In 2025, the Toronto Blue Jays “captivated a nation,” writes Ian Wilson, of Alberta Dugout Stories.
“Toronto may have been the epicentre for the outpouring of support but the bandwagon was filling up fast across the country.”
Read MoreIn 2025, the Toronto Blue Jays “captivated a nation,” writes Ian Wilson, of Alberta Dugout Stories.
“Toronto may have been the epicentre for the outpouring of support but the bandwagon was filling up fast across the country.”
Read MoreA Blue Jays fans since middle school, Adeel Ahmad vowed he would be at Rogers Centre if his team ever made the World Series again. So, he flew from Korea to Toronto and back to Korea for Game 1.
Read MoreJosh Matlow has signed a two-year contract extension to remain as the Barrie Baycats’ president, general Manager and bench boss through the 2027 season.
Read MoreOntario Blue Jays president Corey Eckstein has announced he is leaving the organization after six years to return to Abbotsford, B.C., with his family.
Read MoreThe Canadian Baseball Network has released its trio of All-Canadian Teams and Western Canadian Baseball League players figure prominently in the honours.
Read MoreMore exciting expansion is underway at Seaman Stadium, home of the Western Canadian Baseball League’s Okotoks Dawgs.
Read MoreThe University of British Columbia will have a team in the Canadian College Baseball Conference in 2026.
Read MoreTyler O’Neill isn’t going anywhere. The right-handed hitting slugger, who hails from Maple Ridge, B.C., has opted to stay with the Baltimore Orioles for the next two years. The three-year contract O’Neill signed with the Orioles last winter included a clause that allowed him to opt out of the remaining two years following the 2025 campaign, leaving over $33 million on the table if he decided to test the free agent market. Instead, he will remain in Baltimore, where he will earn $16.5 million in each of the next two seasons.
Read MoreBaseball Canada has announced the roster that will participate in the upcoming WBSC Copa América, which is a 2027 Pan Am Games qualifier. Canada is set to play in Group B from November 13–17 in La Chorrera, Panama.
Read MorePhiladelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson (Corunna, Ont.) has been named a National League Manager of the Year finalist.
Read MoreBaseball Canada has announced that registration is now open for The Road to Okotoks, a one-of-a-kind national championship that will showcase the best 19 and under baseball talent in the country.
Read MoreABC and Houston Cougars alum Antoine Jean (Montreal, Que.) has been named the 2025 Canadian Baseball Network College Player of the Year
Read MoreToronto Blue Jays legend Carlos Delgado is one of the eight players on the National Baseball Hall of Fame’s Contemporary Era ballot that was released on Monday. The Contemporary Baseball Era Committee will meet on Dec. 7 at baseball’s Winter Meetings in Orlando, Fla., to vote on the ballot.
Read MoreOn this date 54 years ago, Fergie Jenkins (Chatham, Ont.) became the first Canadian to win the National League Cy Young Award.
Read MoreToronto Blue Jays first baseman Ty France was the only Toronto Blue Jays player to receive a 2025 Gold Glove Award.
Read MoreCanadian Baseball Network contributor Rob Seguin pays tribute to the 2025 Toronto Blue Jays, a team he fell in love with.
Read MoreBroadcasting legend Jerry Howarth thanks the Toronto Blue Jays for an amazing 2025 season.
Read More“On many Nov. 1sts to come, our contemporaries and descendants will be trading tales about this Game 7 in Toronto, a night of astonished stares and double-takes and wonderment over what’s next. The ones in Ontario will be obsessed, for a good while, about the many ways the Blue Jays could have won and the inside straights that allowed the Dodgers to.
Will Smith came up in the 11th inning with two out against Shane Bieber. There were two out, nobody on. Bieber tried to be careful, but when you’re careful against Smith and most of the Dodgers, you give up control of the ball-strike count. On 2-and-0 Bieber went to a slider that sat there and waited to become a passenger. Smith’s home run to left field gave the Dodgers a 5-4 lead, their first of the entire game, and eventually gave them their second consecutive World Series championship. No one had done that since the 1999-2000 Yankees, and no National League team had done it since the 1975-76 Big Red Machine from Cincinnati.”
Read More“They say you need the bounces to win the World Series.
They weren’t talking about this.
Toronto’s Addison Barger drove a baseball so hard that it lost consciousness in the ninth inning of Game 6 Friday night. Instead of bouncing off the left-centre wall, or bouncing against it, it found a nice little crevasse and took a nap. “
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