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  1. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 7/28 through Sun, 8/3 *** Record Last Week: 2-5 (Overall: 65-48) Run Differential Last Week: -26 (Overall: +16) Standings: First in AL East (3.0 games up on BOS), First in AL (tied with DET) Last Week’s Results Game 107: TOR 4 - BAL 11 Bassitt: 2.1 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Guerrero Jr.: 2-4, HR (15), BB, 2 RBI Bichette: 4-4 Lukes: 1-5, HR (8), RBI Game 108: TOR 4 - BAL 16 Lucas: 2.2 IP, 4 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 1 K Loperfido: 3-4, HR (3), RBI Schneider: 2-4, RBI Barger: 1-4, HR (15), 2 RBI Game 109: TOR 2 - BAL 3 Lauer: 5.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Heineman: 3-3, BB Clement: 2-4, 2 R, HBP Barger: 2-4, 2B Game 110: TOR 9 - BAL 8 Berrios: 4.1 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 3 K Lukes: 1-2, HR (9), 3 RBI Straw: 3-4, R, 3 RBI Loperfido: 3-5, R Game 111: KC 9 - TOR 3 Gausman: 6.0 IP, 6 H, 5 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Guerrero Jr.: 1-4, HR (16) Barger: 1-4, HR (16), 2 RBI Bichette: 2-4, 2B Game 112: KC 2 - TOR 4 Scherzer: 6.0 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Bichette: 3-4, RBI Straw: 1-4, R Game 113: KC 7 - TOR 4 (10) Bassitt: 6.0 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Loperfido: 2-5, RBI, 3 K Clement: 2-3, R, BB Bichette: 1-3, R, 2 BB Highlights Joey Loperfido: Let's start things off on a positive note. The Blue Jays didn’t have the best week on the field, but Joey Loperfido certainly did his part. He appeared in all seven games the Blue Jays played, including getting a start against a left-handed pitcher. Loperfido was second on the team in hits this week and hit his third home run of the season, a 367-foot blast against the Orioles on Tuesday. The Blue Jays are starting to get some position players healthy, but Loperfido is making his case for staying in the lineup on a more regular basis. Bo Bichette: The reason why Loperfido didn’t lead the team in hits this week is that Bo Bichette has gotten back to his regular ways. Bo added 12 more hits this week, which trailed only William Contreras of the Brewers for the most in baseball. He now leads all of MLB in hits, which is something he’s done twice in his career, and if he keeps up this pace, he’ll likely do it for a third time. Only one extra-base hit, and his hitting into four double plays, make his week feel not as productive as it could have been, but Bichette had a good week and should be recognized for it. Max Scherzer: The Blue Jays' starting rotation was stuck in a rut this week, and they were in need of a shutdown performance. Max Scherzer did just that. He got through his six innings, with the only blemish being a solo home run by Salvador Perez. When all was said and done, the Blue Jays and Scherzer were able to get a win to stop the bleeding. This is now back-to-back great starts from Scherzer, who threw seven innings, striking out 11 against the Tigers last week. Mad Max seems to be turning back the clock at the exact time the Blue Jays need him. Lowlights The Rest of the Rotation: The main culprit for the Blue Jays' losses in five of the seven games they played this week was the starting rotation. Kevin Gausman allowed five earned runs in his start. José Berríos struggled to find his groove in his outing, while Easton Lucas got a start in the Blue Jays' doubleheader this week, allowing four runs and failing to escape the third inning. Chris Bassitt had one excellent start (1 ER in 7.0 IP) and one bad start (6 ER in 2.1 IP). All in all, Blue Jays starters had a 5.85 ERA this week, which ranked 25th in baseball. For a team that is currently tied for first place in the AL and is looking to get a bye right into the ALDS, the starting rotation needs to be better going forward. Nathan Lukes: At first glance, Lukes may seem like an odd choice because he did hit two home runs this week, tied with Guerrero and Barger for most on the team, but the issue is that he didn't do much else at the plate. Three hits in 27 plate appearances is pretty rough. Lukes had been hitting leadoff against right-handed pitchers for most of the past few months, but with Loperfido playing well and Daulton Varsho back from the IL, it seems like Lukes may be seeing a reduction in playing time until the bat can wake back up again. Random Stats of the Week: The Blue Jays made four separate trades at the deadline, adding Seranthony Domínguez, Louis Varland, Shane Bieber, Ty France, and catching prospect Brandon Valenzuela. The Blue Jays traded away five players at the deadline: pitchers Khal Stephen, Kendry Rojas, and Juaron Watts-Brown, outfielder Alan Roden and infielder Will Wagner. Davis Schneider stole his first base of the season this week. Ali Sánchez almost had his first big league home run, but was robbed by then-Orioles (now Mets) center fielder Cedric Mullins. Lazaro Estrada, recalled as the 27th man for the doubleheader in Baltimore, ended up giving up eight hits and six earned runs in 3.1 IP. The Blue Jays have now lost back-to-back series for the first time since May 13-18, when the Rays and the Tigers both took two out of three games against the Jays at home. News, Notes and Not Playing OF Daulton Varsho has returned from the IL. He is 0-for-6 with a walk and four strikeouts since returning. C Alejandro Kirk has returned from the seven-day concussion IL. He went 0-for-4 with a walk in his first game back. IF Leo Jimenez has been sent to Triple A. RHP Paxton Schultz has been sent to Triple A. LHP Justin Bruihl has been sent to Double A. RHP Chad Green has been designated for assignment. RHP Bowden Francis has been transferred to the 60-day IL. 7-Day IL: George Springer Springer has been placed on the seven-day concussion IL retroactive to July 29. 10-Day IL: Andrés Giménez, Andrés Giménez ran the bases on the weekend and should go on a rehab assignment soon (Arden Zwelling on X). 15-day IL: Yimi García Yimi García is still about a week or so from beginning a throwing program (Ben Nicholson-Smith on X). 60-day IL: Shane Bieber, Anthony Santander, Alek Manoah, Bowden Francis RHP Shane Bieber made his first rehab start with the Jays organization on Sunday, throwing 5.0 innings, striking out six, and allowing two earned runs. He will most likely make one more rehab appearance before joining the Blue Jays. GM Ross Atkins said OF/DH Anthony Santander's progress is “slower than normal,” but there is still progress (Ben Nicholson-Smith on X). RHP Alek Manoah threw a simulated game on Saturday and is expected to make another rehab start later this week (Arden Zwelling on X). Trending Storylines The Toronto Blue Jays head into the month of August still in first place in the AL East, but they can't get too complacent as the Red Sox and Yankees are still very much within striking distance. The Blue Jays ultimately had a bit of a letdown of a week, losing five of the seven games they played against two teams that were both below .500 when the series began. The main culprit was the pitching, and the front office used the trade deadline to add some reinforcements for the stretch run. Seranthony Domínguez and Louis Varland both made their Blue Jays debuts this week. Domínguez looked great in his first two appearances before giving up three earned runs in the finale on Sunday. Varland threw a clean first inning on Friday before allowing two hits and the game-tying run to score on Sunday. The Jays will rely on both players as back-end weapons out of the bullpen going forward. The Blue Jays are also slowly regaining health. Alejandro Kirk and Daulton Varsho returned to the team this week, with George Springer set to return soon. Shane Bieber, Alek Manoah, and Andrés Giménez are all on, or soon to be on, rehab assignments, and all three will factor into the puzzle as well. The interesting question will be what the Blue Jays do when Bieber is ready. Bassitt, Gausman, and Berríos have been solid all season, Scherzer is coming off his two best starts yet, and Eric Lauer has yet to allow more than three earned runs in a start all season. There is a chance the Blue Jays might look at going with a six-man rotation for the time being. Ty France was also acquired at the deadline, and GM Ross Atkins said he would get a lot of playing time against left-handed pitching early on. So far as a Blue Jay, he is 1-for-8 with a single. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays get what looks like a soft spot on the schedule as they make the rare trip to Colorado. The Rockies have a 30-80 record on the young season, and the Blue Jays could really use this series to bounce back and get on the winning side. Playing baseball in Denver is always an adventure, and the Blue Jays' starting pitchers, who have been struggling lately, will try to right the ship while playing at altitude. Lauer, Berríos, and Gausman will get their chance to do just that. Following their trip to Colorado, the Blue Jays will stay out west and go visit old friend Teoscar Hernández and the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers are sitting in first place in the NL West and will provide the Blue Jays with a tough task, especially with Clayton Kershaw, Blake Snell, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto set to take the bump. If probable pitchers stay the way they are, then Friday night will be a battle of two future Hall of Famers, as Kershaw is set to pitch against Scherzer, which would be a lot of fun. A tough series against the Dodgers makes the previous series against the Rockies much more important, as the Blue Jays will hope to secure some early wins on this West Coast road trip. View full article
  2. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 7/28 through Sun, 8/3 *** Record Last Week: 2-5 (Overall: 65-48) Run Differential Last Week: -26 (Overall: +16) Standings: First in AL East (3.0 games up on BOS), First in AL (tied with DET) Last Week’s Results Game 107: TOR 4 - BAL 11 Bassitt: 2.1 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Guerrero Jr.: 2-4, HR (15), BB, 2 RBI Bichette: 4-4 Lukes: 1-5, HR (8), RBI Game 108: TOR 4 - BAL 16 Lucas: 2.2 IP, 4 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 1 K Loperfido: 3-4, HR (3), RBI Schneider: 2-4, RBI Barger: 1-4, HR (15), 2 RBI Game 109: TOR 2 - BAL 3 Lauer: 5.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Heineman: 3-3, BB Clement: 2-4, 2 R, HBP Barger: 2-4, 2B Game 110: TOR 9 - BAL 8 Berrios: 4.1 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 3 K Lukes: 1-2, HR (9), 3 RBI Straw: 3-4, R, 3 RBI Loperfido: 3-5, R Game 111: KC 9 - TOR 3 Gausman: 6.0 IP, 6 H, 5 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Guerrero Jr.: 1-4, HR (16) Barger: 1-4, HR (16), 2 RBI Bichette: 2-4, 2B Game 112: KC 2 - TOR 4 Scherzer: 6.0 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Bichette: 3-4, RBI Straw: 1-4, R Game 113: KC 7 - TOR 4 (10) Bassitt: 6.0 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Loperfido: 2-5, RBI, 3 K Clement: 2-3, R, BB Bichette: 1-3, R, 2 BB Highlights Joey Loperfido: Let's start things off on a positive note. The Blue Jays didn’t have the best week on the field, but Joey Loperfido certainly did his part. He appeared in all seven games the Blue Jays played, including getting a start against a left-handed pitcher. Loperfido was second on the team in hits this week and hit his third home run of the season, a 367-foot blast against the Orioles on Tuesday. The Blue Jays are starting to get some position players healthy, but Loperfido is making his case for staying in the lineup on a more regular basis. Bo Bichette: The reason why Loperfido didn’t lead the team in hits this week is that Bo Bichette has gotten back to his regular ways. Bo added 12 more hits this week, which trailed only William Contreras of the Brewers for the most in baseball. He now leads all of MLB in hits, which is something he’s done twice in his career, and if he keeps up this pace, he’ll likely do it for a third time. Only one extra-base hit, and his hitting into four double plays, make his week feel not as productive as it could have been, but Bichette had a good week and should be recognized for it. Max Scherzer: The Blue Jays' starting rotation was stuck in a rut this week, and they were in need of a shutdown performance. Max Scherzer did just that. He got through his six innings, with the only blemish being a solo home run by Salvador Perez. When all was said and done, the Blue Jays and Scherzer were able to get a win to stop the bleeding. This is now back-to-back great starts from Scherzer, who threw seven innings, striking out 11 against the Tigers last week. Mad Max seems to be turning back the clock at the exact time the Blue Jays need him. Lowlights The Rest of the Rotation: The main culprit for the Blue Jays' losses in five of the seven games they played this week was the starting rotation. Kevin Gausman allowed five earned runs in his start. José Berríos struggled to find his groove in his outing, while Easton Lucas got a start in the Blue Jays' doubleheader this week, allowing four runs and failing to escape the third inning. Chris Bassitt had one excellent start (1 ER in 7.0 IP) and one bad start (6 ER in 2.1 IP). All in all, Blue Jays starters had a 5.85 ERA this week, which ranked 25th in baseball. For a team that is currently tied for first place in the AL and is looking to get a bye right into the ALDS, the starting rotation needs to be better going forward. Nathan Lukes: At first glance, Lukes may seem like an odd choice because he did hit two home runs this week, tied with Guerrero and Barger for most on the team, but the issue is that he didn't do much else at the plate. Three hits in 27 plate appearances is pretty rough. Lukes had been hitting leadoff against right-handed pitchers for most of the past few months, but with Loperfido playing well and Daulton Varsho back from the IL, it seems like Lukes may be seeing a reduction in playing time until the bat can wake back up again. Random Stats of the Week: The Blue Jays made four separate trades at the deadline, adding Seranthony Domínguez, Louis Varland, Shane Bieber, Ty France, and catching prospect Brandon Valenzuela. The Blue Jays traded away five players at the deadline: pitchers Khal Stephen, Kendry Rojas, and Juaron Watts-Brown, outfielder Alan Roden and infielder Will Wagner. Davis Schneider stole his first base of the season this week. Ali Sánchez almost had his first big league home run, but was robbed by then-Orioles (now Mets) center fielder Cedric Mullins. Lazaro Estrada, recalled as the 27th man for the doubleheader in Baltimore, ended up giving up eight hits and six earned runs in 3.1 IP. The Blue Jays have now lost back-to-back series for the first time since May 13-18, when the Rays and the Tigers both took two out of three games against the Jays at home. News, Notes and Not Playing OF Daulton Varsho has returned from the IL. He is 0-for-6 with a walk and four strikeouts since returning. C Alejandro Kirk has returned from the seven-day concussion IL. He went 0-for-4 with a walk in his first game back. IF Leo Jimenez has been sent to Triple A. RHP Paxton Schultz has been sent to Triple A. LHP Justin Bruihl has been sent to Double A. RHP Chad Green has been designated for assignment. RHP Bowden Francis has been transferred to the 60-day IL. 7-Day IL: George Springer Springer has been placed on the seven-day concussion IL retroactive to July 29. 10-Day IL: Andrés Giménez, Andrés Giménez ran the bases on the weekend and should go on a rehab assignment soon (Arden Zwelling on X). 15-day IL: Yimi García Yimi García is still about a week or so from beginning a throwing program (Ben Nicholson-Smith on X). 60-day IL: Shane Bieber, Anthony Santander, Alek Manoah, Bowden Francis RHP Shane Bieber made his first rehab start with the Jays organization on Sunday, throwing 5.0 innings, striking out six, and allowing two earned runs. He will most likely make one more rehab appearance before joining the Blue Jays. GM Ross Atkins said OF/DH Anthony Santander's progress is “slower than normal,” but there is still progress (Ben Nicholson-Smith on X). RHP Alek Manoah threw a simulated game on Saturday and is expected to make another rehab start later this week (Arden Zwelling on X). Trending Storylines The Toronto Blue Jays head into the month of August still in first place in the AL East, but they can't get too complacent as the Red Sox and Yankees are still very much within striking distance. The Blue Jays ultimately had a bit of a letdown of a week, losing five of the seven games they played against two teams that were both below .500 when the series began. The main culprit was the pitching, and the front office used the trade deadline to add some reinforcements for the stretch run. Seranthony Domínguez and Louis Varland both made their Blue Jays debuts this week. Domínguez looked great in his first two appearances before giving up three earned runs in the finale on Sunday. Varland threw a clean first inning on Friday before allowing two hits and the game-tying run to score on Sunday. The Jays will rely on both players as back-end weapons out of the bullpen going forward. The Blue Jays are also slowly regaining health. Alejandro Kirk and Daulton Varsho returned to the team this week, with George Springer set to return soon. Shane Bieber, Alek Manoah, and Andrés Giménez are all on, or soon to be on, rehab assignments, and all three will factor into the puzzle as well. The interesting question will be what the Blue Jays do when Bieber is ready. Bassitt, Gausman, and Berríos have been solid all season, Scherzer is coming off his two best starts yet, and Eric Lauer has yet to allow more than three earned runs in a start all season. There is a chance the Blue Jays might look at going with a six-man rotation for the time being. Ty France was also acquired at the deadline, and GM Ross Atkins said he would get a lot of playing time against left-handed pitching early on. So far as a Blue Jay, he is 1-for-8 with a single. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays get what looks like a soft spot on the schedule as they make the rare trip to Colorado. The Rockies have a 30-80 record on the young season, and the Blue Jays could really use this series to bounce back and get on the winning side. Playing baseball in Denver is always an adventure, and the Blue Jays' starting pitchers, who have been struggling lately, will try to right the ship while playing at altitude. Lauer, Berríos, and Gausman will get their chance to do just that. Following their trip to Colorado, the Blue Jays will stay out west and go visit old friend Teoscar Hernández and the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers are sitting in first place in the NL West and will provide the Blue Jays with a tough task, especially with Clayton Kershaw, Blake Snell, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto set to take the bump. If probable pitchers stay the way they are, then Friday night will be a battle of two future Hall of Famers, as Kershaw is set to pitch against Scherzer, which would be a lot of fun. A tough series against the Dodgers makes the previous series against the Rockies much more important, as the Blue Jays will hope to secure some early wins on this West Coast road trip.
  3. The month of July was easily the best month the Toronto Blue Jays have played all season. They started the month with a huge seven-run win on Canada Day, which turned out to be the third of ten straight wins the team would roll off. After that stretch, the Jays also had another run of eight wins in nine games from the 18th to the 26th. They finished July with an 18-8 record. Most of the team's success was powered by the offence, which scored 150 runs on the month, the most in baseball, but you don’t win that many ballgames without having some upstart pitching performances as well. In this article, we’ll highlight some of the Blue Jays' standout performances and crown one individual as the Pitcher of the Month for July. Honourable Mentions Chris Bassitt: 28.2 IP 4.08 ERA, 28 K, 5.15 FIP, 0.1 fWAR Bassitt has had better months in his Blue Jays career, but he gets the nod as an honorable mention for the fact that the Blue Jays just seemed to win the games he started this month, going 4-1 in his five starts. The highlight was his six innings with one earned run allowed against the White Sox in a 6-1 win that ended up being shortened by rain after seven innings. The lowlight was his last start of the month in Baltimore, in which he allowed six earned runs while only being able to record seven outs. That outing put a damper on his overall stat line and prevented him from being higher on this list. He also threw one inning in relief in the last game prior to the All-Star break, and the fact that he was willing to do that to give the bullpen some extra rest merits credit in its own right. Max Scherzer: 22.0 IP, 4.91 ERA, 27 K, 4.41 FIP, 0.2 fWAR Every start that Scherzer makes, the more the conversation moves away from how his thumb feels and if he’ll be able to make another start, to how his command is and how his stuff plays on the mound. It now looks like Scherzer is a key part of this starting rotation, and it felt like he only got better as the month went on. This was captured in his last start of July in Detroit, in which Scherzer threw a season-high seven innings, allowing just three hits, walking no one, and striking out 11, his highest total in a game since August of 2023. The home run ball has been a bit of an issue, as he’s allowed five home runs in his last three starts, but if Sherzer is able to keep the ball in the yard and the strikeout improvements remain, the Blue Jays will continue to glimpse the talent the three-time Cy Young Award winner still has in him. Not bad for a pitcher who celebrated his 41st birthday this month. Mason Fluharty: 5.1 IP, 0.00 ERA, 5 K, 2.17 FIP, 0.1 fWAR. Fluharty was the only Blue Jays reliever to throw at least five innings this past month and not allow a run. Following his recall on July 22, he faced 17 batters in four appearances and allowed just three of them to reach, all without giving up a walk and striking out five, including three of the four Orioles he faced last Wednesday. Fluharty was good in April (2.53 ERA over 10.2 IP), and it looks like this could be the start of another run of quality pitching from the Blue Jays' rookie left-hander. (Editor's Note: Don't look at the numbers from Fluharty's first appearance in August...) #3 - Yariel Rodríguez: 12.1 IP, 0.73 ERA, 11 K, 2.77 FIP, 0.2 fWAR Where would this Blue Jays team be without the emergence of Rodríguez this season? He continued his stretch of dominant play with an impressive July, appearing in a team-high 13 games last month and bringing his season ERA down to 2.21 before allowing two earned runs to the Orioles in the series finale last Wednesday. Before that, he had been on a stretch where he allowed just five baserunners (three hits, two walks) and struck out nine over 8.2 IP. The Blue Jays, who have been without Yimi García for significant parts of the season, needed a guy to step up and become a shut-down reliever, and Rodríguez has done just that. #2 - Kevin Gausman: 28.2 IP, 2.51 ERA, 32 K, 3.48 FIP, 0.6 fWAR The Blue Jays' rotation doesn’t really have a true number one ace, but Gausman looks like he’s turning back the clock and is staking his claim as the Blue Jays' best pitcher. In July, he made five starts and just seemed to get better as the month went on, starting off with two earned runs, four walks and three strikeouts against the Yankees, and ending with a gem against the Tigers. Matched up against Tarik Skubal, Gausman threw six innings, allowing just one hit while striking out 10 Tigers hitters. The 10 Ks were his most in a single start this season, and he's now made nine starts in his Blue Jays career with 0 ER and 10+ Ks. That's ace-like stuff, and the Blue Jays will certainly take it going forward. #1 - Eric Lauer: 29.0 IP, 2.79 ERA, 30 K, 2.23 FIP, 1.1 fWAR Speaking of ace-like stuff, that's exactly what Lauer has been giving Toronto, as he claims the title of Jays Center's Pitcher of the Month for July. Lauer still hasn’t allowed more than three earned runs in a start this season, and he was incredibly consistent yet again in July, allowing earned run totals of 2, 2, 2, 1, and 2 in his five starts this month. Dive under the hood, and it looks even better; he struck out 30 batters and issued only three walks. That will play. A 10.00 K/BB ratio had Lauer fifth in all of baseball this past month, ahead of names like Joe Ryan, Skubal, and Jacob deGrom. The 1.1 fWAR he accumulated trailed only Luis Castillo and Paul Skenes for the best in baseball. Eric Lauer has been everything the Blue Jays could have possibly asked for, and he may be getting even better as the year goes on. View full article
  4. The month of July was easily the best month the Toronto Blue Jays have played all season. They started the month with a huge seven-run win on Canada Day, which turned out to be the third of ten straight wins the team would roll off. After that stretch, the Jays also had another run of eight wins in nine games from the 18th to the 26th. They finished July with an 18-8 record. Most of the team's success was powered by the offence, which scored 150 runs on the month, the most in baseball, but you don’t win that many ballgames without having some upstart pitching performances as well. In this article, we’ll highlight some of the Blue Jays' standout performances and crown one individual as the Pitcher of the Month for July. Honourable Mentions Chris Bassitt: 28.2 IP 4.08 ERA, 28 K, 5.15 FIP, 0.1 fWAR Bassitt has had better months in his Blue Jays career, but he gets the nod as an honorable mention for the fact that the Blue Jays just seemed to win the games he started this month, going 4-1 in his five starts. The highlight was his six innings with one earned run allowed against the White Sox in a 6-1 win that ended up being shortened by rain after seven innings. The lowlight was his last start of the month in Baltimore, in which he allowed six earned runs while only being able to record seven outs. That outing put a damper on his overall stat line and prevented him from being higher on this list. He also threw one inning in relief in the last game prior to the All-Star break, and the fact that he was willing to do that to give the bullpen some extra rest merits credit in its own right. Max Scherzer: 22.0 IP, 4.91 ERA, 27 K, 4.41 FIP, 0.2 fWAR Every start that Scherzer makes, the more the conversation moves away from how his thumb feels and if he’ll be able to make another start, to how his command is and how his stuff plays on the mound. It now looks like Scherzer is a key part of this starting rotation, and it felt like he only got better as the month went on. This was captured in his last start of July in Detroit, in which Scherzer threw a season-high seven innings, allowing just three hits, walking no one, and striking out 11, his highest total in a game since August of 2023. The home run ball has been a bit of an issue, as he’s allowed five home runs in his last three starts, but if Sherzer is able to keep the ball in the yard and the strikeout improvements remain, the Blue Jays will continue to glimpse the talent the three-time Cy Young Award winner still has in him. Not bad for a pitcher who celebrated his 41st birthday this month. Mason Fluharty: 5.1 IP, 0.00 ERA, 5 K, 2.17 FIP, 0.1 fWAR. Fluharty was the only Blue Jays reliever to throw at least five innings this past month and not allow a run. Following his recall on July 22, he faced 17 batters in four appearances and allowed just three of them to reach, all without giving up a walk and striking out five, including three of the four Orioles he faced last Wednesday. Fluharty was good in April (2.53 ERA over 10.2 IP), and it looks like this could be the start of another run of quality pitching from the Blue Jays' rookie left-hander. (Editor's Note: Don't look at the numbers from Fluharty's first appearance in August...) #3 - Yariel Rodríguez: 12.1 IP, 0.73 ERA, 11 K, 2.77 FIP, 0.2 fWAR Where would this Blue Jays team be without the emergence of Rodríguez this season? He continued his stretch of dominant play with an impressive July, appearing in a team-high 13 games last month and bringing his season ERA down to 2.21 before allowing two earned runs to the Orioles in the series finale last Wednesday. Before that, he had been on a stretch where he allowed just five baserunners (three hits, two walks) and struck out nine over 8.2 IP. The Blue Jays, who have been without Yimi García for significant parts of the season, needed a guy to step up and become a shut-down reliever, and Rodríguez has done just that. #2 - Kevin Gausman: 28.2 IP, 2.51 ERA, 32 K, 3.48 FIP, 0.6 fWAR The Blue Jays' rotation doesn’t really have a true number one ace, but Gausman looks like he’s turning back the clock and is staking his claim as the Blue Jays' best pitcher. In July, he made five starts and just seemed to get better as the month went on, starting off with two earned runs, four walks and three strikeouts against the Yankees, and ending with a gem against the Tigers. Matched up against Tarik Skubal, Gausman threw six innings, allowing just one hit while striking out 10 Tigers hitters. The 10 Ks were his most in a single start this season, and he's now made nine starts in his Blue Jays career with 0 ER and 10+ Ks. That's ace-like stuff, and the Blue Jays will certainly take it going forward. #1 - Eric Lauer: 29.0 IP, 2.79 ERA, 30 K, 2.23 FIP, 1.1 fWAR Speaking of ace-like stuff, that's exactly what Lauer has been giving Toronto, as he claims the title of Jays Center's Pitcher of the Month for July. Lauer still hasn’t allowed more than three earned runs in a start this season, and he was incredibly consistent yet again in July, allowing earned run totals of 2, 2, 2, 1, and 2 in his five starts this month. Dive under the hood, and it looks even better; he struck out 30 batters and issued only three walks. That will play. A 10.00 K/BB ratio had Lauer fifth in all of baseball this past month, ahead of names like Joe Ryan, Skubal, and Jacob deGrom. The 1.1 fWAR he accumulated trailed only Luis Castillo and Paul Skenes for the best in baseball. Eric Lauer has been everything the Blue Jays could have possibly asked for, and he may be getting even better as the year goes on.
  5. The Toronto Blue Jays have acquired RHP Louis Varland and 1B Ty France from the Minnesota Twins in exchange for OF Alan Roden and LHP Kendry Rojas. Varland, 27, has spent all four of his big league seasons with the Twins, shuttling between the bullpen and the rotation before moving into a full-time relief role in 2025. He relies on a five-pitch mix: a fastball that averages 98 mph, a knuckle curve, a sinker, a slider, and a changeup. On the season, he has a 2.02 ERA and is having his best year when it comes to inducing groundballs (54.5%) and limiting home runs (three in 49 IP on the season). He’ll immediately slide into the Blue Jays' bullpen. He does have 22 games of MLB starting experience, for what it's worth. It's interesting to see where he ends up in Toronto's bullpen. He could be used in a long relief role, as he has been a starter in the past, but he’s only had three outings this year of more than one inning, and that will likely continue. The fastball will play, as the Blue Jays wanted to add more velocity to their bullpen. On the season, Blue Jays' relievers averaged 94.2 mph on their fastballs, which is 21st in baseball. Varland, along with the newly acquired Seranthony Domínguez, will help add some firepower to the Blue Jays' bullpen. With his fastball velocity, ability to induce groundballs, and ability to limit home runs, he’s going to be counted on as a key member of the relief corps down the stretch and into the playoffs. Varland is also under team control until 2031 and isn't arbitration-eligible until 2027. The Blue Jays have placed a lot of value on team control over the last few deadlines, and Varland is no exception. As long as he remains effective, he should be a key part of the Blue Jays' bullpen for years to come. Ty France, 31, has spent time with four MLB teams during his career. On the season, he has six home runs while running a .678 OPS. At first glance, it seems like playing time may be tough to come by for France on this roster. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is locked in at first base, and George Springer, and eventually Anthony Santander, seem to be locking down the DH spot. The Blue Jays did make a separate trade to move Will Wagner earlier in the day, so in theory, France could play some third base, but it's a position he hasn’t played since 2022. The Blue Jays have relied on their bench bats to gain platoon advantages for most of the season, but France doesn’t have dramatic splits in either direction. On the season, He has an 89 wRC+ vs. left-handers compared to 93 vs. right-handers, and in his career, it's an even 111 wRC+ against pitchers from both sides. Ross Atkins did say in his post-trade deadline press conference that France will get a chance to hit against left-handed pitching. So that seems to be his role going forward. Alan Roden was hitting .204 with a .589 OPS on the season, but he was the Blue Jays' No. 3 prospect coming into the year (per FanGraphs). Roden was the talk of the team during spring training, when he hit .407 with two home runs, and a monster 1.244 OPS and made the team as the 26th man. It was even more impressive, as Atkins called him out at the start of spring training, and he went on to excel. He still provides incredible bat-to-ball skills and has still hit well against Triple-A pitching on the season (.918 OPS in 32 games). Roden should get plenty of playing time in Minnesota, as they traded away Harrison Bader and Willi Castro at this trade deadline. Rojas, 22 years old, was recently promoted to Triple-A. Through three levels on the season, he has pitched to a 3.46 ERA with a 2.46 FIP. He was one of the fastest-rising prospects in the Blue Jays' system. His fastball has taken a tick up this year to the 94-95 mph range and touched as high as 97 mph. The young left-hander has dealt with injuries throughout his minor league career, as his 84 innings thrown in 2023 were his career high. On the whole, the Blue Jays addressed most of their needs this deadline. They acquired a player with the potential to be a front-line starter when they traded for Guardians pitcher Shane Bieber earlier in the day. They needed some firepower in the bullpen, and with Garland and Domínguez, they solved that problem, too. France may not be the most exciting name, but the Blue Jays did want another right-handed bat, and he fits that description. The biggest hit to the organization was on the pitching side, as the Blue Jays lost pitching prospects Rojas, Khal Stephen, and Juaron Watts-Brown in three separate trades. All three players had seen their prospect stock rise in 2025 with some good performances in the minor leagues, and the Blue Jays were able to cash in on their success to help bolster the big league roster today. It's also worth noting, the Blue Jays were able to get through the deadline without having to give up top shortstop prospect Arjun Nimmala and top pitching prospect Trey Yesavage, who both remain Toronto Blue Jays for the time being. They also held on to second-round pick Johnny King, who has been another pitching prospect making noise in the system. With the trade deadline now passed, there aren’t any more ways for the Blue Jays to add impact players to their roster between now and the MLB postseason. If the Blue Jays are going to win just their second AL East title since the 1993 World Series, then this is the group of players that is going to have to do it, and the Blue Jays are betting that Louis Varland and Ty France were the last two missing pieces that can help push them over the top. View full article
  6. The Toronto Blue Jays have acquired RHP Louis Varland and 1B Ty France from the Minnesota Twins in exchange for OF Alan Roden and LHP Kendry Rojas. Varland, 27, has spent all four of his big league seasons with the Twins, shuttling between the bullpen and the rotation before moving into a full-time relief role in 2025. He relies on a five-pitch mix: a fastball that averages 98 mph, a knuckle curve, a sinker, a slider, and a changeup. On the season, he has a 2.02 ERA and is having his best year when it comes to inducing groundballs (54.5%) and limiting home runs (three in 49 IP on the season). He’ll immediately slide into the Blue Jays' bullpen. He does have 22 games of MLB starting experience, for what it's worth. It's interesting to see where he ends up in Toronto's bullpen. He could be used in a long relief role, as he has been a starter in the past, but he’s only had three outings this year of more than one inning, and that will likely continue. The fastball will play, as the Blue Jays wanted to add more velocity to their bullpen. On the season, Blue Jays' relievers averaged 94.2 mph on their fastballs, which is 21st in baseball. Varland, along with the newly acquired Seranthony Domínguez, will help add some firepower to the Blue Jays' bullpen. With his fastball velocity, ability to induce groundballs, and ability to limit home runs, he’s going to be counted on as a key member of the relief corps down the stretch and into the playoffs. Varland is also under team control until 2031 and isn't arbitration-eligible until 2027. The Blue Jays have placed a lot of value on team control over the last few deadlines, and Varland is no exception. As long as he remains effective, he should be a key part of the Blue Jays' bullpen for years to come. Ty France, 31, has spent time with four MLB teams during his career. On the season, he has six home runs while running a .678 OPS. At first glance, it seems like playing time may be tough to come by for France on this roster. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is locked in at first base, and George Springer, and eventually Anthony Santander, seem to be locking down the DH spot. The Blue Jays did make a separate trade to move Will Wagner earlier in the day, so in theory, France could play some third base, but it's a position he hasn’t played since 2022. The Blue Jays have relied on their bench bats to gain platoon advantages for most of the season, but France doesn’t have dramatic splits in either direction. On the season, He has an 89 wRC+ vs. left-handers compared to 93 vs. right-handers, and in his career, it's an even 111 wRC+ against pitchers from both sides. Ross Atkins did say in his post-trade deadline press conference that France will get a chance to hit against left-handed pitching. So that seems to be his role going forward. Alan Roden was hitting .204 with a .589 OPS on the season, but he was the Blue Jays' No. 3 prospect coming into the year (per FanGraphs). Roden was the talk of the team during spring training, when he hit .407 with two home runs, and a monster 1.244 OPS and made the team as the 26th man. It was even more impressive, as Atkins called him out at the start of spring training, and he went on to excel. He still provides incredible bat-to-ball skills and has still hit well against Triple-A pitching on the season (.918 OPS in 32 games). Roden should get plenty of playing time in Minnesota, as they traded away Harrison Bader and Willi Castro at this trade deadline. Rojas, 22 years old, was recently promoted to Triple-A. Through three levels on the season, he has pitched to a 3.46 ERA with a 2.46 FIP. He was one of the fastest-rising prospects in the Blue Jays' system. His fastball has taken a tick up this year to the 94-95 mph range and touched as high as 97 mph. The young left-hander has dealt with injuries throughout his minor league career, as his 84 innings thrown in 2023 were his career high. On the whole, the Blue Jays addressed most of their needs this deadline. They acquired a player with the potential to be a front-line starter when they traded for Guardians pitcher Shane Bieber earlier in the day. They needed some firepower in the bullpen, and with Garland and Domínguez, they solved that problem, too. France may not be the most exciting name, but the Blue Jays did want another right-handed bat, and he fits that description. The biggest hit to the organization was on the pitching side, as the Blue Jays lost pitching prospects Rojas, Khal Stephen, and Juaron Watts-Brown in three separate trades. All three players had seen their prospect stock rise in 2025 with some good performances in the minor leagues, and the Blue Jays were able to cash in on their success to help bolster the big league roster today. It's also worth noting, the Blue Jays were able to get through the deadline without having to give up top shortstop prospect Arjun Nimmala and top pitching prospect Trey Yesavage, who both remain Toronto Blue Jays for the time being. They also held on to second-round pick Johnny King, who has been another pitching prospect making noise in the system. With the trade deadline now passed, there aren’t any more ways for the Blue Jays to add impact players to their roster between now and the MLB postseason. If the Blue Jays are going to win just their second AL East title since the 1993 World Series, then this is the group of players that is going to have to do it, and the Blue Jays are betting that Louis Varland and Ty France were the last two missing pieces that can help push them over the top.
  7. The Toronto Blue Jays are in first place in the AL East. With only one division title since they won back-to-back World Series in the early 90's, the Blue Jays find themselves in a position that they aren't used to with he trade deadline fast approaching. History aside, there is no longer a conversation about whether or not the Blue Jays should be buyers or sellers, or if they should be looking to unload players one year from free agency, like they did with Yusei Kikuchi, Yimi Garcia, Justin Turner and others in 2024. The Blue Jays are a contending team, and they have to act like a World Series hopeful. Which means they’ve got to buy and find anyway possible to make their team better. What makes the deadline so interesting this year is that there are multiple pathways for the team to take. The Blue Jays are 11th in runs scored on the season and 20th in home runs, so the argument can be made that they should look to add a power bat. They thought they had that need in the offseason, when they signed Anthony Santander to a five-year contract, but with only six home runs, a .577 OPS in just 50 games played, he hasn’t filled the role that the team was hoping he would. The Jays could also use more pitching. They aren't alone in this, as all the teams who find themselves with a chance of entering the dance in October also need more arms, but the Blue Jays' need may be more exacerbated. Jose Berrios, Kevin Gausman, and Chris Bassitt have been staples in the rotation so far, but all three of them have had some inconsistencies, leading to some up-and-down performances. Max Scherzer is back now, but with his constant thumb issues, it's hard to rely on him to be able to stay healthy for the whole season. Eric Lauer has been a revelation since joining the rotation, posting a 2.80 ERA, with a xERA and FIP not too far off, but Lauer hasn't thrown more than 100 IP since 2022 with the Brewers and there is some concern that the clock may strike midnight soon. The Blue Jays' bullpen has had some pleasant surprises — Yariel Rodriguez has turned into one of the more dominant set-up men in MLB, Justin Bruhil, Brendon Little, and Brayden Fisher have all had success, and even with injuries to Yimi Garcia and Nick Sandlin, and some home run issues at times with Jeff Hoffman and Chad Green, the Blue Jays bullpen as a whole has been in pretty good shape. But there is always a chance the Blue Jays could add more as the calendar approaches the July 31 trade deadline. On Monday, Jeff Passan and Kiley McDaniel of ESPN wrote an article about MLB’s top 50 trade deadline candidates, and the Blue Jays were mentioned as “best fits” for several of the players listed. It's worth exploring a little more just how much each player mentioned would actually fit in with the Toronto Blue Jays and lay out a case for and against each candidate, and whether or not said player will be coming north of the border come the second half of the season: 1. Steven Kwan OF, Cleveland Guardians The case for: You don’t have to squint very hard to see why the Blue Jays would be interested in a player like Kwan, He’s won a Gold Glove in all three seasons he’s played in the majors, walks more than he strikes out, and is incredible at putting the bat on the ball (a whiff rate below 10% each of the last three seasons), which is a skill the Blue Jays absolutely adore. The Blue Jays have also been without a true leadoff hitter in quite some time, and Kwan would solve that issue immediately upon arrival. The case against: The issue for the Blue Jays right now is that they’ve already got a crowded outfield. Daulton Varsho is currently on a rehab assignment and is nearing a return. Addison Barger has been seeing a lot of time in RF, and the Blue Jays have been having success with the Nathan Lukes, Myles Straw, Joey Loperfido, Davis Schneider rotation in the other spot. On top of that, Kwan is not going to be cheap, as he’s not a free agent until the 2028 season, and the Guardians don't necessarily need to trade him this trade deadline, If Kwan delivers and helps guide the Blue Jays to a World Series, then it won't matter what the Blue Jays gave up. But if it doesn’t, it could affect the long-term viability of the Blue Jays if one of their top prospects ends up becoming a superstar in another organization. 2. Sandy Alcantara SP Miami Marlins The Case For: It's not that often that former Cy Young Award winners become available, and that is exactly what is happening here with the Miami Marlins. Alcantara’s 8.0 bWAR season in 2022 is the best MLB has seen for a pitcher since Aaron Nola in 2018. So, it's exciting to dream of adding that player to any rotation, especially for a team like the Blue Jays, who have been looking for an ace, and if h'es right, he could fit that bill. Add in the fact that he’s under contract through the 2026 season and has a club option for 2027, there is some team control here, which historically this Blue Jays front office has valued. The Case Against: The problem with Alcantara is that he hasn’t looked like that ace for quite some time. He underwent Tommy John surgery in October 2023 and missed the entire 2024 season. He was able to return to start the 2025 season, but he simply hasn't pitched well. A 7.14 ERA is ugly no matter how you look at it, and the strikeouts are down, the walks are up, and so are the home runs. None of that gives much hope that a turnaround is coming, at least right away. It's hard to justify giving up on some future players for a pitcher who, as things currently stand, isn't better than any of the five that are currently in the rotation, and unless the Blue Jays are quite certain they know what it's going to take to turn him back into a Cy Young candidate, then it may be buyer beware for Alcantara. 3. Seth Lugo RHP Kansas City Royals The Case For: Seth Lugo just seems like the Blue Jays' type of pitcher. He throws eight different pitches more than 5% of the time. There are shades of Chris Bassitt here, who has had success with in Toronto. Beyond that, Lugo has also been quite effective over the past few seasons. He had a 3.60 ERA or better in five straight seasons, including a 2024 season that saw him produce a 5.4 bWAR and finish second in the AL Cy Young award. His 2025 season has been pretty good as well; his 2.94 ERA is right in line with where it was in the prior season. He instantly makes any rotation better. The Case Against: There is some worry that Lugo’s ability to induce soft contact is fading. He’s got a 46.3% hard-hit rate, which is in the bottom 10% of MLB, and although the actual ERA is good, xERA has Lugo at a 4.71 mark, which is the highest since his sophomore year in 2017. On top of that, Lugo is now 35 years old, and if he declines his player option for 2025, he could be a free agent at season's end. If Lugo can continue his run of strong pitching, then it's worth the move 10 times out of 10, but if his numbers regress back to the mean, and the hard hits keep coming against him, it may be hard to rely on Lugo as a dominant force going forward. 4. Mitch Keller SP, Pittsburgh Pirates The Case For: Out of all the pitchers mentioned on this list, Keller might be pitching the best at the moment, He’s currently running a 3.48 ERA, which is the best of his career, and is also under team control until the 2029 season, which could be of interest for the Blue Jays. Bassitt and Scherzer are set to become free agents this season, and Gausman and potentially Berrios (if he opts out) will join them shortly after. Keller's four-seam/sweeper combo has been quite good, with a +11 run value on the fastball and a +5 on the sweeper. Combine that with the fact he’s made 29 or more starts each of the last three seasons, and there is a case that Keller can provide a strong mix of durability and effectiveness going into the postseason. The Jays and Pirates have linked up for trades before, and the Pirates are most likely going to want bats, and the Blue Jays have a ton of those in the high minors that they could look to move on from. The Case Against: There is some concern under the hood with Keller; the hard-hit rate has been up, and the strikeouts have been down. Neither of those are trends that most contenders want to see before they acquire a player. There is also the fact that Mitch Keller has never pitched in the playoffs before. Now, that's not necessarily his fault, but there is some concern to see how a player will hold up under the bright lights of October. 5. Zac Gallen SP, Arizona Diamondbacks The Case For: If you’re looking to try to strike gold on upside, then Gallen might be the best play at the deadline. From 2022-2024, Gallen was consistently one of the better pitchers in the game. Throwing at least 148 innings in all three seasons, finishing top-five in NL Cy Young voting in two of those seasons, and finishing as the leader in the NL in WHIP (0.913) in 2022, he's a proven ace. On top of that, Gallen does have some postseason experience. He made six starts for the Diamondbacks in their run to the World Series in 2023, pitching to a 4.54 ERA in over 30 innings, showing that he can pitch on the big stage. The Case Against: Although Gallen has been that good for the past three seasons, his 2025 campaign this far leaves more to be desired. He’s currently running a 5.58 ERA and is having career-worst numbers in strikeouts, walks, home runs allowed, and more. In addition, Gallen is purely a rental, as he is set to become a free agent at the end of the 2025 season, meaning that the team runs the risk of losing him at the end of the season if he doesn't re-sign in Toronto. It's another case of high-risk, high-reward, and it comes down to just how risky the Blue Jays want to be this trade deadline. Honorable Mentions: Edward Cabrera SP - Miami Marlins Merrill Kelly SP - Arizona Diamondbacks Jhoan Duran RP - Minnesota Twins David Bednar RP - Pittsburgh Pirates Ryan Helsley RP - St. Louis Cardinals Luis Severino SP - Athletics No matter what happens between now and July 31, it feels like the Blue Jays are going to make some additions to their roster, and pitching seems like the sure way to go. The Blue Jays are in a position where, no matter who they acquire, there is going to be some risk either way, but the worst thing they can do is stand pat, and let the other teams around them get better, This is the best chance Toronto has had for a World Series title since the Josh Donaldson/Jose Bautista era in the mid-2010’s. This is the last chance the Blue Jays have to make additions to the roster, and making the right move at this deadline could be the difference between this team making a run deep into October or being out of the playoffs early for a fourth straight appearance. And the latter is a sight that no fan, player, or front office member wants to have happen again.
  8. The Toronto Blue Jays are in first place in the AL East. With only one division title since they won back-to-back World Series in the early 90's, the Blue Jays find themselves in a position that they aren't used to with he trade deadline fast approaching. History aside, there is no longer a conversation about whether or not the Blue Jays should be buyers or sellers, or if they should be looking to unload players one year from free agency, like they did with Yusei Kikuchi, Yimi Garcia, Justin Turner and others in 2024. The Blue Jays are a contending team, and they have to act like a World Series hopeful. Which means they’ve got to buy and find anyway possible to make their team better. What makes the deadline so interesting this year is that there are multiple pathways for the team to take. The Blue Jays are 11th in runs scored on the season and 20th in home runs, so the argument can be made that they should look to add a power bat. They thought they had that need in the offseason, when they signed Anthony Santander to a five-year contract, but with only six home runs, a .577 OPS in just 50 games played, he hasn’t filled the role that the team was hoping he would. The Jays could also use more pitching. They aren't alone in this, as all the teams who find themselves with a chance of entering the dance in October also need more arms, but the Blue Jays' need may be more exacerbated. Jose Berrios, Kevin Gausman, and Chris Bassitt have been staples in the rotation so far, but all three of them have had some inconsistencies, leading to some up-and-down performances. Max Scherzer is back now, but with his constant thumb issues, it's hard to rely on him to be able to stay healthy for the whole season. Eric Lauer has been a revelation since joining the rotation, posting a 2.80 ERA, with a xERA and FIP not too far off, but Lauer hasn't thrown more than 100 IP since 2022 with the Brewers and there is some concern that the clock may strike midnight soon. The Blue Jays' bullpen has had some pleasant surprises — Yariel Rodriguez has turned into one of the more dominant set-up men in MLB, Justin Bruhil, Brendon Little, and Brayden Fisher have all had success, and even with injuries to Yimi Garcia and Nick Sandlin, and some home run issues at times with Jeff Hoffman and Chad Green, the Blue Jays bullpen as a whole has been in pretty good shape. But there is always a chance the Blue Jays could add more as the calendar approaches the July 31 trade deadline. On Monday, Jeff Passan and Kiley McDaniel of ESPN wrote an article about MLB’s top 50 trade deadline candidates, and the Blue Jays were mentioned as “best fits” for several of the players listed. It's worth exploring a little more just how much each player mentioned would actually fit in with the Toronto Blue Jays and lay out a case for and against each candidate, and whether or not said player will be coming north of the border come the second half of the season: 1. Steven Kwan OF, Cleveland Guardians The case for: You don’t have to squint very hard to see why the Blue Jays would be interested in a player like Kwan, He’s won a Gold Glove in all three seasons he’s played in the majors, walks more than he strikes out, and is incredible at putting the bat on the ball (a whiff rate below 10% each of the last three seasons), which is a skill the Blue Jays absolutely adore. The Blue Jays have also been without a true leadoff hitter in quite some time, and Kwan would solve that issue immediately upon arrival. The case against: The issue for the Blue Jays right now is that they’ve already got a crowded outfield. Daulton Varsho is currently on a rehab assignment and is nearing a return. Addison Barger has been seeing a lot of time in RF, and the Blue Jays have been having success with the Nathan Lukes, Myles Straw, Joey Loperfido, Davis Schneider rotation in the other spot. On top of that, Kwan is not going to be cheap, as he’s not a free agent until the 2028 season, and the Guardians don't necessarily need to trade him this trade deadline, If Kwan delivers and helps guide the Blue Jays to a World Series, then it won't matter what the Blue Jays gave up. But if it doesn’t, it could affect the long-term viability of the Blue Jays if one of their top prospects ends up becoming a superstar in another organization. 2. Sandy Alcantara SP Miami Marlins The Case For: It's not that often that former Cy Young Award winners become available, and that is exactly what is happening here with the Miami Marlins. Alcantara’s 8.0 bWAR season in 2022 is the best MLB has seen for a pitcher since Aaron Nola in 2018. So, it's exciting to dream of adding that player to any rotation, especially for a team like the Blue Jays, who have been looking for an ace, and if h'es right, he could fit that bill. Add in the fact that he’s under contract through the 2026 season and has a club option for 2027, there is some team control here, which historically this Blue Jays front office has valued. The Case Against: The problem with Alcantara is that he hasn’t looked like that ace for quite some time. He underwent Tommy John surgery in October 2023 and missed the entire 2024 season. He was able to return to start the 2025 season, but he simply hasn't pitched well. A 7.14 ERA is ugly no matter how you look at it, and the strikeouts are down, the walks are up, and so are the home runs. None of that gives much hope that a turnaround is coming, at least right away. It's hard to justify giving up on some future players for a pitcher who, as things currently stand, isn't better than any of the five that are currently in the rotation, and unless the Blue Jays are quite certain they know what it's going to take to turn him back into a Cy Young candidate, then it may be buyer beware for Alcantara. 3. Seth Lugo RHP Kansas City Royals The Case For: Seth Lugo just seems like the Blue Jays' type of pitcher. He throws eight different pitches more than 5% of the time. There are shades of Chris Bassitt here, who has had success with in Toronto. Beyond that, Lugo has also been quite effective over the past few seasons. He had a 3.60 ERA or better in five straight seasons, including a 2024 season that saw him produce a 5.4 bWAR and finish second in the AL Cy Young award. His 2025 season has been pretty good as well; his 2.94 ERA is right in line with where it was in the prior season. He instantly makes any rotation better. The Case Against: There is some worry that Lugo’s ability to induce soft contact is fading. He’s got a 46.3% hard-hit rate, which is in the bottom 10% of MLB, and although the actual ERA is good, xERA has Lugo at a 4.71 mark, which is the highest since his sophomore year in 2017. On top of that, Lugo is now 35 years old, and if he declines his player option for 2025, he could be a free agent at season's end. If Lugo can continue his run of strong pitching, then it's worth the move 10 times out of 10, but if his numbers regress back to the mean, and the hard hits keep coming against him, it may be hard to rely on Lugo as a dominant force going forward. 4. Mitch Keller SP, Pittsburgh Pirates The Case For: Out of all the pitchers mentioned on this list, Keller might be pitching the best at the moment, He’s currently running a 3.48 ERA, which is the best of his career, and is also under team control until the 2029 season, which could be of interest for the Blue Jays. Bassitt and Scherzer are set to become free agents this season, and Gausman and potentially Berrios (if he opts out) will join them shortly after. Keller's four-seam/sweeper combo has been quite good, with a +11 run value on the fastball and a +5 on the sweeper. Combine that with the fact he’s made 29 or more starts each of the last three seasons, and there is a case that Keller can provide a strong mix of durability and effectiveness going into the postseason. The Jays and Pirates have linked up for trades before, and the Pirates are most likely going to want bats, and the Blue Jays have a ton of those in the high minors that they could look to move on from. The Case Against: There is some concern under the hood with Keller; the hard-hit rate has been up, and the strikeouts have been down. Neither of those are trends that most contenders want to see before they acquire a player. There is also the fact that Mitch Keller has never pitched in the playoffs before. Now, that's not necessarily his fault, but there is some concern to see how a player will hold up under the bright lights of October. 5. Zac Gallen SP, Arizona Diamondbacks The Case For: If you’re looking to try to strike gold on upside, then Gallen might be the best play at the deadline. From 2022-2024, Gallen was consistently one of the better pitchers in the game. Throwing at least 148 innings in all three seasons, finishing top-five in NL Cy Young voting in two of those seasons, and finishing as the leader in the NL in WHIP (0.913) in 2022, he's a proven ace. On top of that, Gallen does have some postseason experience. He made six starts for the Diamondbacks in their run to the World Series in 2023, pitching to a 4.54 ERA in over 30 innings, showing that he can pitch on the big stage. The Case Against: Although Gallen has been that good for the past three seasons, his 2025 campaign this far leaves more to be desired. He’s currently running a 5.58 ERA and is having career-worst numbers in strikeouts, walks, home runs allowed, and more. In addition, Gallen is purely a rental, as he is set to become a free agent at the end of the 2025 season, meaning that the team runs the risk of losing him at the end of the season if he doesn't re-sign in Toronto. It's another case of high-risk, high-reward, and it comes down to just how risky the Blue Jays want to be this trade deadline. Honorable Mentions: Edward Cabrera SP - Miami Marlins Merrill Kelly SP - Arizona Diamondbacks Jhoan Duran RP - Minnesota Twins David Bednar RP - Pittsburgh Pirates Ryan Helsley RP - St. Louis Cardinals Luis Severino SP - Athletics No matter what happens between now and July 31, it feels like the Blue Jays are going to make some additions to their roster, and pitching seems like the sure way to go. The Blue Jays are in a position where, no matter who they acquire, there is going to be some risk either way, but the worst thing they can do is stand pat, and let the other teams around them get better, This is the best chance Toronto has had for a World Series title since the Josh Donaldson/Jose Bautista era in the mid-2010’s. This is the last chance the Blue Jays have to make additions to the roster, and making the right move at this deadline could be the difference between this team making a run deep into October or being out of the playoffs early for a fourth straight appearance. And the latter is a sight that no fan, player, or front office member wants to have happen again. View full article
  9. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 7/14 through Sun, 7/20 Record Last Week: 3-0 (Overall: 58-41) Run Differential Last Week: + 9 (Overall: + 26) Standings: First Place in AL East (3.0 Games Up on NYY), Second in AL (1.0 GB of DET for first) Last Week’s Results Game 97: SF 0 - TOR 4 Bassitt: 6.1 IP, 10 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Springer: 3-4 Loperfido: 2-3, 2B, RBI, BB Wagner: 1-2, 2B, 2 RBI, BB Game 98: SF 3 - TOR 6 Lauer: 6.0 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K Barger: 4-4, 2B, R Heineman: 2-4, HR (3), 3 RBI Wagner: 2-4, 2B, 2 RBI Game 99: SF 6 - TOR 8 Berrios: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 4 ER, 1 BB, 5 K Guerrero Jr: 2-3, HR (13), 2 RBI, BB Springer: 2-4, HR (17). 2 RBI Barger: 1-4, HR (14), 2 RBI Highlights Addison Barger: Not even the All-Star break can slow down Addison Barger. Over the weekend series against the Giants, Barger continued on his impressive sophomore season at the plate. He had hits in all three games, including a four-hit performance in the middle game of the series (the first time he’s done that in his career), and he capped that off with a monster 407 ft home run in the series finale. Barger has now moved into second on the team in home runs, despite playing in just 75 games on the season. The 2.2 fWAR has him second on the team as well and has emerged as one of the key contributors to the recent success of the Blue Jays. Eric Lauer: If Addison Barger isn’t one of the most surprising players on the 2025 Blue Jays, then that title has to belong to Eric Lauer, who put up another stellar performance on Saturday. Lauer started the game striking out five of the first six Giants he faced, and ended up retiring the first 13 batters before allowing a solo home run. When all was said and done, he threw six innings and allowed just two runs. Most importantly, since Lauer has been inserted into the rotation, the Blue Jays are 6-1 in those starts. Lauer may be more than just a number five starter for this team, and if he keeps pitching this well, it won't be Lauer who gets removed from the rotation if/when the Blue Jays add another starting pitcher at the deadline. Will Wagner: There has been a constant theme with these Blue Jays while they’ve been winning baseball games, and that's that they have been getting positive contributions from players that weren't necessarily expected to be this good. Well, the beat goes on, and this week it was Will Wagner's turn to step up. Two more doubles and a series high four RBI coming from the bottom third of the order will play. Since his call-up at the end of June, Wagner is slashing .333/.436/.485 good enough for a .921 OPS. He’s mostly playing in a platoon role, hitting against left-handed pitching, but he’s been doing his part and is looking more and more like he belongs in the major leagues. Lowlights Jose Berrios: Don’t look now, but Berrios has been the one out of the five starters who has been struggling the most lately. He was able to pitch into the sixth inning on Sunday but allowed four earned runs, now the third time in his last four starts he’s allowed that many. This isn't anything new for Berrios, as throughout his career he’s had extended stretches of ineffectiveness and has found a way to turn it around, But with the Blue Jays currently leading the AL East, and in a heated competition to try and get one of the top two spots in the American League to get a bye in the first round having their pitchers be productive every day is going to be key, and the Blue Jays would like to see Berrios go on another positive run sooner rather than later. Braydon Fisher: It’s been hard to find a low light this week. That’ll happen when your team wins all three games played in the week, but Braydon Fisher gets highlighted here, mostly because he came into the game on Sunday to relieve Berrios, and all three batters he faced got on base. A double, a single, and then a walk was all he was able to before he was lifted from his appearance. His performance on the season has still been remarkable, as he has allowed earned runs in only one of his last 19 appearances, so he’s earned some slack, but it's worth bringing attention to in a week where so many Blue Jays performed so well. Random Stats of the Week The Blue Jays have now won 10 straight games at home, the most they’ve had since the 1985 season. Vladimir Guerrero Jr and Alejandro Kirk both appeared in the All-Star Game this week, both of them collecting a hit in their game. The Blue Jays drafted 19 players in this week's MLB Draft, and according to Baseball America, all but one have signed so far. Chris Bassitt allowed 10 hits in his start but did not allow a run. LHP Joe Mantiply signed with the Blue Jays on a minor league deal this week. He was an all-star as recently as 2022. Jeff Hoffman picked up saves in the first two games of the series, and Yariel Rodriguez picked up the save in the finale. The Blue Jays held a moment of silence on Friday for the passing of long-time Blue Jay Jim Clancy. Clancy spent 12 seasons in Toronto and was an all-star in the 1982 season News, Notes and Not Playing No new roster notes 10-Day IL: Andres Gimenez, Daulton Varsho Andres Gimenez was with the team in Toronto this week, doing defensive drills and some light hitting (Via Davidi) Daulton Varsho has begun a rehab assignment; the number of games until his return is still to be determined, but he did hit a HR on Sunday in Dunedin (Via Davidi) 15-day IL: Yimi Garcia, Bowden Francis, Paxton Schultz, Nick Sandlin Yimi Garcia, who was on the IL due to an ankle sprain, is now experiencing “ulnar nerve symptoms” and will get an exam for the next steps (Via Davidi) Bowden Francis felt “cranky in his shoulder” and will be shut down for at least 10 days (Via Davidi) Nick Sandlin has begun playing catch. He’s feeling better (Via Davidi) 60-day IL: Anthony Santander, Alek Manoah, Ryan Burr OF/DH Anthony Santander still hasn't swung a bat. he met in Toronto this week to see some doctors to try and get a plan going forward. (Via Davidi) RHP Alek Manoah got into his first few rehab games, throwing two innings and striking out two in his most recent appearance. Ryan Burrs’ season is over, after having surgery to address an injury in his throwing shoulder (Via Shi Davidi) Trending Storyline The Blue Jays' stretch of dominance continues, as they have been the best team in baseball since May 25th. The goal for this team is to maintain that success and avoid becoming too complacent. Not only is the team competing for first place in the AL East, but the chance at finishing first or second in the American League should be a priority as the Blue Jays haven’t had any luck at all in the wild card series, and getting a first-round bye would be a remarkable goal for this team. The Trade deadline is now less than two weeks away, and the Blue Jays are certainly going to be buyers at the deadline. It's worth watching over the next few series to see what the Blue Jays need to acquire. Can Max Scherzer prove he can stay on the mound for the rest of the season? How will the Blue Jays address some needs in their bullpen? Davis Schneider had a good run before the All-Star break, but are the Blue Jays still going to acquire a right-handed bench bat, or can Schneider be that player? There is a lot to look into over these next few series, as it may have some effect on what the Blue Jays do at the deadline. On the field, there is still much to be determined as well. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has been good, but hasn’t had the power surge that he’s had in the past. How will the position player group shape out with Daulton Varsho set to return in the near future? Will the pitching staff be able to bounce back after some less-than-spectacular outings? Time will tell. Looking Ahead The unofficial second half of the season continues as the Blue Jays will continue their home stand and will try to extend their 10-game home winning streak as they welcome the New York Yankees into town. The Yankees have just recently taken a series against Atlanta and have made some changes to their pitching staff in order to have their best arms (Rodon and Fried) start in the series. The Jays have had success against the Bronx Bombers this season, after they swept them the last time they were in Toronto. If the Blue Jays can do that again, they will put some serious distance between the two teams in the race for the division, but a Yankees win will have the race much closer once again. After completing the series against the Yankees, the Jays will make the short trip to Detroit, where they will await the first-place Tigers for a four-game series. It will be the Jays' first look against the team that the Blue Jays are chasing for first place in the American League. Just as in the previous series, if the Blue Jays can take at least three games in the series, then the odds of them claiming first in the AL and taking a bye through the Wild Card round seem very real; if not, it'll be hard to catch up to them especially as the Jays will likely have to face the likely candidate for the AL Cy Young in Tarik Skubal this week. The Jays have had many big weeks this season, and this upcoming week might be one of the biggest yet. View full article
  10. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 7/14 through Sun, 7/20 Record Last Week: 3-0 (Overall: 58-41) Run Differential Last Week: + 9 (Overall: + 26) Standings: First Place in AL East (3.0 Games Up on NYY), Second in AL (1.0 GB of DET for first) Last Week’s Results Game 97: SF 0 - TOR 4 Bassitt: 6.1 IP, 10 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Springer: 3-4 Loperfido: 2-3, 2B, RBI, BB Wagner: 1-2, 2B, 2 RBI, BB Game 98: SF 3 - TOR 6 Lauer: 6.0 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K Barger: 4-4, 2B, R Heineman: 2-4, HR (3), 3 RBI Wagner: 2-4, 2B, 2 RBI Game 99: SF 6 - TOR 8 Berrios: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 4 ER, 1 BB, 5 K Guerrero Jr: 2-3, HR (13), 2 RBI, BB Springer: 2-4, HR (17). 2 RBI Barger: 1-4, HR (14), 2 RBI Highlights Addison Barger: Not even the All-Star break can slow down Addison Barger. Over the weekend series against the Giants, Barger continued on his impressive sophomore season at the plate. He had hits in all three games, including a four-hit performance in the middle game of the series (the first time he’s done that in his career), and he capped that off with a monster 407 ft home run in the series finale. Barger has now moved into second on the team in home runs, despite playing in just 75 games on the season. The 2.2 fWAR has him second on the team as well and has emerged as one of the key contributors to the recent success of the Blue Jays. Eric Lauer: If Addison Barger isn’t one of the most surprising players on the 2025 Blue Jays, then that title has to belong to Eric Lauer, who put up another stellar performance on Saturday. Lauer started the game striking out five of the first six Giants he faced, and ended up retiring the first 13 batters before allowing a solo home run. When all was said and done, he threw six innings and allowed just two runs. Most importantly, since Lauer has been inserted into the rotation, the Blue Jays are 6-1 in those starts. Lauer may be more than just a number five starter for this team, and if he keeps pitching this well, it won't be Lauer who gets removed from the rotation if/when the Blue Jays add another starting pitcher at the deadline. Will Wagner: There has been a constant theme with these Blue Jays while they’ve been winning baseball games, and that's that they have been getting positive contributions from players that weren't necessarily expected to be this good. Well, the beat goes on, and this week it was Will Wagner's turn to step up. Two more doubles and a series high four RBI coming from the bottom third of the order will play. Since his call-up at the end of June, Wagner is slashing .333/.436/.485 good enough for a .921 OPS. He’s mostly playing in a platoon role, hitting against left-handed pitching, but he’s been doing his part and is looking more and more like he belongs in the major leagues. Lowlights Jose Berrios: Don’t look now, but Berrios has been the one out of the five starters who has been struggling the most lately. He was able to pitch into the sixth inning on Sunday but allowed four earned runs, now the third time in his last four starts he’s allowed that many. This isn't anything new for Berrios, as throughout his career he’s had extended stretches of ineffectiveness and has found a way to turn it around, But with the Blue Jays currently leading the AL East, and in a heated competition to try and get one of the top two spots in the American League to get a bye in the first round having their pitchers be productive every day is going to be key, and the Blue Jays would like to see Berrios go on another positive run sooner rather than later. Braydon Fisher: It’s been hard to find a low light this week. That’ll happen when your team wins all three games played in the week, but Braydon Fisher gets highlighted here, mostly because he came into the game on Sunday to relieve Berrios, and all three batters he faced got on base. A double, a single, and then a walk was all he was able to before he was lifted from his appearance. His performance on the season has still been remarkable, as he has allowed earned runs in only one of his last 19 appearances, so he’s earned some slack, but it's worth bringing attention to in a week where so many Blue Jays performed so well. Random Stats of the Week The Blue Jays have now won 10 straight games at home, the most they’ve had since the 1985 season. Vladimir Guerrero Jr and Alejandro Kirk both appeared in the All-Star Game this week, both of them collecting a hit in their game. The Blue Jays drafted 19 players in this week's MLB Draft, and according to Baseball America, all but one have signed so far. Chris Bassitt allowed 10 hits in his start but did not allow a run. LHP Joe Mantiply signed with the Blue Jays on a minor league deal this week. He was an all-star as recently as 2022. Jeff Hoffman picked up saves in the first two games of the series, and Yariel Rodriguez picked up the save in the finale. The Blue Jays held a moment of silence on Friday for the passing of long-time Blue Jay Jim Clancy. Clancy spent 12 seasons in Toronto and was an all-star in the 1982 season News, Notes and Not Playing No new roster notes 10-Day IL: Andres Gimenez, Daulton Varsho Andres Gimenez was with the team in Toronto this week, doing defensive drills and some light hitting (Via Davidi) Daulton Varsho has begun a rehab assignment; the number of games until his return is still to be determined, but he did hit a HR on Sunday in Dunedin (Via Davidi) 15-day IL: Yimi Garcia, Bowden Francis, Paxton Schultz, Nick Sandlin Yimi Garcia, who was on the IL due to an ankle sprain, is now experiencing “ulnar nerve symptoms” and will get an exam for the next steps (Via Davidi) Bowden Francis felt “cranky in his shoulder” and will be shut down for at least 10 days (Via Davidi) Nick Sandlin has begun playing catch. He’s feeling better (Via Davidi) 60-day IL: Anthony Santander, Alek Manoah, Ryan Burr OF/DH Anthony Santander still hasn't swung a bat. he met in Toronto this week to see some doctors to try and get a plan going forward. (Via Davidi) RHP Alek Manoah got into his first few rehab games, throwing two innings and striking out two in his most recent appearance. Ryan Burrs’ season is over, after having surgery to address an injury in his throwing shoulder (Via Shi Davidi) Trending Storyline The Blue Jays' stretch of dominance continues, as they have been the best team in baseball since May 25th. The goal for this team is to maintain that success and avoid becoming too complacent. Not only is the team competing for first place in the AL East, but the chance at finishing first or second in the American League should be a priority as the Blue Jays haven’t had any luck at all in the wild card series, and getting a first-round bye would be a remarkable goal for this team. The Trade deadline is now less than two weeks away, and the Blue Jays are certainly going to be buyers at the deadline. It's worth watching over the next few series to see what the Blue Jays need to acquire. Can Max Scherzer prove he can stay on the mound for the rest of the season? How will the Blue Jays address some needs in their bullpen? Davis Schneider had a good run before the All-Star break, but are the Blue Jays still going to acquire a right-handed bench bat, or can Schneider be that player? There is a lot to look into over these next few series, as it may have some effect on what the Blue Jays do at the deadline. On the field, there is still much to be determined as well. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has been good, but hasn’t had the power surge that he’s had in the past. How will the position player group shape out with Daulton Varsho set to return in the near future? Will the pitching staff be able to bounce back after some less-than-spectacular outings? Time will tell. Looking Ahead The unofficial second half of the season continues as the Blue Jays will continue their home stand and will try to extend their 10-game home winning streak as they welcome the New York Yankees into town. The Yankees have just recently taken a series against Atlanta and have made some changes to their pitching staff in order to have their best arms (Rodon and Fried) start in the series. The Jays have had success against the Bronx Bombers this season, after they swept them the last time they were in Toronto. If the Blue Jays can do that again, they will put some serious distance between the two teams in the race for the division, but a Yankees win will have the race much closer once again. After completing the series against the Yankees, the Jays will make the short trip to Detroit, where they will await the first-place Tigers for a four-game series. It will be the Jays' first look against the team that the Blue Jays are chasing for first place in the American League. Just as in the previous series, if the Blue Jays can take at least three games in the series, then the odds of them claiming first in the AL and taking a bye through the Wild Card round seem very real; if not, it'll be hard to catch up to them especially as the Jays will likely have to face the likely candidate for the AL Cy Young in Tarik Skubal this week. The Jays have had many big weeks this season, and this upcoming week might be one of the biggest yet.
  11. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 6/30 through Sun, 7/6 *** Record Last Week: 7-0 (Overall: 52-38) Run Differential Last Week: +16 (Overall: +12) Standings: First Place in AL East (3.0 Games Up on NYY and TB), Third in AL (3.0 GB of HOU for second) Last Week’s Results Game 84: NYY 4 - TOR 5 Scherzer: 5.0 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K Guerrero Jr.: 2-4, 2B, 3 RBI Clement: 2-4, RBI Schneider: 2-4 Game 85: NYY 5 - TOR 12 Gausman: 5.0 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 4 BB, 3 K Springer: 3-4, 2 HR (12,13), 7 RBI, BB Giménez: 2-3, HR (5), 3 RBI Clement: 1-4, BB, 2 RBI Game 86: NYY 9 - TOR 11 Berríos: 4.1 IP, 9 H, 6 ER, 0 BB, 3 K Schneider: 2-4, 2 HR (2,3), 3 RBI Gimenez: 3-5, RBI Barger: 2-5, HR (10), 4 RBI Game 87: NYY 5 - TOR 8 Bassitt: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 9 K Springer: 3-5, 2 HR (14,15), 4 RBI Barger: 3-4, HR (11), 2 RBI Lukes: 3-5, 2 RBI Game 88: LAA 3 - TOR 4 (10) Lauer: 6.0 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Springer: 2-4, R Wagner: 1-3, 2B Game 89: LAA 3 - TOR 4 (11) Scherzer: 4.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 4 K Estrada: 4.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 0 BB 4 K Guerrero Jr.: 3-5, BB Springer: 2-6, HR (16), 2 RBI Barger: 2-5, 2 RBI Game 90: LAA 2 - TOR 3 Gausman: 5.2 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 9 K Bichette: 1-3, HR (12), 2 RBI Loperfido: 1-3, RBI Schneider: 1-3, 2B, RBI Highlights The Whole Team: What a week this was for the Toronto Blue Jays. They played as well as possible, winning all seven games on the schedule and vaulting themselves from three games back in the division to first place with a three-game cushion. The Blue Jays scored the second-most runs in baseball this week, and the bullpen, which was overworked this last series, did its job to get the team the wins they needed. When all was said and done, the Blue Jays went 7-0, their first sweep of a homestand of seven or more games in franchise history, including their first-ever four-game home sweep of the New York Yankees. If the Blue Jays do end up winning the AL East this season, this week is going to be a big reason why. George Springer: Wow. What a week. Personally, I don't remember a time another Blue Jay had a week like George Springer just had. As a whole, he hit .429/.500/.964 with 5 home runs and 13 RBI, all while walking more than he struck out, and he added a stolen base for good measure. Springer led all AL hitters (or tied for the lead) in: runs (9), RBI (13), fWAR (0.8), plate appearances (33), hits (12), and Win Probability Added (0.94). On the season, Springer now has a 148 wRC+, which trails only Aaron Judge, Cal Raleigh, and Jonathan Aranda in the American League, all of whom will be representing the AL at the All-Star Game. Springer deserves to be there with them. Jeff Hoffman: There was really no wrong answer here to put as our third highlight, but it's important to take a look at what Jeff Hoffman did over this homestand. The Jays used their closer a lot this week. He got into four games, pitched an inning in each, and was a perfect 4-for-4 in saves. He now has 22 on the season, which is the fourth-most in baseball. It's worth noting too that since the start of June, He’s thrown to a 1.38 ERA with just two earned runs allowed in 13 innings pitched. He seems to have gotten back on track lately. Honorable mentions: Addison Barger, Lazaro Estrada, Andrés Giménez, Davis Schneider, Eric Lauer, Max Scherzer Lowlights Yimi García: In a week that was predominantly so good for the Blue Jays, it was hard to find that many low lights, The most notable one this week has to be Yimi García, who came back after roughly six weeks on the IL and was immediately thrown into the fire; he threw a season-high 34 pitches and gave up a game-tying home run to Aaron Judge. To make things worse, García was then sent back to the IL with an ankle sprain after he slipped getting out of a cold tub. Just some real rough luck. José Berríos: This one might be grasping at straws a little, but when the Blue Jays played so well, you’ve got to look hard for some small moments of underperformance. This week, it was José Berríos who was cruising along in his start before things really fell apart for him in the fifth inning. He allowed five straight batters to reach via four singles and a double to begin the inning, and after a fly out, a massive three-run homer by Giancarlo Stanton chased Berríos from the game. Via Baseball Reference's game score metric, his score of 24 was his worst of the season, and both the nine hits and six earned runs he allowed tied his season-worst. Berríos has had starts like this before and has bounced back several times. He will have the opportunity to do so against the White Sox this week. Random Stats of the Week The Blue Jays had two batters reach via catcher's interference this week. Davis Schneider had the hardest swing of his career this week, swinging the bat 82.9 mph. Addison Barger recorded his sixth outfield assist of the season this week, throwing a ball 95.3 mph to nab Mike Trout trying to score. MLB All-Stars were announced this week. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. will be there for his fifth Midsummer Classic, and Alejandro Kirk will be there for his second. Lazaro Estrada, Joey Loperfido and Ryan Burr became the 46th, 47th and 48th different Blue Jays to appear in a game this season. The Blue Jays celebrated Canada Day at home this week, winning 12-5. They are now 17-29 all-time on Canada Day. Max Scherzer made his return to the mound after a long layoff, throwing nine innings over two starts. He allowed four earned runs and struck out eleven. News, Notes and Not Playing INF Leo Jiménez, OF Joey Loperfido, RHP Robinson Pina and RHP Ryan Burr have all been called up. RHP Yimi García returned from the IL and is now back on the IL. RHP Lazaro Estrada made his MLB debut this week and has since been sent back to Triple-A Buffalo. OF Jonatan Clase, LHP Mason Fluharty, and LHP Justin Bruihl have all been sent to Triple-A Buffalo. OF Will Robertson has been designated for assignment. 10-Day IL: Andrés Giménez, Daulton Varsho Andrés Giménez is on the injured list with an ankle sprain. Daulton Varsho is set to get into rehab games in the coming days (via Mitch Bannon). 15-day IL: Yimi García, Bowden Francis, Paxton Schultz Yimi García hits the IL with a right ankle sprain after slipping in the tub (via Bannon). 60-day IL: Anthony Santander, Alek Manoah OF/DH Anthony Santander was diagnosed with a subluxation of his shoulder and has been transferred to the 60-day IL (via Keegan Matheson). RHP Alek Manoah is going to have one more live bullpen session before getting into games (via Mitch Bannon). Trending Storylines The Blue Jays just don’t stop winning games. Following a 7-0 homestand that saw them soar into first place, a lot of the credit should go to the offense. Almost everyone who got into the lineup produced in some way, and it does feel like almost every player on the roster is contributing. It won't last this way forever, but the Blue Jays do look like one of, if not the best team in baseball for the time being. Some of the team's flaws may have been overshadowed by a great week, but the Blue Jays' starting pitching wasn’t at its best. Scherzer showed some good and some bad in both of his starts, noting that it was a push to get things together to make his second start this week. Eric Lauer has pitched well since he was named a full-time member of the starting rotation, but all three of Berríos, Kevin Gausman and Chris Bassitt had less-than-spectacular starts this week. The rotation is worth monitoring going forward once the Blue Jays' offence slows down (if it ever does) and as the team approaches the trade deadline. The Blue Jays' bullpen also got a heavy dose of usage this week. Blue Jays relievers threw 30.1 IP, which was the most out of all 30 MLB teams. The bullpen has been good, but the Blue Jays don't want to run the risk of overworking their relievers, as it could cost them later in the season. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays have one more week until the All-Star break, and their road trip will have them run through Chicago to visit the White Sox and then to Sacramento to visit the A’s. There is a lot on the line, too. If Toronto can win just two of their next six games, they'll set a record for most wins in franchise history before the All-Star break. In their first series, the Jays will be looking for revenge against Chicago, who took two out of three against them two weeks ago at the Rogers Centre. On paper, the Blue Jays should be able to continue their winning ways against a team that is near the bottom of the standings. Berríos, Bassitt, and Lauer are the Jays' projected starters for this series. After a trip to the windy city, the Blue Jays will head to Sacramento to take on the A’s in a ballpark that has been a real offensive force so far this season. The Jays have played well against the A’s, sweeping them earlier in the season, and they will look to do so again before they head into the All-Star break. On paper, it looks like a real opportunity for the Jays to further their lead in the AL East, but they can’t take these two teams lightly, especially when playing them on the road.
  12. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 6/30 through Sun, 7/6 *** Record Last Week: 7-0 (Overall: 52-38) Run Differential Last Week: +16 (Overall: +12) Standings: First Place in AL East (3.0 Games Up on NYY and TB), Third in AL (3.0 GB of HOU for second) Last Week’s Results Game 84: NYY 4 - TOR 5 Scherzer: 5.0 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K Guerrero Jr.: 2-4, 2B, 3 RBI Clement: 2-4, RBI Schneider: 2-4 Game 85: NYY 5 - TOR 12 Gausman: 5.0 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 4 BB, 3 K Springer: 3-4, 2 HR (12,13), 7 RBI, BB Giménez: 2-3, HR (5), 3 RBI Clement: 1-4, BB, 2 RBI Game 86: NYY 9 - TOR 11 Berríos: 4.1 IP, 9 H, 6 ER, 0 BB, 3 K Schneider: 2-4, 2 HR (2,3), 3 RBI Gimenez: 3-5, RBI Barger: 2-5, HR (10), 4 RBI Game 87: NYY 5 - TOR 8 Bassitt: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 9 K Springer: 3-5, 2 HR (14,15), 4 RBI Barger: 3-4, HR (11), 2 RBI Lukes: 3-5, 2 RBI Game 88: LAA 3 - TOR 4 (10) Lauer: 6.0 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Springer: 2-4, R Wagner: 1-3, 2B Game 89: LAA 3 - TOR 4 (11) Scherzer: 4.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 4 K Estrada: 4.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 0 BB 4 K Guerrero Jr.: 3-5, BB Springer: 2-6, HR (16), 2 RBI Barger: 2-5, 2 RBI Game 90: LAA 2 - TOR 3 Gausman: 5.2 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 9 K Bichette: 1-3, HR (12), 2 RBI Loperfido: 1-3, RBI Schneider: 1-3, 2B, RBI Highlights The Whole Team: What a week this was for the Toronto Blue Jays. They played as well as possible, winning all seven games on the schedule and vaulting themselves from three games back in the division to first place with a three-game cushion. The Blue Jays scored the second-most runs in baseball this week, and the bullpen, which was overworked this last series, did its job to get the team the wins they needed. When all was said and done, the Blue Jays went 7-0, their first sweep of a homestand of seven or more games in franchise history, including their first-ever four-game home sweep of the New York Yankees. If the Blue Jays do end up winning the AL East this season, this week is going to be a big reason why. George Springer: Wow. What a week. Personally, I don't remember a time another Blue Jay had a week like George Springer just had. As a whole, he hit .429/.500/.964 with 5 home runs and 13 RBI, all while walking more than he struck out, and he added a stolen base for good measure. Springer led all AL hitters (or tied for the lead) in: runs (9), RBI (13), fWAR (0.8), plate appearances (33), hits (12), and Win Probability Added (0.94). On the season, Springer now has a 148 wRC+, which trails only Aaron Judge, Cal Raleigh, and Jonathan Aranda in the American League, all of whom will be representing the AL at the All-Star Game. Springer deserves to be there with them. Jeff Hoffman: There was really no wrong answer here to put as our third highlight, but it's important to take a look at what Jeff Hoffman did over this homestand. The Jays used their closer a lot this week. He got into four games, pitched an inning in each, and was a perfect 4-for-4 in saves. He now has 22 on the season, which is the fourth-most in baseball. It's worth noting too that since the start of June, He’s thrown to a 1.38 ERA with just two earned runs allowed in 13 innings pitched. He seems to have gotten back on track lately. Honorable mentions: Addison Barger, Lazaro Estrada, Andrés Giménez, Davis Schneider, Eric Lauer, Max Scherzer Lowlights Yimi García: In a week that was predominantly so good for the Blue Jays, it was hard to find that many low lights, The most notable one this week has to be Yimi García, who came back after roughly six weeks on the IL and was immediately thrown into the fire; he threw a season-high 34 pitches and gave up a game-tying home run to Aaron Judge. To make things worse, García was then sent back to the IL with an ankle sprain after he slipped getting out of a cold tub. Just some real rough luck. José Berríos: This one might be grasping at straws a little, but when the Blue Jays played so well, you’ve got to look hard for some small moments of underperformance. This week, it was José Berríos who was cruising along in his start before things really fell apart for him in the fifth inning. He allowed five straight batters to reach via four singles and a double to begin the inning, and after a fly out, a massive three-run homer by Giancarlo Stanton chased Berríos from the game. Via Baseball Reference's game score metric, his score of 24 was his worst of the season, and both the nine hits and six earned runs he allowed tied his season-worst. Berríos has had starts like this before and has bounced back several times. He will have the opportunity to do so against the White Sox this week. Random Stats of the Week The Blue Jays had two batters reach via catcher's interference this week. Davis Schneider had the hardest swing of his career this week, swinging the bat 82.9 mph. Addison Barger recorded his sixth outfield assist of the season this week, throwing a ball 95.3 mph to nab Mike Trout trying to score. MLB All-Stars were announced this week. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. will be there for his fifth Midsummer Classic, and Alejandro Kirk will be there for his second. Lazaro Estrada, Joey Loperfido and Ryan Burr became the 46th, 47th and 48th different Blue Jays to appear in a game this season. The Blue Jays celebrated Canada Day at home this week, winning 12-5. They are now 17-29 all-time on Canada Day. Max Scherzer made his return to the mound after a long layoff, throwing nine innings over two starts. He allowed four earned runs and struck out eleven. News, Notes and Not Playing INF Leo Jiménez, OF Joey Loperfido, RHP Robinson Pina and RHP Ryan Burr have all been called up. RHP Yimi García returned from the IL and is now back on the IL. RHP Lazaro Estrada made his MLB debut this week and has since been sent back to Triple-A Buffalo. OF Jonatan Clase, LHP Mason Fluharty, and LHP Justin Bruihl have all been sent to Triple-A Buffalo. OF Will Robertson has been designated for assignment. 10-Day IL: Andrés Giménez, Daulton Varsho Andrés Giménez is on the injured list with an ankle sprain. Daulton Varsho is set to get into rehab games in the coming days (via Mitch Bannon). 15-day IL: Yimi García, Bowden Francis, Paxton Schultz Yimi García hits the IL with a right ankle sprain after slipping in the tub (via Bannon). 60-day IL: Anthony Santander, Alek Manoah OF/DH Anthony Santander was diagnosed with a subluxation of his shoulder and has been transferred to the 60-day IL (via Keegan Matheson). RHP Alek Manoah is going to have one more live bullpen session before getting into games (via Mitch Bannon). Trending Storylines The Blue Jays just don’t stop winning games. Following a 7-0 homestand that saw them soar into first place, a lot of the credit should go to the offense. Almost everyone who got into the lineup produced in some way, and it does feel like almost every player on the roster is contributing. It won't last this way forever, but the Blue Jays do look like one of, if not the best team in baseball for the time being. Some of the team's flaws may have been overshadowed by a great week, but the Blue Jays' starting pitching wasn’t at its best. Scherzer showed some good and some bad in both of his starts, noting that it was a push to get things together to make his second start this week. Eric Lauer has pitched well since he was named a full-time member of the starting rotation, but all three of Berríos, Kevin Gausman and Chris Bassitt had less-than-spectacular starts this week. The rotation is worth monitoring going forward once the Blue Jays' offence slows down (if it ever does) and as the team approaches the trade deadline. The Blue Jays' bullpen also got a heavy dose of usage this week. Blue Jays relievers threw 30.1 IP, which was the most out of all 30 MLB teams. The bullpen has been good, but the Blue Jays don't want to run the risk of overworking their relievers, as it could cost them later in the season. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays have one more week until the All-Star break, and their road trip will have them run through Chicago to visit the White Sox and then to Sacramento to visit the A’s. There is a lot on the line, too. If Toronto can win just two of their next six games, they'll set a record for most wins in franchise history before the All-Star break. In their first series, the Jays will be looking for revenge against Chicago, who took two out of three against them two weeks ago at the Rogers Centre. On paper, the Blue Jays should be able to continue their winning ways against a team that is near the bottom of the standings. Berríos, Bassitt, and Lauer are the Jays' projected starters for this series. After a trip to the windy city, the Blue Jays will head to Sacramento to take on the A’s in a ballpark that has been a real offensive force so far this season. The Jays have played well against the A’s, sweeping them earlier in the season, and they will look to do so again before they head into the All-Star break. On paper, it looks like a real opportunity for the Jays to further their lead in the AL East, but they can’t take these two teams lightly, especially when playing them on the road. View full article
  13. The Toronto Blue Jays are a really good baseball team. There shouldn't be much debate about it either, following two straight series sweeps (including a four-game sweep against the New York Yankees) and four series victories in a row, the Blue Jays sit in first place in the AL East. They became the first team in the division to hit the 50-win mark, and they trail only the Houston Astros and the Detroit Tigers for the best record in the American League. There is a small subset of people out there (looking at you, Michael Kay) who don't believe the Blue Jays are for real, with the main argument being that their run differential has been quite poor throughout the season. Jamie Campbell threw some shade towards Kay and the Yankees after the Blue Jays swept them on Thursday, saying, "a certain Yankee broadcaster" is going to have to "go on his show tomorrow and admit that the Blue Jays are a first-place team because the standings prove it." Now, at the end of the day, run differential doesn't really matter. They don't hand out a trophy at the end of the season for the team that outscored their opponents the most, nor do they award playoff spots that way either. All that matters is whether you score more than your opponent each day, and the Blue Jays have done that more often than not this season. That said, run differential is usually a better predictor than current win-loss record of how a team is going to perform going forward. Blue Jays fans should know this well. Back in 2015, the Blue Jays were a game below .500 at the All-Star break despite their +84 run differential. Two weeks later, they added Troy Tulowitzki, David Price, and others, and they soared to a 48-23 record in the second half and marched right on to the ALCS. Alex Anthopoulos, Toronto's general manager at the time, cited the team's extreme run differential as a reason to push the chips in at the deadline, and it's safe to say it worked out. Now, getting back to the 2025 team, the run differential conversation has felt like throwing a wet blanket on a season that has been incredibly fun so far. With any luck, maybe the Blue Jays continue on their current tear and we soon forget all about this. Still, it's worth taking a look to see what history says about a team's success with such a “poor” run differential halfway through the season. At the end of June, the Blue Jays' run differential was -3. So, with that number in mind, we can take a look at how many clubs have gone on to make the playoffs after finishing June with a negative run differential since the league implemented a 10-team playoff structure in 2012: 2024: Tigers (-22) 2023: Marlins (-12), Brewers* (-22), Phillies (-8) 2022: None 2021: Cardinals (-42), Yankees (-3) 2020: N/A (COVID season) 2019: Brewers (-4), Cardinals* (-1) 2018: Rockies (-44) 2017: Twins (-55) 2016: None 2015: Mets* (-12) 2014: Pirates (-9) 2013: Dodgers* (-46) 2012: Orioles (-22), Tigers* (-9), Athletics*, (-4) *Team ended up winning the division It's quite an interesting list. In 11 of the past 13 seasons, there has been at least one team with a negative run differential at the end of June that made the postseason. In some cases, those teams had even more success. The 2015 Mets team, led by Jacob deGrom and Matt Harvey, went all the way to the World Series. In addition, the 2012 Tigers team, led by Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, and Miguel Cabrera, also made it to the World Series. Turning back to 2025, it's possible that the Guardians, Twins, or Royals find their way into the playoffs, but there is a good chance that the Blue Jays may be the only team with a negative run differential coming into July to make the postseason. Making the postseason isn’t the only goal for this Blue Jays team; they’re going to want to win the division, and knowing that the Blue Jays have gone 0-6 in the Wild Card round since 2016, getting a first-round bye would be even more important for this team. So, that should be the goal, and the Jays are certainly making progress. As of this weekend, the Blue Jays overtook the Yankees as the favourites to win the division, according to FanGraphs' playoff odds: Graph updated following games on July 6. Run differential says something about a team, but it doesn't say everything. It doesn't tell you how clutch a team has been. It doesn't tell you that the Blue Jays are 16-10 in one-run games so far, or how they have been so good at moving runners over and getting them in when they need to late in games. All these things are key for helping teams, like the Blue Jays, win more games than expected. This might even be the last time this season we're thinking about this. In July so far, the Blue Jays have a +15 run differential, and if they keep winning ballgames at their current pace, this stat won't matter much anymore – no matter what Michael Kay and other Yankee media members say. View full article
  14. The Toronto Blue Jays are a really good baseball team. There shouldn't be much debate about it either, following two straight series sweeps (including a four-game sweep against the New York Yankees) and four series victories in a row, the Blue Jays sit in first place in the AL East. They became the first team in the division to hit the 50-win mark, and they trail only the Houston Astros and the Detroit Tigers for the best record in the American League. There is a small subset of people out there (looking at you, Michael Kay) who don't believe the Blue Jays are for real, with the main argument being that their run differential has been quite poor throughout the season. Jamie Campbell threw some shade towards Kay and the Yankees after the Blue Jays swept them on Thursday, saying, "a certain Yankee broadcaster" is going to have to "go on his show tomorrow and admit that the Blue Jays are a first-place team because the standings prove it." Now, at the end of the day, run differential doesn't really matter. They don't hand out a trophy at the end of the season for the team that outscored their opponents the most, nor do they award playoff spots that way either. All that matters is whether you score more than your opponent each day, and the Blue Jays have done that more often than not this season. That said, run differential is usually a better predictor than current win-loss record of how a team is going to perform going forward. Blue Jays fans should know this well. Back in 2015, the Blue Jays were a game below .500 at the All-Star break despite their +84 run differential. Two weeks later, they added Troy Tulowitzki, David Price, and others, and they soared to a 48-23 record in the second half and marched right on to the ALCS. Alex Anthopoulos, Toronto's general manager at the time, cited the team's extreme run differential as a reason to push the chips in at the deadline, and it's safe to say it worked out. Now, getting back to the 2025 team, the run differential conversation has felt like throwing a wet blanket on a season that has been incredibly fun so far. With any luck, maybe the Blue Jays continue on their current tear and we soon forget all about this. Still, it's worth taking a look to see what history says about a team's success with such a “poor” run differential halfway through the season. At the end of June, the Blue Jays' run differential was -3. So, with that number in mind, we can take a look at how many clubs have gone on to make the playoffs after finishing June with a negative run differential since the league implemented a 10-team playoff structure in 2012: 2024: Tigers (-22) 2023: Marlins (-12), Brewers* (-22), Phillies (-8) 2022: None 2021: Cardinals (-42), Yankees (-3) 2020: N/A (COVID season) 2019: Brewers (-4), Cardinals* (-1) 2018: Rockies (-44) 2017: Twins (-55) 2016: None 2015: Mets* (-12) 2014: Pirates (-9) 2013: Dodgers* (-46) 2012: Orioles (-22), Tigers* (-9), Athletics*, (-4) *Team ended up winning the division It's quite an interesting list. In 11 of the past 13 seasons, there has been at least one team with a negative run differential at the end of June that made the postseason. In some cases, those teams had even more success. The 2015 Mets team, led by Jacob deGrom and Matt Harvey, went all the way to the World Series. In addition, the 2012 Tigers team, led by Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, and Miguel Cabrera, also made it to the World Series. Turning back to 2025, it's possible that the Guardians, Twins, or Royals find their way into the playoffs, but there is a good chance that the Blue Jays may be the only team with a negative run differential coming into July to make the postseason. Making the postseason isn’t the only goal for this Blue Jays team; they’re going to want to win the division, and knowing that the Blue Jays have gone 0-6 in the Wild Card round since 2016, getting a first-round bye would be even more important for this team. So, that should be the goal, and the Jays are certainly making progress. As of this weekend, the Blue Jays overtook the Yankees as the favourites to win the division, according to FanGraphs' playoff odds: Graph updated following games on July 6. Run differential says something about a team, but it doesn't say everything. It doesn't tell you how clutch a team has been. It doesn't tell you that the Blue Jays are 16-10 in one-run games so far, or how they have been so good at moving runners over and getting them in when they need to late in games. All these things are key for helping teams, like the Blue Jays, win more games than expected. This might even be the last time this season we're thinking about this. In July so far, the Blue Jays have a +15 run differential, and if they keep winning ballgames at their current pace, this stat won't matter much anymore – no matter what Michael Kay and other Yankee media members say.
  15. For what feels like the first time in a long time, the Blue Jays seem to have some really exciting starting pitching prospects coming up through the system. Of the Blue Jays' top 30 prospects (per MLB Pipeline), 15 are pitchers, and several of them saw their stock rise in June. Here are the Blue Jays Minor League Starting Pitchers of the Month for June: Honorable Mentions Brandon Barriera, LHP (FCL) This one isn't about the results on the field; the nod here is simply for Barriera is taking the mound again. Barriera underwent Tommy John surgery shortly after only getting four outs in his only appearance in the system in 2024. He is now 21 years old, and the stats haven’t been there (22.09 ERA through four complex league starts). We can call it a win that the young lefty is back on the mound, and once he gets comfortable, the Blue Jays will hope to see more of the talent that made him a first-round pick in the 2022 draft. Landen Maroudis, RHP (Single-A Dunedin) Maroudis's June started late, as an injury had him on the IL in the early part of the month. But eventually, he returned from a rehab assignment, made his debut for the Dunedin Blue Jays, and looked good. He made two starts and did not allow a run, giving up just one hit over eight innings. That will always play, even though it came with the caveat of four walks (and a hit by pitch) and just six strikeouts. There is no question, though, that Maroudis has some really good stuff and is still just twenty years old. If he can harness that stuff, it's a safe bet that he will be higher on this list at the end of July. Juaron Watts-Brown, RHP (Double-A New Hampshire) I'm not going to lie, Juaron Watts-Brown might be a personal favourite of mine in the minor leagues right now. He's just 23 years old, and FanGraphs gives him a 60-grade slider, one of the best sliders in the Blue Jays system. Since his promotion to Double-A New Hampshire, he’s held his own, pitching to a 3.06 ERA over 35.1 IP. He was especially good in June, putting up a 2.08 ERA during in the month. He’s been logging a ton of innings so far (72.2 IP on the year) as the Blue Jays are gearing him up to be a starter long term. As long as he keeps producing, Watts-Brown will be major league-ready sooner rather than later. 5) Kendry Rojas, LHP (Single-A Dunedin) Rojas's month of June has got to be encouraging: He appeared in five games (four starts) and was impressive the whole way through. In total, he threw 16 innings, allowing just eight hits and only one earned run. It was even more impressive that he got better as the month went on. His most recent appearance was a 5.0 IP, 0 H, 2 BB, and 9 K performance. He’s ranked as Jays Center's #8 prospect, and he certainly did nothing in June to move him lower on the list. 4) Khal Stephen, RHP (High-A Vancouver) If you were impressed by Rojas’s June, then Khal Stephen's numbers should leave you with a similar feeling. In the month, he threw 28.1 innings with a 0.95 ERA and 33 strikeouts to just six walks. He lowered his season ERA from 3.21 to 1.73 during that time, throwing at least five innings in every start and posting strikeout totals of eight, nine, and eleven in his most dominant outings of the month. He’s only made seven starts for the Canadians, but if he keeps up the string of excellent starts, he could be in New Hampshire before long. via Sportsnet TV broadcast 3) Gage Stanifer, RHP (High-A Vancouver) There might not be a more “fun” pitching prospect in the Blue Jays system right now than Stanifer. He began by piggybacking Trey Yesavage in all of his starts, but now Stanifer has his own spotlight – and for good reason. After pitching 26 innings with a 0.69 ERA in Dunedin, he got the call to Vancouver and has continued to excel. His most notable skill has been his ability to rack up strikeouts. Since his call-up, he’s only had one appearance in which he struck out fewer than six batters. The walks may always be a bit of an issue, but when you have the ability to strike out as many as Stanifer can, it has to be noticed. Did we mention he has yet to allow a home run this season, either? 2) Johnny King, LHP (Single-A Dunedin) Speaking of Blue Jays who are striking out everyone, Johnny King says hello. The Jays' third-round pick in 2024 started out in the Florida Complex League, and he proved he was just too good for that level. A 1.13 ERA and a 41.8% K-rate are absurd for anyone, much less an 18-year-old in his first season in professional baseball. The Blue Jays thought the same thing and, earlier this month, gave him a promotion to Dunedin. In his first start at Single A, he faced 13 batters, struck out six of them, walked four and allowed just one hit. King is going to get a long run in Dunedin, but if he keeps up this level of dominance, who knows how high his ceiling could be? 1) Trey Yesavage, RHP (Double-A New Hampshire) Who else was it going to be? Yesavage was our number one last month and has done nothing to fall from the top spot. Since he got the call-up to New Hampshire this month, he’s thrown to a 3.86 ERA, but his FIP of 2.63 is still excellent, and so are the strikeout numbers: 16 over 11.2 IP to be exact. Although walks have been an issue (three in his first start, four in his second), he seemed to have figured it out in his most recent outing, tossing five innings, with just one walk and one hit while striking out eight. He’ll also be the Blue Jays representative in the Futures Game this year, and it's well deserved. Image via New Hampshire Fisher Cats on Instagram View full article
  16. For what feels like the first time in a long time, the Blue Jays seem to have some really exciting starting pitching prospects coming up through the system. Of the Blue Jays' top 30 prospects (per MLB Pipeline), 15 are pitchers, and several of them saw their stock rise in June. Here are the Blue Jays Minor League Starting Pitchers of the Month for June: Honorable Mentions Brandon Barriera, LHP (FCL) This one isn't about the results on the field; the nod here is simply for Barriera is taking the mound again. Barriera underwent Tommy John surgery shortly after only getting four outs in his only appearance in the system in 2024. He is now 21 years old, and the stats haven’t been there (22.09 ERA through four complex league starts). We can call it a win that the young lefty is back on the mound, and once he gets comfortable, the Blue Jays will hope to see more of the talent that made him a first-round pick in the 2022 draft. Landen Maroudis, RHP (Single-A Dunedin) Maroudis's June started late, as an injury had him on the IL in the early part of the month. But eventually, he returned from a rehab assignment, made his debut for the Dunedin Blue Jays, and looked good. He made two starts and did not allow a run, giving up just one hit over eight innings. That will always play, even though it came with the caveat of four walks (and a hit by pitch) and just six strikeouts. There is no question, though, that Maroudis has some really good stuff and is still just twenty years old. If he can harness that stuff, it's a safe bet that he will be higher on this list at the end of July. Juaron Watts-Brown, RHP (Double-A New Hampshire) I'm not going to lie, Juaron Watts-Brown might be a personal favourite of mine in the minor leagues right now. He's just 23 years old, and FanGraphs gives him a 60-grade slider, one of the best sliders in the Blue Jays system. Since his promotion to Double-A New Hampshire, he’s held his own, pitching to a 3.06 ERA over 35.1 IP. He was especially good in June, putting up a 2.08 ERA during in the month. He’s been logging a ton of innings so far (72.2 IP on the year) as the Blue Jays are gearing him up to be a starter long term. As long as he keeps producing, Watts-Brown will be major league-ready sooner rather than later. 5) Kendry Rojas, LHP (Single-A Dunedin) Rojas's month of June has got to be encouraging: He appeared in five games (four starts) and was impressive the whole way through. In total, he threw 16 innings, allowing just eight hits and only one earned run. It was even more impressive that he got better as the month went on. His most recent appearance was a 5.0 IP, 0 H, 2 BB, and 9 K performance. He’s ranked as Jays Center's #8 prospect, and he certainly did nothing in June to move him lower on the list. 4) Khal Stephen, RHP (High-A Vancouver) If you were impressed by Rojas’s June, then Khal Stephen's numbers should leave you with a similar feeling. In the month, he threw 28.1 innings with a 0.95 ERA and 33 strikeouts to just six walks. He lowered his season ERA from 3.21 to 1.73 during that time, throwing at least five innings in every start and posting strikeout totals of eight, nine, and eleven in his most dominant outings of the month. He’s only made seven starts for the Canadians, but if he keeps up the string of excellent starts, he could be in New Hampshire before long. via Sportsnet TV broadcast 3) Gage Stanifer, RHP (High-A Vancouver) There might not be a more “fun” pitching prospect in the Blue Jays system right now than Stanifer. He began by piggybacking Trey Yesavage in all of his starts, but now Stanifer has his own spotlight – and for good reason. After pitching 26 innings with a 0.69 ERA in Dunedin, he got the call to Vancouver and has continued to excel. His most notable skill has been his ability to rack up strikeouts. Since his call-up, he’s only had one appearance in which he struck out fewer than six batters. The walks may always be a bit of an issue, but when you have the ability to strike out as many as Stanifer can, it has to be noticed. Did we mention he has yet to allow a home run this season, either? 2) Johnny King, LHP (Single-A Dunedin) Speaking of Blue Jays who are striking out everyone, Johnny King says hello. The Jays' third-round pick in 2024 started out in the Florida Complex League, and he proved he was just too good for that level. A 1.13 ERA and a 41.8% K-rate are absurd for anyone, much less an 18-year-old in his first season in professional baseball. The Blue Jays thought the same thing and, earlier this month, gave him a promotion to Dunedin. In his first start at Single A, he faced 13 batters, struck out six of them, walked four and allowed just one hit. King is going to get a long run in Dunedin, but if he keeps up this level of dominance, who knows how high his ceiling could be? 1) Trey Yesavage, RHP (Double-A New Hampshire) Who else was it going to be? Yesavage was our number one last month and has done nothing to fall from the top spot. Since he got the call-up to New Hampshire this month, he’s thrown to a 3.86 ERA, but his FIP of 2.63 is still excellent, and so are the strikeout numbers: 16 over 11.2 IP to be exact. Although walks have been an issue (three in his first start, four in his second), he seemed to have figured it out in his most recent outing, tossing five innings, with just one walk and one hit while striking out eight. He’ll also be the Blue Jays representative in the Futures Game this year, and it's well deserved. Image via New Hampshire Fisher Cats on Instagram
  17. If the Rockies would move Seth Halvorson he's the guy. The Jays could absolutely use another bullpen arm or two, but the question is assuming everyone is healthy, who is the odd man out?
  18. I've always thought a good manager cant make your team, but a bad one can ruin it. John Schneider isnt ruining this team.
  19. The 2025 Toronto Blue Jays season has been a wild ride so far. As the Blue Jays approach the midway point of the season later this week, it's worth taking a look at the bigger picture of the season so far. In 2024, the Blue Jays severely disappointed. They ended up being sellers at the trade deadline and finished with 74 wins. It felt like the team had more question marks than answers going into a pivotal 2025 season. Well, here we are getting close to the end of June, and the Blue Jays find themselves sitting in the second Wild Card spot and within striking distance of the New York Yankees for the division crown. It's quite remarkable when you factor in that the key pieces the Blue Jays added this offseason haven't done a lot to help them win. Anthony Santander had just a 65 wRC+ in his 50 games before getting hurt. Andrés Giménez's defence has been good, but he has just a 67 wRC+. Max Scherzer is set to return today, but so far, he’s only pitched three innings for the Jays. Jeff Hoffman has 17 saves, but a 5.29 ERA and -0.2 fWAR is certainly a disappointment, considering he was so good for Philadelphia the last few seasons. In fact, the Blue Jays' best offseason additions have been Eric Lauer and Myles Straw, and that would have surprised a lot of people coming into the season. Now, there are lots of reasons the Blue Jays are playing better. Bo Bichette looks healthy and is producing again, Addison Barger and Ernie Clement have broken out as impact players, George Springer and Alejandro Kirk have taken their offensive games to another level, and the bullpen has gone from being historically bad to ranking in the top half of the league. But some of the credit also needs to go to John Schneider. It's hard to pin down exactly how valuable having a good manager is to a team, but Schneider has done some things this season that should not only lead to the Blue Jays picking up his club option for 2026 but should also make him a candidate for an extension. Here’s why: 1) The clubhouse seems to be more comfortable Part of the role of a manager is being able to control the personalities of the clubhouse, something that not all managers across baseball have been able to do. Yet, all vibes seem to be good right now in the Blue Jays' clubhouse. Sure, part of the reason is because the Blue Jays are winning, but another part of it is that there is more communication and players are happy. Back in April, Sportsnet's David Singh wrote an article about how some of the veterans on the team felt in the clubhouse. You can read the whole thing at this link, but here are a few key quotes: "We are in it, maybe even more than we ever have been. We're all on the same page and we're just communicating better.” - Kevin Gausman "We're playing as a team, completely. Everybody understands where we want to go and what we want to do." - George Springer "For the first time since I've been here, I feel like everyone's really, really comfortable with how everything's working. So it's just a fun feeling coming to the yard." - Chris Bassitt That's a testament to the manager and the rest of the coaching staff; if the players are comfortable and happy to come to work, they will play better. It works in real life too, not just in baseball. 2) He hasn't been afraid to make some changes There were times in the past when it seemed like Schneider was hesitant to make changes. There could be many reasons why that was, but it seems like he’s now being more flexible. In the past, he seemed hesitant to move Springer out of the leadoff spot even when he wasn't performing well, simply because either Springer didn't want to or Schneider didn't want to upset him (or maybe a bit of both). Now, Schneider seems to be more flexible with adjusting his lineup. He’s recently moved Vladimir Guerrero Jr. back to the three hole, where, over the course of his career, he’s hit much better. (.744 career OPS from the two spot compared to a .916 OPS while hitting third). Schneider also moved Addison Barger up to the two hole, getting him more at-bats and also adding a lefty in between Bichette and Guerrero. So far, it seems to be working. 3) The Blue Jays are actually doing small ball well Say what you will about small ball. The best thing a batter can do in any particular plate appearance is hit a home run, but there is something to be said about a hitter doing what he can to get a guy over and bring him in when he needs to. Baseball Reference has a few stats that track situational hitting, and here’s where the Blue Jays rank in some of them. They're fifth in baseball in productive out rate, seventh in percentage of PAs with a runner on third and less than two out in which that runner scores, and second in advancing runners that are on second base with nobody out. For reference, in 2024, they were seventh, eighth, and 19th in those categories (via Baseball Reference). Part of this could just be that the Blue Jays are putting the ball in play more often, and this is a by product of that, but Schneider has gotten the Blue Jays to be productive and play for their team, and its probably related to why this club has 22 comeback wins and is 12-9 in one run games this year. Now, there is a lot more to it than just what I've laid out, and the Blue Jays don't have to make any decisions in a rush. The long-term futures of president Mark Shapiro and general manager Ross Atkins are still up in the air, and the team might be looking for security in those roles before turning attention to the manager. Yet, on merit alone, Schneider has done a lot this year to earn a longer leash with the Blue Jays, which would be another great development for a man who has been in the system since he was drafted in the 13th round in 2002. John Schneider has made mistakes, and he will continue to make mistakes. There will be times when he takes a pitcher out of the game too early, or chooses to use the wrong reliever in the wrong spot, or does not pinch hit for someone when the situation clearly calls for it. Managing a professional baseball team is hard, and no manager will ever be perfect. But he’s gotten better year after year, and the argument can be made that he’s just going to keep improving. If the Blue Jays don't think so, then some other team in baseball will be happy to have John Schneider on their staff, and that would be a loss for this franchise. Stats updated prior to games on June 24. View full article
  20. The 2025 Toronto Blue Jays season has been a wild ride so far. As the Blue Jays approach the midway point of the season later this week, it's worth taking a look at the bigger picture of the season so far. In 2024, the Blue Jays severely disappointed. They ended up being sellers at the trade deadline and finished with 74 wins. It felt like the team had more question marks than answers going into a pivotal 2025 season. Well, here we are getting close to the end of June, and the Blue Jays find themselves sitting in the second Wild Card spot and within striking distance of the New York Yankees for the division crown. It's quite remarkable when you factor in that the key pieces the Blue Jays added this offseason haven't done a lot to help them win. Anthony Santander had just a 65 wRC+ in his 50 games before getting hurt. Andrés Giménez's defence has been good, but he has just a 67 wRC+. Max Scherzer is set to return today, but so far, he’s only pitched three innings for the Jays. Jeff Hoffman has 17 saves, but a 5.29 ERA and -0.2 fWAR is certainly a disappointment, considering he was so good for Philadelphia the last few seasons. In fact, the Blue Jays' best offseason additions have been Eric Lauer and Myles Straw, and that would have surprised a lot of people coming into the season. Now, there are lots of reasons the Blue Jays are playing better. Bo Bichette looks healthy and is producing again, Addison Barger and Ernie Clement have broken out as impact players, George Springer and Alejandro Kirk have taken their offensive games to another level, and the bullpen has gone from being historically bad to ranking in the top half of the league. But some of the credit also needs to go to John Schneider. It's hard to pin down exactly how valuable having a good manager is to a team, but Schneider has done some things this season that should not only lead to the Blue Jays picking up his club option for 2026 but should also make him a candidate for an extension. Here’s why: 1) The clubhouse seems to be more comfortable Part of the role of a manager is being able to control the personalities of the clubhouse, something that not all managers across baseball have been able to do. Yet, all vibes seem to be good right now in the Blue Jays' clubhouse. Sure, part of the reason is because the Blue Jays are winning, but another part of it is that there is more communication and players are happy. Back in April, Sportsnet's David Singh wrote an article about how some of the veterans on the team felt in the clubhouse. You can read the whole thing at this link, but here are a few key quotes: "We are in it, maybe even more than we ever have been. We're all on the same page and we're just communicating better.” - Kevin Gausman "We're playing as a team, completely. Everybody understands where we want to go and what we want to do." - George Springer "For the first time since I've been here, I feel like everyone's really, really comfortable with how everything's working. So it's just a fun feeling coming to the yard." - Chris Bassitt That's a testament to the manager and the rest of the coaching staff; if the players are comfortable and happy to come to work, they will play better. It works in real life too, not just in baseball. 2) He hasn't been afraid to make some changes There were times in the past when it seemed like Schneider was hesitant to make changes. There could be many reasons why that was, but it seems like he’s now being more flexible. In the past, he seemed hesitant to move Springer out of the leadoff spot even when he wasn't performing well, simply because either Springer didn't want to or Schneider didn't want to upset him (or maybe a bit of both). Now, Schneider seems to be more flexible with adjusting his lineup. He’s recently moved Vladimir Guerrero Jr. back to the three hole, where, over the course of his career, he’s hit much better. (.744 career OPS from the two spot compared to a .916 OPS while hitting third). Schneider also moved Addison Barger up to the two hole, getting him more at-bats and also adding a lefty in between Bichette and Guerrero. So far, it seems to be working. 3) The Blue Jays are actually doing small ball well Say what you will about small ball. The best thing a batter can do in any particular plate appearance is hit a home run, but there is something to be said about a hitter doing what he can to get a guy over and bring him in when he needs to. Baseball Reference has a few stats that track situational hitting, and here’s where the Blue Jays rank in some of them. They're fifth in baseball in productive out rate, seventh in percentage of PAs with a runner on third and less than two out in which that runner scores, and second in advancing runners that are on second base with nobody out. For reference, in 2024, they were seventh, eighth, and 19th in those categories (via Baseball Reference). Part of this could just be that the Blue Jays are putting the ball in play more often, and this is a by product of that, but Schneider has gotten the Blue Jays to be productive and play for their team, and its probably related to why this club has 22 comeback wins and is 12-9 in one run games this year. Now, there is a lot more to it than just what I've laid out, and the Blue Jays don't have to make any decisions in a rush. The long-term futures of president Mark Shapiro and general manager Ross Atkins are still up in the air, and the team might be looking for security in those roles before turning attention to the manager. Yet, on merit alone, Schneider has done a lot this year to earn a longer leash with the Blue Jays, which would be another great development for a man who has been in the system since he was drafted in the 13th round in 2002. John Schneider has made mistakes, and he will continue to make mistakes. There will be times when he takes a pitcher out of the game too early, or chooses to use the wrong reliever in the wrong spot, or does not pinch hit for someone when the situation clearly calls for it. Managing a professional baseball team is hard, and no manager will ever be perfect. But he’s gotten better year after year, and the argument can be made that he’s just going to keep improving. If the Blue Jays don't think so, then some other team in baseball will be happy to have John Schneider on their staff, and that would be a loss for this franchise. Stats updated prior to games on June 24.
  21. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 6/16 through Sun, 6/22 *** Record Last Week: 3-3 (Overall: 41-36) Run Differential Last Week: +2 (Overall: -10) Standings: Third Place in AL East (4.0 GB), Fifth in AL (Currently in second Wild Card spot, 1.5 games back of TBR and 1.5 games up on CLE and SEA) Last Week’s Results Game 72: ARI 4 - TOR 5 (walk-off) Bassitt: 6.0 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 5 K Guerrero Jr.: 3-4, HR (9), 3 RBI Bichette: 2-4, HR (9), RBI Barger: 2-5, HR (8), RBI Barger and Bichette with back-to-back HRs in the ninth to win Game 73: ARI 1 - TOR 8 Lauer: 5.0 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 8 K Bichette: 3-5, HR (10), 2 RBI Barger: 3-4, BB, RBI Clement: 3-5, R Game 74: ARI 9 - TOR 5 Gausman: 4.1 IP, 7 H, 7 ER, 3 BB, 4 K Kirk: 3-4, 2 HR (6, 7), 3 RBI Clase: 1-3, HR (2) Robertson: 0-4, 3K Game 75: CWS 7 - TOR 1 Turnbull: 2.0 IP, 5 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 2 K Fischer: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K Clement: 2-4 Bichette: 3-4, RBI Game 76: CWS 1 - TOR 7 Berríos: 7.2 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Bichette: 1-5, HR (11), RBI Guerrero Jr.: 1-4, HR (10) Schneider: 2-3, BB, 3 RBI Game 77: CWS 4 - TOR 2 Bassitt : 6.0 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 7 K Bichette: 2-5 2 RBI Clement: 2-4 Highlights Bo Bichette: Don't look now, but Bichette has been heating up again. Over six games this week, he went deep in three of them, had multi-hit games in four of them, and accumulated 22 total bases. He now leads the Blue Jays with 11 home runs on the season, and his 47 RBI also lead the team. That is an impressive feat, as he’s spent the whole season batting out of the leadoff spot. Overall, in just this past week, he raised his OPS by 42 points and is showing no signs of slowing down. Bichette has been known to get extremely hot in the past, and this week looks like the start of one of those runs. Eric Lauer: Lauer has been officially named one of the five members of the starting rotation, and he took the opportunity and made an impressive first showing with it. In total, he threw five innings, allowed just four hits and struck out eight Diamondbacks on Wednesday. His performance continued a run of surprising success; he now has a 2.29 ERA and 36 strikeouts in his 35.1 innings pitched. This start was Lauer's first appearance of five or more innings this year, which the Blue Jays will likely want to see more of as he gets deeper into his season. As long as he can continue his run of allowing two earned runs or fewer (which has been the case in all but one of his appearances this year), then the Blue Jays might have found a pleasant surprise in Lauer. José Berríos: When Berríos is on his game, there aren’t many pitchers who look as comfortable and composed as he does on the mound. He was certainly on his game on Saturday against the White Sox, throwing into the eighth inning and allowing just two hits and no earned runs. According to Baseball Reference's game score metric, this start matched his six-inning, two-hit, nine-strikeout performance against the Athletics at the end of May. The Blue Jays' rotation has more question marks than was expected coming into the season, but Berríos has been a staple, and he’ll have to continue to be just that going forward. Lowlights Jeff Hoffman: Hoffman has certainly had a very uninspiring season to date. After he was an All-Star last season in Philadelphia, he signed a three-year, $33 million deal with the Blue Jays to be the closer, and he’s certainly had his ups and downs. That trend continued this week, as he allowed two baserunners to reach on Sunday, which ultimately lead to a series loss against the lowly White Sox, Hoffman's other two appearances were fine, (he threw two innings and allowed a walk and a hit batter) but his struggles have been enough of an ongoing trend for the Blue Jays that maybe they will look to consider someone else in the ninth inning. For what it's worth, John Schneider says, “We still trust the s*** out of him,” so that may not be happening any time soon. Andrés Giménez: Giménez really hasn't turned into the offensive threat at the plate that some people were thinking he could be this year. This week, he went 0-for-17 (with four HPB!!!) before getting a single in the fifth inning of Sunday's game. His OPS+ on the season now sits at a minuscule 61, which has fallen below the 82 and 96 he had in his final two years in Cleveland. In fact, out of all qualified hitters this week, Giménez was the only one in the majors that was held without a hit prior to games on Sunday. The defence has still been elite, but it's getting to the point where it's hard to justify having him bat any higher than eighth in the lineup until things start to turn around. Spencer Turnbull: Turnbull also struggled in his first start of the season. The Blue Jays were hoping to tap into the length he is able to offer, but it didn't happen in this start. He threw just two innings and allowed five hits and four runs before being lifted. With Lauer taking a spot in the rotation and Max Scherzer set to return at some point this week, it looks like Turnbull’s next outing will be coming from the bullpen. Random Stats of the Week José Berríos reached career inning number 1,500 this week. Bo Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. have now reached double-digit home runs this season, joining George Springer. Blue Jays hitters had a 25.7% line drive rate this week, which was the best in baseball (coming into the games on Sunday). Andrés Giménez's four HPBs were the most among all major leaguers this week. Will Robertson made his major league debut last Sunday. He’s the 44th different player the Blue Jays have used this season. Alan Roden’s triple yesterday was the Blue Jays' fourth of the season, moving them out of last place in that department. The Jays used four different center fielders in a game earlier this week, which is a franchise record. The Blue Jays' bullpen had an MLB-low 28.3% groundball rate this week. News, Notes, and Not Playing RHP Erik Swanson has been DFA’d. LHP Justin Bruihl was recalled and then sent back to the minors. RHP Nick Sandlin returned from the 15-day IL. OF Nathan Lukes returned from the 7-day IL. 10-Day IL: Anthony Santander, Daulton Varsho Anthony Santander still hasn't started hitting, as he’s recovering from his shoulder injury (via Keegan Matheson). Daulton Varsho should start rehab games at some point this upcoming week (via Matheson). 15-day IL: Yimi García, Bowden Francis Yimi García should get back into his first game action on Monday (via Matheson). Bowden Francis had a cortisone injection and will not be throwing for the next few days (via Matheson). 60-day IL: Max Scherzer, Ryan Burr, Alek Manoah, Max Scherzer finished his rehab assignment and, barring any last-minute setbacks, will take the mound on Wednesday in Cleveland (via Matheson). Ryan Burr has been pitching in Triple-A Buffalo on a rehab assignment, He’s allowed five earned runs over nine innings across three levels. Trending Storylines The Blue Jays finished their homestand with a 3-3 record, which might seem like a disappointment, especially after they took two out of three against the Diamondbacks, only to lose two out of three against the lowly White Sox. Overall, the Blue Jays haven't played that badly; the home run power has started to come around, with Alejandro Kirk, Bo Bichette, and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. all hitting multiple home runs this past week. The main culprit was the starting pitching. As you would expect in a week in which they won three and lost three, the Jays had some good and some bad starts. Lauer, Bassitt, and Berríos all pitched well, while Turnbull and Kevin Gausman struggled in their turns. The bullpen had some shaky moments, from Hoffman and Mason Fluharty in particular, but they also had some good moments. Yariel Rodríguez continued his dominant stretch by not allowing any runs this past week. Braydon Fischer and Chad Green both had good weeks out of the 'pen as well, continuing a trend of some good and some bad from the arm barn. The Blue Jays will look to get back to putting everything together and get back to their winning ways this coming week. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays look to continue their grind through a crowded American League playoff race with series against two teams that are just behind them in the standings. After an off day on Monday, the Blue Jays will head to Cleveland, where they will face the Guardians for the second time this year. Cleveland took two out of three against the Jays in Toronto earlier this season, with Daniel Schneemann's grand slam off Yimi García being the defining moment of that series. The Guardians are 5-5 in their last 10 games, but their offence scored an MLB-low 16 runs this past week, so the Jays pitchers will look to keep their offence ice cold. Eric Lauer, Kevin Gausman and Max Scherzer will get their chance to do so, After Cleveland, the Blue Jays will head to Fenway Park to get their first look at the Red Sox post-Rafael Devers. The Blue Jays have played well against the Red Sox this season, going 5-2 in seven games, including a sweep the last time they played in Fenway. This will be the last time the Jays see the Red Sox until the final week of the season, so these games could play a pivotal role in the playoff race, as getting wins against teams in one's own division are always key. It’ll help, too, that if probable pitchers stay on schedule, the Blue Jays will miss Garrett Crochet. View full article
  22. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 6/16 through Sun, 6/22 *** Record Last Week: 3-3 (Overall: 41-36) Run Differential Last Week: +2 (Overall: -10) Standings: Third Place in AL East (4.0 GB), Fifth in AL (Currently in second Wild Card spot, 1.5 games back of TBR and 1.5 games up on CLE and SEA) Last Week’s Results Game 72: ARI 4 - TOR 5 (walk-off) Bassitt: 6.0 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 5 K Guerrero Jr.: 3-4, HR (9), 3 RBI Bichette: 2-4, HR (9), RBI Barger: 2-5, HR (8), RBI Barger and Bichette with back-to-back HRs in the ninth to win Game 73: ARI 1 - TOR 8 Lauer: 5.0 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 8 K Bichette: 3-5, HR (10), 2 RBI Barger: 3-4, BB, RBI Clement: 3-5, R Game 74: ARI 9 - TOR 5 Gausman: 4.1 IP, 7 H, 7 ER, 3 BB, 4 K Kirk: 3-4, 2 HR (6, 7), 3 RBI Clase: 1-3, HR (2) Robertson: 0-4, 3K Game 75: CWS 7 - TOR 1 Turnbull: 2.0 IP, 5 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 2 K Fischer: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K Clement: 2-4 Bichette: 3-4, RBI Game 76: CWS 1 - TOR 7 Berríos: 7.2 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Bichette: 1-5, HR (11), RBI Guerrero Jr.: 1-4, HR (10) Schneider: 2-3, BB, 3 RBI Game 77: CWS 4 - TOR 2 Bassitt : 6.0 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 7 K Bichette: 2-5 2 RBI Clement: 2-4 Highlights Bo Bichette: Don't look now, but Bichette has been heating up again. Over six games this week, he went deep in three of them, had multi-hit games in four of them, and accumulated 22 total bases. He now leads the Blue Jays with 11 home runs on the season, and his 47 RBI also lead the team. That is an impressive feat, as he’s spent the whole season batting out of the leadoff spot. Overall, in just this past week, he raised his OPS by 42 points and is showing no signs of slowing down. Bichette has been known to get extremely hot in the past, and this week looks like the start of one of those runs. Eric Lauer: Lauer has been officially named one of the five members of the starting rotation, and he took the opportunity and made an impressive first showing with it. In total, he threw five innings, allowed just four hits and struck out eight Diamondbacks on Wednesday. His performance continued a run of surprising success; he now has a 2.29 ERA and 36 strikeouts in his 35.1 innings pitched. This start was Lauer's first appearance of five or more innings this year, which the Blue Jays will likely want to see more of as he gets deeper into his season. As long as he can continue his run of allowing two earned runs or fewer (which has been the case in all but one of his appearances this year), then the Blue Jays might have found a pleasant surprise in Lauer. José Berríos: When Berríos is on his game, there aren’t many pitchers who look as comfortable and composed as he does on the mound. He was certainly on his game on Saturday against the White Sox, throwing into the eighth inning and allowing just two hits and no earned runs. According to Baseball Reference's game score metric, this start matched his six-inning, two-hit, nine-strikeout performance against the Athletics at the end of May. The Blue Jays' rotation has more question marks than was expected coming into the season, but Berríos has been a staple, and he’ll have to continue to be just that going forward. Lowlights Jeff Hoffman: Hoffman has certainly had a very uninspiring season to date. After he was an All-Star last season in Philadelphia, he signed a three-year, $33 million deal with the Blue Jays to be the closer, and he’s certainly had his ups and downs. That trend continued this week, as he allowed two baserunners to reach on Sunday, which ultimately lead to a series loss against the lowly White Sox, Hoffman's other two appearances were fine, (he threw two innings and allowed a walk and a hit batter) but his struggles have been enough of an ongoing trend for the Blue Jays that maybe they will look to consider someone else in the ninth inning. For what it's worth, John Schneider says, “We still trust the s*** out of him,” so that may not be happening any time soon. Andrés Giménez: Giménez really hasn't turned into the offensive threat at the plate that some people were thinking he could be this year. This week, he went 0-for-17 (with four HPB!!!) before getting a single in the fifth inning of Sunday's game. His OPS+ on the season now sits at a minuscule 61, which has fallen below the 82 and 96 he had in his final two years in Cleveland. In fact, out of all qualified hitters this week, Giménez was the only one in the majors that was held without a hit prior to games on Sunday. The defence has still been elite, but it's getting to the point where it's hard to justify having him bat any higher than eighth in the lineup until things start to turn around. Spencer Turnbull: Turnbull also struggled in his first start of the season. The Blue Jays were hoping to tap into the length he is able to offer, but it didn't happen in this start. He threw just two innings and allowed five hits and four runs before being lifted. With Lauer taking a spot in the rotation and Max Scherzer set to return at some point this week, it looks like Turnbull’s next outing will be coming from the bullpen. Random Stats of the Week José Berríos reached career inning number 1,500 this week. Bo Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. have now reached double-digit home runs this season, joining George Springer. Blue Jays hitters had a 25.7% line drive rate this week, which was the best in baseball (coming into the games on Sunday). Andrés Giménez's four HPBs were the most among all major leaguers this week. Will Robertson made his major league debut last Sunday. He’s the 44th different player the Blue Jays have used this season. Alan Roden’s triple yesterday was the Blue Jays' fourth of the season, moving them out of last place in that department. The Jays used four different center fielders in a game earlier this week, which is a franchise record. The Blue Jays' bullpen had an MLB-low 28.3% groundball rate this week. News, Notes, and Not Playing RHP Erik Swanson has been DFA’d. LHP Justin Bruihl was recalled and then sent back to the minors. RHP Nick Sandlin returned from the 15-day IL. OF Nathan Lukes returned from the 7-day IL. 10-Day IL: Anthony Santander, Daulton Varsho Anthony Santander still hasn't started hitting, as he’s recovering from his shoulder injury (via Keegan Matheson). Daulton Varsho should start rehab games at some point this upcoming week (via Matheson). 15-day IL: Yimi García, Bowden Francis Yimi García should get back into his first game action on Monday (via Matheson). Bowden Francis had a cortisone injection and will not be throwing for the next few days (via Matheson). 60-day IL: Max Scherzer, Ryan Burr, Alek Manoah, Max Scherzer finished his rehab assignment and, barring any last-minute setbacks, will take the mound on Wednesday in Cleveland (via Matheson). Ryan Burr has been pitching in Triple-A Buffalo on a rehab assignment, He’s allowed five earned runs over nine innings across three levels. Trending Storylines The Blue Jays finished their homestand with a 3-3 record, which might seem like a disappointment, especially after they took two out of three against the Diamondbacks, only to lose two out of three against the lowly White Sox. Overall, the Blue Jays haven't played that badly; the home run power has started to come around, with Alejandro Kirk, Bo Bichette, and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. all hitting multiple home runs this past week. The main culprit was the starting pitching. As you would expect in a week in which they won three and lost three, the Jays had some good and some bad starts. Lauer, Bassitt, and Berríos all pitched well, while Turnbull and Kevin Gausman struggled in their turns. The bullpen had some shaky moments, from Hoffman and Mason Fluharty in particular, but they also had some good moments. Yariel Rodríguez continued his dominant stretch by not allowing any runs this past week. Braydon Fischer and Chad Green both had good weeks out of the 'pen as well, continuing a trend of some good and some bad from the arm barn. The Blue Jays will look to get back to putting everything together and get back to their winning ways this coming week. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays look to continue their grind through a crowded American League playoff race with series against two teams that are just behind them in the standings. After an off day on Monday, the Blue Jays will head to Cleveland, where they will face the Guardians for the second time this year. Cleveland took two out of three against the Jays in Toronto earlier this season, with Daniel Schneemann's grand slam off Yimi García being the defining moment of that series. The Guardians are 5-5 in their last 10 games, but their offence scored an MLB-low 16 runs this past week, so the Jays pitchers will look to keep their offence ice cold. Eric Lauer, Kevin Gausman and Max Scherzer will get their chance to do so, After Cleveland, the Blue Jays will head to Fenway Park to get their first look at the Red Sox post-Rafael Devers. The Blue Jays have played well against the Red Sox this season, going 5-2 in seven games, including a sweep the last time they played in Fenway. This will be the last time the Jays see the Red Sox until the final week of the season, so these games could play a pivotal role in the playoff race, as getting wins against teams in one's own division are always key. It’ll help, too, that if probable pitchers stay on schedule, the Blue Jays will miss Garrett Crochet.
  23. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 6/2 through Sun, 6/8 *** Record Last Week: 4-2 (Overall: 35-30) Run Differential Last Week: +4 (Overall: -1) Standings: Third Place in AL East (4.5 GB), Sixth in AL (Currently in a three-way tie for all three WC spots. 0.5 games up on CLE.) Last Week’s Results Game 60: PHI 8 - TOR 3 Francis: 1.2 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 2 BB, 2 K Lauer: 4.0 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K Barger: 2-4, HR (6), 2 RBI Schneider: 2-3, HR (1), RBI Game 61: PHI 1 - TOR 2 Berríos: 6.0 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 5 K Giménez: 2-3, R Guerrero Jr.: 1-4, SB Kirk: 1-4, RBI, walk-off hit against former Blue Jay Jordan Romano Game 62: PHI 1 - TOR 9 Bassitt: 7.0 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 6 K Bichette: 2-4, HR (8), 2 RBI Kirk: 3-4, RBI Heineman: 2-4, 3 RBI Straw: 2-4, 3 RBI Game 63: TOR 6 - MIN 4 Lauer: 2.1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K (Schultz started: 2.0 IP, 4 H, 3 ER) Barger: 1-4 HR (7), 2 RBI Springer: 1-4 HR (9), RBI Bichette: 1-4, 2 RBI Hoffman: 1.0 IP, 1 BB, 3 K, SV (14) Game 64: TOR 5 - MIN 4 Gausman: 6.0 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Springer: 1-4, HR (10), 2 RBI Heineman: 3-4, HR (2), 2 R Game 65: TOR 3 - MIN 6 Francis: 3.1 IP, 5 H, 4 ER, 5 BB (career high), 2 K Roden: 1-3, 2B, RBI Springer 1-4, 3 K Highlights Tyler Heineman has been making his mark on every game he has played this season. This week, he only appeared in two games and got eight plate appearances, but he made the most of them. He went 5-for-8 with a double, a home run, and four RBI. He accumulated 0.4 fWAR in just those two games, which was in the top 30 for most fWAR gained by all MLB players this week (coming into games on Sunday). Not bad for just a two-game sample. The Blue Jays aren’t losing much when Heineman sees playing time, which could allow John Schneider to give Alejandro Kirk a few more breaks from behind the plate. Addison Barger continued his hot stretch that began at the end of last week, when he hit a home run in three straight games against the Athletics. He hit one against the Phillies on Tuesday and proceeded to hit another in the series opener against the Twins. On the week, it was a 5-for-18 total with three more extra base hits, as he has continued to provide the Blue Jays with some much-needed left-handed power. Schneider seems to believe in him as well, regularly batting him third in the order and finding a way to get him playing time in right field to keep the bat in the lineup with Andrés Giménez back from injury. Chris Bassitt took the mound again and put together another impressive start. Allowing just one earned run, he completed seven innings for the first time this season. Via Baseball Reference's game score statistic, it was his fourth-best start of the season and his second-best since April 16 against Atlanta. Bassitt was coming off back-to-back outings with five earned runs allowed, so getting that back down to just one was key. Most importantly, the Blue Jays have now won six of the last seven games that Bassitt has started. Lowlights Bowden Francis has really struggled to build on the success that he had in the second half of 2024. In his two starts this past week, he allowed 10 earned runs and four more home runs, which brought him to an MLB-worst 19 long balls allowed. On the season, it's a 50.3% hard-hit rate against him and a 12.2% barrel rate, both of which are in the bottom five in baseball. Post game, Francis took responsibility, saying, “I can't keep digging a hole. I've got to find a way to get out of it, turn the page, so I can post for the guys that are playing hard. I'm just not doing that right now. I've got to keep grinding it out” (per Sportsnet's Shi Davidi). As of now, no move has been made to replace Francis in the rotation. However, he has an option remaining, and it may be getting close to the time to let someone else take his spot. Jonatan Clase had been showing some encouraging signs lately, but this past week was not a good one for him. The stat line on the whole was 0-for-14 with one walk and five strikeouts. The Blue Jays have a crowded outfield situation already, with Nathan Lukes, Myles Straw, George Springer, Barger, Alan Roden, and Davis Schneider all able to play the outfield, and when either Anthony Santander or Daulton Varsho returns, it seems likely that Clase will be the odd man out and sent back to Buffalo. Random Stats of the Week Chris Bassitt recorded career strikeout number 1,100 in his start. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had his 35-game on-base streak come to an end on Wednesday. It was the longest streak a Blue Jay has had this season. Eric Lauer faced 22 batters this week and allowed only one hit. George Springer became the first Blue Jay to reach double-digit home runs this season. The Blue Jays now have 19 come-from-behind wins this season, which is the most in the American League. Blue Jays hitters struck out at a 15.2% rate this week, which was the best in baseball. Per FanGraphs' Clutch metric, Blue Jays' hitters were the most clutch in baseball this week. Their 1.412 OPS in high-leverage plate appearances also led the league. News, Notes and Not Playing Spencer Turnbull has been recalled, RP Paxton Schultz has been sent to Triple-A. INF Michael Stefanic has cleared waivers and remains in the Blue Jays organization. C Ali Sánchez has re-signed with the Blue Jays and reported to Buffalo. RHP José Ureña has elected free agency. 10-Day IL: Anthony Santander, Daulton Varsho Anthony Santander had a PRP injection in his shoulder. He should start throwing and ramping up in another day or two (via The Athletic's Mitch Bannon). Daulton Varsho is hitting in the batting cages and playing catch but is not running yet (via Sportsnet's Arden Zwelling). 15-day IL: Yimi García, Nick Sandlin, Will Wagner Yimi García has resumed plating catch after receiving a cortisone shot (via Zwelling). Nick Sandlin pitched 1.1 IP in the Florida Complex League, throwing 23 pitches (via Zwelling). Will Wagner has begun rehabbing in the FCL as well (via Sportsnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith). 60-day IL: Max Scherzer, Ryan Burr, Alek Manoah, Adam Macko, Brandon Barriera Adam Macko has finished his rehab assignment and reported to Triple-A Buffalo. He threw four hitless innings in his first start (via Bannon). Max Scherzer threw 50 pitches in a simulated game. His next step is a side session (via Zwelling). Alek Manoah is expected to face live hitters on Tuesday (via Bannon). Ryan Burr has resumed playing catch (via Zwelling). Brandon Barriera (minor league IL) is joining the FCL for a rehab assignment (Via Bannon). Trending Storyline The Blue Jays' offence really looks like it's coming around again, especially in terms of power. On the season, the Blue Jays are now 18th in home runs after ranking in the bottom five of baseball during the early part of the year. The Jays have also shown their resilience in coming from behind to win ballgames. As previously mentioned, their 19 come-from-behind wins trail only the Dodgers for the most in baseball, backed by a bullpen that has a 3.27 ERA on the season, a mark that is fifth in MLB. Speaking of the bullpen, there have been some dominant performances as of late. Jeff Hoffman picked up two more saves this week (although he did give up a home run to the Twins), Yariel Rodríguez faced five more batters without allowing a hit, and none of Rodríguez, Chad Green, Lauer or Braydon Fisher allowed a run this week. It's quite the turnaround from a bullpen that was so dreadful in 2024. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays have now won four straight series and are 8-2 in their last ten games. They’re right in the hunt in the AL East, and every game is going to matter as the AL Wild Card race is incredibly tight. The Blue Jays will spend the next week on the road, as they have two interleague matchups on tap. They will begin the week with three games in St. Louis, a place they haven't been since the opening series of 2023. The Cardinals have been playing well, as they’re seven games above .500 and just one game out of a playoff spot, so that series will be tough. Following an off day, the Blue Jays will travel to Philadelphia, where the Phillies will look to get revenge on the Blue Jays after the Jays took two out of three against them at home. The probable pitchers could change, but if the schedule lines up as it does right now, the Blue Jays might miss Zack Wheeler again, which would be a significant break.
  24. Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 6/2 through Sun, 6/8 *** Record Last Week: 4-2 (Overall: 35-30) Run Differential Last Week: +4 (Overall: -1) Standings: Third Place in AL East (4.5 GB), Sixth in AL (Currently in a three-way tie for all three WC spots. 0.5 games up on CLE.) Last Week’s Results Game 60: PHI 8 - TOR 3 Francis: 1.2 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 2 BB, 2 K Lauer: 4.0 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K Barger: 2-4, HR (6), 2 RBI Schneider: 2-3, HR (1), RBI Game 61: PHI 1 - TOR 2 Berríos: 6.0 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 5 K Giménez: 2-3, R Guerrero Jr.: 1-4, SB Kirk: 1-4, RBI, walk-off hit against former Blue Jay Jordan Romano Game 62: PHI 1 - TOR 9 Bassitt: 7.0 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 6 K Bichette: 2-4, HR (8), 2 RBI Kirk: 3-4, RBI Heineman: 2-4, 3 RBI Straw: 2-4, 3 RBI Game 63: TOR 6 - MIN 4 Lauer: 2.1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K (Schultz started: 2.0 IP, 4 H, 3 ER) Barger: 1-4 HR (7), 2 RBI Springer: 1-4 HR (9), RBI Bichette: 1-4, 2 RBI Hoffman: 1.0 IP, 1 BB, 3 K, SV (14) Game 64: TOR 5 - MIN 4 Gausman: 6.0 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 5 K Springer: 1-4, HR (10), 2 RBI Heineman: 3-4, HR (2), 2 R Game 65: TOR 3 - MIN 6 Francis: 3.1 IP, 5 H, 4 ER, 5 BB (career high), 2 K Roden: 1-3, 2B, RBI Springer 1-4, 3 K Highlights Tyler Heineman has been making his mark on every game he has played this season. This week, he only appeared in two games and got eight plate appearances, but he made the most of them. He went 5-for-8 with a double, a home run, and four RBI. He accumulated 0.4 fWAR in just those two games, which was in the top 30 for most fWAR gained by all MLB players this week (coming into games on Sunday). Not bad for just a two-game sample. The Blue Jays aren’t losing much when Heineman sees playing time, which could allow John Schneider to give Alejandro Kirk a few more breaks from behind the plate. Addison Barger continued his hot stretch that began at the end of last week, when he hit a home run in three straight games against the Athletics. He hit one against the Phillies on Tuesday and proceeded to hit another in the series opener against the Twins. On the week, it was a 5-for-18 total with three more extra base hits, as he has continued to provide the Blue Jays with some much-needed left-handed power. Schneider seems to believe in him as well, regularly batting him third in the order and finding a way to get him playing time in right field to keep the bat in the lineup with Andrés Giménez back from injury. Chris Bassitt took the mound again and put together another impressive start. Allowing just one earned run, he completed seven innings for the first time this season. Via Baseball Reference's game score statistic, it was his fourth-best start of the season and his second-best since April 16 against Atlanta. Bassitt was coming off back-to-back outings with five earned runs allowed, so getting that back down to just one was key. Most importantly, the Blue Jays have now won six of the last seven games that Bassitt has started. Lowlights Bowden Francis has really struggled to build on the success that he had in the second half of 2024. In his two starts this past week, he allowed 10 earned runs and four more home runs, which brought him to an MLB-worst 19 long balls allowed. On the season, it's a 50.3% hard-hit rate against him and a 12.2% barrel rate, both of which are in the bottom five in baseball. Post game, Francis took responsibility, saying, “I can't keep digging a hole. I've got to find a way to get out of it, turn the page, so I can post for the guys that are playing hard. I'm just not doing that right now. I've got to keep grinding it out” (per Sportsnet's Shi Davidi). As of now, no move has been made to replace Francis in the rotation. However, he has an option remaining, and it may be getting close to the time to let someone else take his spot. Jonatan Clase had been showing some encouraging signs lately, but this past week was not a good one for him. The stat line on the whole was 0-for-14 with one walk and five strikeouts. The Blue Jays have a crowded outfield situation already, with Nathan Lukes, Myles Straw, George Springer, Barger, Alan Roden, and Davis Schneider all able to play the outfield, and when either Anthony Santander or Daulton Varsho returns, it seems likely that Clase will be the odd man out and sent back to Buffalo. Random Stats of the Week Chris Bassitt recorded career strikeout number 1,100 in his start. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had his 35-game on-base streak come to an end on Wednesday. It was the longest streak a Blue Jay has had this season. Eric Lauer faced 22 batters this week and allowed only one hit. George Springer became the first Blue Jay to reach double-digit home runs this season. The Blue Jays now have 19 come-from-behind wins this season, which is the most in the American League. Blue Jays hitters struck out at a 15.2% rate this week, which was the best in baseball. Per FanGraphs' Clutch metric, Blue Jays' hitters were the most clutch in baseball this week. Their 1.412 OPS in high-leverage plate appearances also led the league. News, Notes and Not Playing Spencer Turnbull has been recalled, RP Paxton Schultz has been sent to Triple-A. INF Michael Stefanic has cleared waivers and remains in the Blue Jays organization. C Ali Sánchez has re-signed with the Blue Jays and reported to Buffalo. RHP José Ureña has elected free agency. 10-Day IL: Anthony Santander, Daulton Varsho Anthony Santander had a PRP injection in his shoulder. He should start throwing and ramping up in another day or two (via The Athletic's Mitch Bannon). Daulton Varsho is hitting in the batting cages and playing catch but is not running yet (via Sportsnet's Arden Zwelling). 15-day IL: Yimi García, Nick Sandlin, Will Wagner Yimi García has resumed plating catch after receiving a cortisone shot (via Zwelling). Nick Sandlin pitched 1.1 IP in the Florida Complex League, throwing 23 pitches (via Zwelling). Will Wagner has begun rehabbing in the FCL as well (via Sportsnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith). 60-day IL: Max Scherzer, Ryan Burr, Alek Manoah, Adam Macko, Brandon Barriera Adam Macko has finished his rehab assignment and reported to Triple-A Buffalo. He threw four hitless innings in his first start (via Bannon). Max Scherzer threw 50 pitches in a simulated game. His next step is a side session (via Zwelling). Alek Manoah is expected to face live hitters on Tuesday (via Bannon). Ryan Burr has resumed playing catch (via Zwelling). Brandon Barriera (minor league IL) is joining the FCL for a rehab assignment (Via Bannon). Trending Storyline The Blue Jays' offence really looks like it's coming around again, especially in terms of power. On the season, the Blue Jays are now 18th in home runs after ranking in the bottom five of baseball during the early part of the year. The Jays have also shown their resilience in coming from behind to win ballgames. As previously mentioned, their 19 come-from-behind wins trail only the Dodgers for the most in baseball, backed by a bullpen that has a 3.27 ERA on the season, a mark that is fifth in MLB. Speaking of the bullpen, there have been some dominant performances as of late. Jeff Hoffman picked up two more saves this week (although he did give up a home run to the Twins), Yariel Rodríguez faced five more batters without allowing a hit, and none of Rodríguez, Chad Green, Lauer or Braydon Fisher allowed a run this week. It's quite the turnaround from a bullpen that was so dreadful in 2024. Looking Ahead The Blue Jays have now won four straight series and are 8-2 in their last ten games. They’re right in the hunt in the AL East, and every game is going to matter as the AL Wild Card race is incredibly tight. The Blue Jays will spend the next week on the road, as they have two interleague matchups on tap. They will begin the week with three games in St. Louis, a place they haven't been since the opening series of 2023. The Cardinals have been playing well, as they’re seven games above .500 and just one game out of a playoff spot, so that series will be tough. Following an off day, the Blue Jays will travel to Philadelphia, where the Phillies will look to get revenge on the Blue Jays after the Jays took two out of three against them at home. The probable pitchers could change, but if the schedule lines up as it does right now, the Blue Jays might miss Zack Wheeler again, which would be a significant break. View full article
  25. We’re officially now into June, and the Toronto Blue Jays baseball season is in full swing. The Blue Jays have had their share of surprises, both positive and negative, and in turn have them slightly over the .500 mark as we head into the summer months. The Blue Jays' minor league system is no exception, and for the first time in what feels like a long time, the Blue Jays are having some notable, and dare I say, exciting (!!!) position player prospects coming through the pipeline. Let's take a look at some of these players and crown one of them as Blue Jays hitting prospect of the month for May: Honorable Mentions: - Manuel Beltre: A, Dunedin Blue Jays - .269/.356/.368 .724 OPS, 2 HR, 21 BB, 28 K, 13 SB - Alan Roden: AAA. Buffalo Bisons - .361/.446/.583 1.029 OPS, 3 HR, 9 BB, 7 K, 3 SB (Currently back with Toronto) - Edward Duran: A, Dunedin Blue Jays - .301/.399/.486 .885 OPS, 4 HR, 20 BB, 38 K Top 5 Minor League Hitters for May 5. OF David Beckles CPX, DSL Blue Jays - .338/.483/.529 1.012 OPS, 2 HR, 19 BB, 21 K Beckles, just 21 years old, was originally an undrafted free agent by the New York Yankees. After two seasons, he was released and signed a minor league contract with the Blue Jays. After a cup of coffee in the system in 2024, he’s started 2025 with a bang. His 1.012 OPS leads all qualified Blue Jays minor leaguers out of all qualified hitters, and even though he’s not going to appear on anyone's top prospect list (at least as of now), Anyone who posts an OPS that high deserves a shoutout here. Additionally, he was named Florida Complex League Player of the Week on May 12th, which is worth celebrating. 4. Will Robertson: AAA, Buffalo Bisons: .278/.397/.500, .897 OPS, 7 HR, 24 BB, 36 K Now 27 years old, Will Robertson is quickly proving he doesn't have that much more to prove in the minor leagues, coming off back-to-back 19-homer seasons in 2023 with New Hampshire and in 2024 with Buffalo. He’s continued right where he left off, with an increase in walk rate between 2025 and 2024 (15.9%-10.8%) and a decrease in strikeout rate (23.8%-31.3%). Combine that with a rise in average exit velocity (93.1 mph, up from 90.5 mph). He’s doing everything you want to see a prospect do. Even though the Blue Jays outfield picture is quite crowded right now, don't be surprised if Robertson makes his way into the picture by season's end, and by the way, he ended the month of May with four home runs in four straight games: 3. Yohendrick Pinango: AA, New Hampshire Fisher Cats: .294/.403/.513, .916 OPS, 8 HR, 27 BB, 42 K Pinango came in at number three in our Prospects for March/April and has done nothing to remove himself from that list. Daniel Labude noted that a lot of the success was due to his improvement in plate discipline. Not only has that maintained, its actually jumped to a 14.1 walk rate, which has him on base at over 40% of the time. Combine that with five of his eight home runs coming in May and he’s chipped in with four stolen bases too, he’s continuing to look like one of the best hitters in Double A. Not a bad return for Nate Pearson at last year's deadline if he can continue this hot stretch. 2. RJ Schreck: AA, New Hampshire Fisher Cats: .277/.390/.546, .936 OPS 9 HR, 20 BB, 38 K If Pinango isn't one of the best hitters in Double A right now, it's probably because his teammate, RJ Schreck, is standing in his way. Acquired at the trade deadline in 2024 in part of the Justin Turner trade, Schreck has been on fire over the past month. Over the last 30 days, Schreck's nine home runs are the third highest in all of minor leagues, with only the Astros, Shay Whitcomb (who has now been called up), and the Rockies' Ryan Ritter having hit more. On top of that, his 31 hits led all Blue Jays minor leaguers over that time. The strikeouts may become an issue in the long run, but the power is real here, and that's been evident over the last month. 1. Arjun Nimmala: A+, Vancouver Canadians .288/.369/.531 .901 OPS, 9 HR, 21 BB, 36 K Get ready to buy the hype. Nimmala started the year in High-A Vancouver and has done nothing but hit. A first-round pick by the Blue Jays in 2023, he has taken the minor leagues by storm; his 24 extra-base hits are tied for first in the Northwest League. In May, he has an .898 OPS and has even chipped in four steals, all while playing shortstop at a professional level. The prospects lists are starting to take notice: Baseball America has updated its top 100 list, placing Nimmala at No. 57, while MLB Pipeline has him at 59. Kiley McDaniel of ESPN has Nimmala up to 29th on his list. It seems like the sky is the limit, and it won't be a surprise if he ends up first on this list for June and other months as well. Did we mention that he’s just nineteen years old?
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