantiply’s two most recent outings, 1.2 scoreless innings against Cleveland on April 24 and another scoreless frame against Boston on April 27, are exactly the kind of stabilizing performances Little failed to provide during his difficult first week in Toronto, in which he allowed 10 earned runs in 3.2 innings.

    The path back for Little will get even narrower as more pitchers return from the injured list. Trey Yesavage’s return on Tuesday was initially set to push Eric Lauer back to the bullpen, until the Jays placed Max Scherzer on the IL. Lauer's rotation spot seems safe for now, but likely not forever. 

    Lauer has been struggling a bit as a starter this season, posting a 6.75 ERA and 1.54 WHIP over five games. However, the club is banking on his 2025 success. He excelled as a reliever last season, particularly in September. His ERA over that final month was 3.00. If Lauer can be Toronto's left-handed innings eater in the 'pen, the structural need for Little will vanish.

    The roster math is even colder. Little has one minor league option year left. With the bullpen getting healthy and teams starting to contemplate the trade deadline, the Jays need predictability. His remaining years of team control make him an asset (he's eligible for arbitration through 2030), but it also makes him the path of least resistance when a roster spot is needed for a fresh arm.

    For Little to force his way back, he needs to do more than post zeroes against Triple-A hitters. He needs to prove he can finish righties without relying on a sinker they have already timed. Until the quality of contact metrics catch up to the strikeout totals, he remains a depth piece, valuable for an injury crisis, but no longer a pillar of the late-inning plan. He doesn't just need to be successful in Buffalo, he needs to be different.

    The internal debate regarding Little is not merely about a singular performance or a single missed location, but the makeup of the Jays’ bullpen. For a team that struggled with consistency in the early weeks of 2026, the arrival of stability is a welcome shift. Little’s performance in Buffalo is a testament to his resilience and stuff, yet it simultaneously highlights the ceiling he faces within the team's current roster setup.

    The team has clearly prioritized the reliability of Mantiply. His game is less about eye-popping strikeout numbers and more about pitch efficiency and tactical command. The Jays also have Mason Fluharty if they’re looking for someone to strike out the side every time they take the mound.

    Little is no longer a work in progress. At this stage, he is expected to be a finished product. Every pitch thrown, whether in the International League or the American League, is a data point in the ongoing assessment of his viability as a big league contributor. The Blue Jays' front office must be evaluating whether they can trust him to execute his game plan, or if they are simply hoping that he might defy the evidence of his own recent track record.

    There are just as many examples of pitchers who have lost their “stuff” to never find it as there are pitchers who found it again.

    Ultimately, the decision to keep Little in Triple A is not about his potential, but a reflection of the team’s current reality. His path back is not paved with pure statistical dominance against competition that is less equipped to punish his mistakes. Instead, it is a path that requires him to demonstrate an understanding of why his previous attempts failed and to make the necessary adjustments to prevent those same patterns from recurring.

    Until such time that the "eye test" matches the "stat sheet" in a way that suggests a return to his former confident self, he will continue to serve as the organization's high-ceiling depth piece.

    It is simply the business of baseball, where teams are constantly asking, what have you done for me lately? As May approaches, the spotlight on Little will intensify within the organization. His results and performance will need to speak for themselves. He needs to find the necessary adjustments to get back to the pitcher he was. Otherwise, his future might not be in a Jays uniform.

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