One Toronto Blue Jays writer recently predicted the Blue Jays would acquire Miami Marlins starting pitcher Andrew Nardi in a shocking trade.
The Toronto Blue Jays have had as poor of luck as any organization in free agency in recent offseasons after narrowly falling short on numerous big-time names the last two winters.
The Toronto Blue Jays have made some moves this offseason, but one move in particular could come back to bite them.
Entering his age-40 season, Scherzer was never going to get more than a year, and his $15.5 million salary is right in line with Justin Verlander, Alex Cobb, Charlie Morton and other veteran arms who've signed this winter. But does that mean that the future Hall of Famer was the right fit for this Toronto team?
MLB Network's Jon Heyman reported Thursday that the Blue Jays are signing right-handed pitcher Max Scherzer to a one-year deal worth $15.5 million. At 40 years old, Scherzer was one of the top remaining starting pitchers available in free agency.
The Toronto Blue Jays offseason took a step in the right direction when they signed Anthony Santander to a multiyear deal. Despite evidence to the contrary, Jay
A new report reveals the New York Mets are in competition with the Toronto Blue Jays for not one but two big names still in free agency.
Max Scherzer is heading north. The legendary right-hander has agreed to a one-year, $15.5 million contract with the Blue Jays for 2025, a source told MLB.com's Mark Feinsand on Thursday. The team has not confirmed the deal.
The deal with Toronto for Scherzer, 40, is reportedly pending a physical. The three-time Cy Young winner was limited by injuries to just 43⅓ inning with the Rangers in 2024.
As MLB free agency continues to progress, Pete Alonso is slowly being left alone as the most important figure who is still free. However, as time goes by, the situation is becoming
The only move that left the industry scratching its heads, however, was the December deal that sent catcher Jose Trevino to the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for right-handed reliever Fernando Cruz and catcher Alex Jackson. ESPN MLB writer Jorge Castillo explained this on a recent episode of the “Baseball Tonight” podcast.