After finishing last in the American League East in 2024, the Toronto Blue Jays are projected to make a massive improvement ...
Misses in the 2022 draft and injuries have hurt the overall depth of the Jays' system, though they have some near-ready MLB ...
Former Toronto Blue Jays reliever Brandon League has taken a job in the minor leagues for 2025. He'll serve as one of the pitching coaches of the Columbus Clippers, which is the Triple-A affiliate ...
Former Texas Rangers alum Max Scherzer ended his free agency stint with the Toronto Blue Jays. The 40-year-old talented pitcher agreed on a $15.5 million deal with the Blue Jays recently.
Have you ever wanted to take a tour of the Rogers Centre without one of those pesky baseball games getting in the way? Well, now you can! All jokes aside, the team will be offering tours of the ...
The Toronto Blue Jays have made some nice moves this offseason, but their work shouldn't be finished just yet. With the additions of Anthony Santander in the outfield, Max Scherzer in the rotation, ...
He very swiftly turned down their latest deal, but this opens the door for the Toronto Blue Jays to swoop in and snatch him. This offer would have paid Alonso $23.3 million per year, and it shows ...
It took a while, but the Blue Jays finally found ... Ohtani on a private plane headed to Toronto to make a deal. He had actually picked the Dodgers. The Jays went on to finish 74-88, 20 games ...
In what should come as no surprise, Blue Jays Nation’s top Canadian baseball prospect for the 2025 season is Chicago Cubs’ outfield prospect Owen Caissie. Placing 54th on MLB Pipeline’s ...
Future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer will spend his 18th MLB season in Toronto. Scherzer and the Blue Jays have reportedly agreed on a one-year, $15.5 million deal, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan.
Future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer will spend his 18th MLB season in Toronto. Scherzer and the Blue Jays have reportedly agreed on a one-year, $15.5 million deal, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan.
There’s still work to be done, but the Toronto Blue Jays have begun fixing what started out as a nightmare of an offseason. Ross Atkins and his management staff were public-enemy number one in Toronto ...
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