The Toronto Blue Jays have significantly strengthened their starting rotation during the offseason, positioning it as one of the best in baseball for 2026. Key additions like Dylan Cease and Cody Ponce replace underperforming pitchers from 2025, while depth options provide resilience against injuries. The status of José Berríos remains a pivotal question as spring training approaches.
The Toronto Blue Jays entered the offseason under pressure to build a legitimate World Series contender. While their offense lost Kyle Tucker to the Dodgers and Bo Bichette to the Mets, the team focused on upgrading their pitching staff. The rotation, previously solid but hampered by injuries and inconsistencies in 2025, now boasts greater depth and potential.
Dylan Cease arrives on a seven-year, $210 million contract to anchor the group, replacing Chris Bassitt, who posted a 3.96 ERA over 170 1/3 innings last season. The Blue Jays see Cease stepping into the ace role previously held by Kevin Gausman through 2025 and the postseason, with expectations of deep outings and high strikeouts. Departures include Max Scherzer, who had a 5.19 ERA in 17 regular-season starts despite strong playoff showings, and Bowden Francis, who struggled with a 6.05 ERA over 14 starts. Innings from spot starters Spencer Turnbull, José Ureña, and Easton Lucas, who made five starts, will be filled by promising talents.
Trey Yesavage, who rose from Single-A to a World Series standout in seven months, joins Shane Bieber—five months post-Tommy John surgery and in a contract year—and Cody Ponce, signed for three years and $30 million after reinventing himself in Korea. Ponce represents the team's boldest offseason gamble on upside potential. Even accounting for health risks over 162 games, the rotation offers a net positive, potentially carrying the team to the playoffs if Gausman maintains form and Bieber stays healthy.
Depth is improved with Eric Lauer, a 2025 success with a 3.18 ERA over 104 2/3 innings and 15 starts, eyeing a swingman role. Francis returns healthy for Triple-A Buffalo, prospect Gage Stanifer could arrive by midsummer, and Ricky Tiedemann rebounds from Tommy John surgery for shorter stints. The Blue Jays may need six to ten starters, and they are better equipped than last year.
José Berríos' future is the biggest variable. After right elbow inflammation sidelined him, leading to his first postseason roster exclusion in a 10-year career, he was “not happy” with the outcome. He will ramp up in camp, with decisions deferred until late March if six healthy starters emerge. The team prefers to assess his arm in spring training before considering trades, avoiding prospect costs for salary relief.