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{{Short description|Major League Baseball franchise in Toronto, Ontario}}
{{MLB infobox |
{{pp-vandalism|small=yes}}
name = Toronto Blue Jays |
{{Use Canadian English|date=February 2016}}
established = 1977 |
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2017}}
misc = |
{{Infobox MLB
logo = TorontoBlueJays_100.png |
| name = Toronto Blue Jays
WS = (2) |
| established = 1977
WORLD CHAMPIONS = [[1992 World Series|1992]] • [[1993 World Series|1993]] |
| misc =
LEAGUE = AL |
| logo = Toronto_Blue_Jays_logo.svg
P = (2) |
| uniformlogo = TorontoBJaysCapInsignia.png<!--Please discuss in talk page to reach consensus first before removing it-->
PENNANTS = [[1992 American League Championship Series|1992]]&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;[[1993 American League Championship Series|1993]] |
| current league = American League
misc1 = |
| y1 = 1977
OTHER PENNANTS = |
| division = [[American League East|East Division]]
DIV = East |
| y2 = 1977
DV = (5) |
| Uniform = MLB-ALE-TOR-Uniform.png
Division Champs = [[1985 in baseball|1985]]&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;[[1989 in baseball|1989]]&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;[[1991 in baseball|1991]]&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;[[1992 in baseball|1992]]</br>[[1993 in baseball|1993]] |
| retirednumbers = {{hlist| [[Roy Halladay|32]] | [[Jackie Robinson|42]] }}
misc5 = |
| colours = Royal blue, navy blue, red, white<!-- Powder blue is NOT an official team color. Please do not restore it. Thank you. --><!--Please don't capitalize, per [[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Baseball/Archive 38#Colour names in team infoboxes]]--><ref name="NewBlueJaysLogo2011">{{cite press release|title=The "Blue" is back in Blue Jays|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/the-blue-is-back-in-blue-jays/c-25993468|publisher=[[MLB Advanced Media]]|website=BlueJays.com|date=November 18, 2011|access-date=May 5, 2020}}</ref><ref name="BlueJaysLogos">{{cite web|title=History of the Logo|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/history/logos|publisher=[[MLB Advanced Media]]|website=BlueJays.com|access-date=May 5, 2020}}</ref><br />{{colour box|#134A8E}} {{colour box|#1D2D5C}} {{colour box|#E8291C}} {{color box|#FFFFFF}}
OTHER DIV CHAMPS = |
| y3 = 1977
WC = (0) |
| nicknames = The Jays<!-- Please do not add Bluebirds unless it becomes common among reputable sportscasters and sports publications and please provide a reliable source when that happens--><!--Please don't add Buffalo Blue Jays as it is just a clever headline in most cases and the team name is Toronto Blue Jays, even when they played home games in Buffalo-->
Wild Card = None |
| pastnames =
misc6 = |
| ballpark =
current league = American League |
[[Rogers Centre]] ({{mlby|1989}}–{{mlby|2019}}, {{mlby|2021}}–present){{efn|Known as SkyDome from 1989 to 2005.}}
y1 = 1977 |
| pastparks =
division = [[American League East|East Division]] |
* [[Sahlen Field]] ({{mlby|2020}}, June {{mlby|2021}}–July {{mlby|2021}}){{efn|As a result of the [[COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto]], the Blue Jays played their home games during the [[2020 Major League Baseball season]] and [[2021 Major League Baseball season|2021 season]] (from June until July 30) at Sahlen Field in [[Buffalo, New York]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Matheson|first=Keegan|title=Blue Jays to play home games in Buffalo|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/blue-jays-buffalo-home-games-2020|publisher=[[MLB Advanced Media]]|website=BlueJays.com|date=July 24, 2020|access-date=September 28, 2020}}</ref>}}
y2 = 1977 |
* [[TD Ballpark]] (April {{mlby|2021}}–May {{mlby|2021}}){{efn|As a result of the [[COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto]], the Blue Jays played their first 21 home games during the [[2021 Major League Baseball season]] at TD Ballpark in [[Dunedin, Florida]] before returning to Sahlen Field in June 2021.}}
misc2 = |
* [[Exhibition Stadium]] ({{mlby|1977}}–{{mlby|1989}})
nickname = Toronto Blue Jays |

y3 = 1977 |
| WS = (2)
misc3 = |
| WORLD CHAMPIONS = {{hlist| {{wsy|1992}} | {{wsy|1993}} }}
ballpark = [[Rogers Centre]] |
| LEAGUE = AL
y4 = 1989 |
| P = (2)
misc4 =
| PENNANTS = {{hlist| [[1992 American League Championship Series|1992]] | [[1993 American League Championship Series|1993]] }}
**formerly [[SkyDome]] ([[1989 in baseball|1989]]-[[2004 in baseball|2004]])
| misc1 =
*[[Exhibition Stadium]] ([[1977 in baseball|1977]]-[[1989 in baseball|1989]]) |
| OTHER PENNANTS =
Uniform logo = Al 2005 toronto 01a.gif |
| DIV = AL East
Retired numbers = 11<br/>37<br/>29<br/>43<br/>1<br/><br/>4306 |
| DV = (6)
Retired names = [[George Bell (baseball player)|George Bell]]<BR>[[Dave Stieb]]<BR>[[Joe Carter]]<BR>[[Cito Gaston]]<BR>[[Tony Fernandez]]<BR>[[Pat Gillick]]<BR>[[Tom Cheek]] |
| Division Champs = {{hlist| [[1985 Toronto Blue Jays season|1985]] | [[1989 Toronto Blue Jays season|1989]] | [[1991 Toronto Blue Jays season|1991]] | [[1992 Toronto Blue Jays season|1992]] | [[1993 Toronto Blue Jays season|1993]] | [[2015 Toronto Blue Jays season|2015]] }}
Retired pos = [[Outfielder|OF]]<BR>[[Pitcher|P]]<BR>[[Outfielder|OF]]<BR>[[Manager (baseball)|MGR]]<BR>[[Shortstop|SS]]<BR>[[General manager|GM]]<BR>[[Announcer|ANCR]] |
| misc5 =
Retired date = 1996<BR>1996<BR>1999<BR>1999<BR>2001<BR>2002<BR>2004 |
| OTHER DIV CHAMPS =
misc7 = <small>NOTE: Instead of retiring numbers, the Blue Jays honour their players and personnel of the organization with a spot on the '''''Level of Excellence'''''.</small> |
| WC = (4)
Team = Blue Jays |
| Wild Card = {{hlist| [[2016 Toronto Blue Jays season|2016]] | [[2020 Toronto Blue Jays season|2020]] | [[2022 Toronto Blue Jays season|2022]] | [[2023 Toronto Blue Jays season|2023]] }}
Team1 = Blue_Jays
| misc6 =
| owner = [[Rogers Communications]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Front Office Directory|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/team/front-office-directory|publisher=[[MLB Advanced Media]]|website=BlueJays.com|access-date=May 5, 2020}}</ref>
| president = [[Mark Shapiro (sports executive)|Mark Shapiro]]
| manager = [[John Schneider (baseball)|John Schneider]]
| gm = [[Ross Atkins (baseball)|Ross Atkins]]
| presbo =
| website = {{url|https://www.mlb.com/bluejays|mlb.com/bluejays}}
}}
}}
The '''Toronto Blue Jays''' are a [[Major League Baseball]] team based in [[Toronto|Toronto, Ontario]], notable for being the only team from outside the [[United States]] to win the [[World Series]]. They are in the [[American League East|Eastern Division]] of the [[American League]].


The '''Toronto Blue Jays''' are a Canadian [[professional baseball|professional baseball team]] based in [[Toronto]]<!--See talk page for discussion about "a" vs. "the"-->. The Blue Jays compete in [[Major League Baseball]] (MLB) as a member club of the [[American League]] (AL) [[American League East|East Division]]. Since 1989, the team has played its home games primarily at [[Rogers Centre]] in downtown Toronto.
They are the only team in the Major Leagues outside the United States after the [[Montreal Expos]] who were relocated to [[Washington, D.C.]] to become the [[Washington Nationals]] after the [[2004]] season. The [[2006]] season is the Blue Jays' 30th season.


The name "Blue Jays" originates from the [[blue jay|bird of the same name]], and blue is also the [[Sports in Toronto#Toronto's association with the colour blue|traditional colour of Toronto's]] [[College athletics|collegiate]] and [[Major professional sports teams of the United States and Canada|professional sports teams]] including the [[Toronto Maple Leafs|Maple Leafs]] ([[ice hockey]]) and the [[Toronto Argonauts|Argonauts]] ([[Canadian football]]). In 1976, out of the over 4,000 suggestions, 154 people selected the name "Blue Jays."<ref>{{cite news|last=Matheson|first=Keegan|title=Here's how the Blue Jays got their name|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/toronto-blue-jays-team-name-history|publisher=[[MLB Advanced Media]]|website=BlueJays.com|date=December 21, 2020|access-date=July 18, 2021}}</ref><!-- The Toronto Raptors and Toronto FC use a version of red as their main colour. --> In addition, the team was originally owned by the [[Labatt Brewing Company]], makers of the popular beer Labatt Blue. Colloquially nicknamed the "'''Jays'''", the team's official colours are royal blue, navy blue, red, and white.<ref name="NewBlueJaysLogo2011" /><ref name="BlueJaysLogos" />
== Franchise history ==
====Growing pains (1977-1981)====
The Toronto Blue Jays came into existence in [[1976]] as one of two teams slated to join the American League for the next season (the other being the [[Seattle Mariners]]). Toronto had been mentioned as a major league city several times in the previous century and had been home to the [[Toronto Maple Leafs (former baseball team)|Toronto Maple Leafs]] of the [[International League]] from [[1930]] to [[1967]]. The [[San Francisco Giants]] were considering a move to the city until the team was purchased by [[Bob Lurie]] in 1976.


An [[expansion team|expansion franchise]], the club was founded in Toronto in 1977. Originally based at [[Exhibition Stadium]], the team began playing its home games at SkyDome upon its opening in 1989. They are the second MLB franchise to be based outside the United States, and currently the only team based outside the U.S. after the first Canadian franchise, the [[Montreal Expos]], became the [[Washington Nationals]] in 2005.<!-- American does not always refer to the United States in this case. --> Since 2000, the Blue Jays have been owned by [[Rogers Communications]] and in 2004, SkyDome was purchased by that company, which renamed it Rogers Centre. The Blue Jays and the [[Atlanta Braves]]{{efn|The Atlanta Braves are owned by [[Liberty Media]].}} are the only two MLB teams under corporate ownership; the Blue Jays are the only American League team to be under such ownership.
The franchise was originally owned by [[Labatt|Labatt Breweries]], with [[Imperial Trust]] and [[Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce]] as minority owners. The Blue Jays played their first game ever on [[April 7]], [[1977]] against the [[Chicago White Sox]]. They won 9-5, led by [[Doug Ault]]'s two [[Home run|home runs]]. Snowflakes were seen during the game.


Due to border restrictions brought about by the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], the Blue Jays played home games at [[TD Ballpark]] in [[Dunedin, Florida]] for April and May of the [[2021 Major League Baseball season|2021 season]], and [[Sahlen Field]] in [[Buffalo, New York]] for the [[2020 Major League Baseball season|2020 season]] as well as June and July 2021, returning home to Toronto as of July 30 of that year.
The Blue Jays faired poorly in both [[1978]] and [[1979]], losing over 100 games in each of those seasons. [[1979]] was highlighted by shortstop [[Alfredo Griffin]] being named American League co-[[MLB Rookie of the Year award|Rookie of the Year]].


In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Blue Jays went through struggles typical of an expansion team, frequently finishing last in their division. In 1983, they had their [[1983 Toronto Blue Jays season|first winning season]] and two years later, became [[1985 Toronto Blue Jays season|division champions]]. From 1985 to 1993, the Blue Jays were an AL East powerhouse, winning five division championships in nine seasons, including three consecutive from [[1991 Toronto Blue Jays season|1991]] to [[1993 Toronto Blue Jays season|1993]]. During that run, the team also became back-to-back [[World Series]] champions in [[1992 World Series|1992]] and [[1993 World Series|1993]], led by a core group of [[List of Major League Baseball awards|award]]-winning [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star]] players, including [[National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Hall of Famer]] [[Roberto Alomar]], [[Joe Carter]], [[John Olerud]], and [[Devon White (baseball)|Devon White]]. The Blue Jays became the first (and, to date, only) team outside the U.S. to appear in and win a World Series, and the fastest AL expansion team to do so, winning in its 16th year. As of [[2019 Major League Baseball season|2019]], they are one of only two MLB franchises that are undefeated through multiple World Series appearances, along with the [[National League (baseball)|National League]]'s [[Miami Marlins]]. After 1993, the Blue Jays failed to qualify for the playoffs for 21 consecutive seasons, until clinching a playoff berth and division championship in [[2015 Toronto Blue Jays season|2015]]. The team clinched a second consecutive playoff berth in [[2016 Toronto Blue Jays season|2016]], after securing an [[List of American League Wild Card winners|AL wild card]] position. In both years, the Blue Jays beat the [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]] in the [[American League Division Series|AL Division Series]], but lost the [[American League Championship Series|AL Championship Series]]. Most recently, they qualified for the playoffs as a wild card team in [[2020 Toronto Blue Jays season|2020]], [[2022 Toronto Blue Jays season|2022]], and [[2023 Toronto Blue Jays season|2023]].
[[1980]] saw [[Bobby Mattick]] take over the role of manager from [[Roy Hartsfield]], the Blue Jays' original manager.


From 1977 to 2023, the Blue Jays' overall win–loss record is {{Win–loss record|w=3,687|l=3,700|t=3}} ({{winpct|3687|3700|3}}).<ref>{{cite web |title=Toronto Blue Jays Team History & Encyclopedia |url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/TOR/ |website=Baseball Reference |publisher=Sports Reference LLC |access-date=2022-10-13}}</ref>
[[1981]] was the strike season, and despite dramatically improving their winning percentage in the second half, the Blue Jays still finished in last place in the American League East in both halves of the season.


{{toc limit|3}}
====Getting Competitive (1982-88)====
Toronto's first solid season came in [[1982]] as they finished 78-84. Their pitching staff was led by starters [[Dave Stieb]], [[Jim Clancy (baseball player)|Jim Clancy]] and [[Luis Leal]], and the outfield featured a young [[Lloyd Moseby]] and [[Jesse Barfield]].


==History==
In [[1983]], the Blue Jays compiled their first winning record, 89-73, finishing in fourth place, 9 games behind the eventual [[World Series]] champions, the [[Baltimore Orioles]].
{{Main|History of the Toronto Blue Jays}}
{{Very long section|date=August 2021}}


===Expansion team===
The Blue Jays' progression continued in [[1984]], finishing with the same 89-73 record, but this time in second place behind another World Series champions, the [[Detroit Tigers]].
The Blue Jays were approved as part of the [[1977 Major League Baseball expansion]] discussions, after Toronto's original plan of getting a Major League Baseball team by buying and moving the [[San Francisco Giants]] fell through; they would be added alongside the [[1977 Seattle Mariners season|Seattle Mariners]]. The team was represented by legal counsel [[Herb Solway]] and [[Gord Kirke]]. Kirke prepared the original documents which led to the founding of the team in 1976.<ref name="Livesey">{{cite web|url=https://www.canadianlawyermag.com/article/the-champs-champion-8/|title=The champs' champion|last=Livesey|first=Bruce|date=2006-01-25|website=Canadian Lawyer Magazine|access-date=2019-05-02}}</ref>


===1977–1994<!-- He resigned as GM on October 31, 1994 -->: The Pat Gillick era===
After 1984, Alfredo Griffin went to the [[Oakland Athletics]], thus giving a permanent spot to young Dominican shortstop [[Tony Fernandez]]. [[1985]] saw Toronto win their first championship of any sort: the first of their five American League East division titles. The Blue Jays featured strong pitching and a balanced offense. Their mid-season call up of relief pitcher [[Tom Henke]] also proved to be important. They finished 99-62 (the franchise record for most wins), two games in front of the [[New York Yankees]]. The Blue Jays faced the [[Kansas City Royals]] in the [[1985 American League Championship Series|American League Championship Series]] (ALCS), and took a 3 games to 1 lead. However, Kansas City won three consecutive games to win the series 4 games to 3, on their way to their first, and only, World Series championship.
====1977–1981====
[[File:Blue Jays v White Sox 1977.jpg|thumb|The Blue Jays' second game in its inaugural season. Unlike the first game played in a snow storm, this day was bright and sunny with the temperature well below freezing.]]
The Blue Jays played their first game on April 7, 1977, against the [[1977 Chicago White Sox season|Chicago White Sox]] before a home crowd of 44,649. The game is now perhaps best remembered for the minor snowstorm which began just before the game started. Toronto won the snowy affair 9–5, led by [[Doug Ault]]'s two [[home run]]s. That win would be one of only 54 of the 1977 season, as the [[1977 Toronto Blue Jays season|Blue Jays]] finished last in the AL East, with a record of 54–107. After the season, assistant general manager [[Pat Gillick]] succeeded [[Peter Bavasi]] as general manager of the team, a position he would hold until 1994.<ref name="history"/>


In 1978, the team [[1978 Toronto Blue Jays season|improved their record]] by five games, but remained last, with a record of 59–102. In 1979, after a 53–109 [[1979 Toronto Blue Jays season|last place finish]], shortstop [[Alfredo Griffin]] was named American League co-[[Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award|Rookie of the Year]]. In addition, the Blue Jays' first mascot, [[BJ Birdy]], made its debut in 1979.
The Blue Jays could not duplicate their success in [[1986]], despite an excellent season from right fielder [[Jesse Barfield]], who hit 40 home runs.


In 1980, [[Bobby Mattick]] became manager, succeeding [[Roy Hartsfield]], the Blue Jays' original manager. In Mattick's first season as manager, although the team remained at the bottom, Toronto [[1980 Toronto Blue Jays season|nearly reached]] the 70-win mark, finishing with a record of 67–95, a 14-win improvement on 1979. [[Jim Clancy (baseball)|Jim Clancy]] led with 13 wins and [[John Mayberry]] became the first Jay to hit 30 home runs in a season.
[[1987]] saw the Blue Jays lose a thrilling division race to the Detroit Tigers by 2 games, after being swept in the final series by the Tigers. The Blue Jays finished with a 96-66 record, second best in the major leagues, but to no avail. [[George Bell (baseball player)|George Bell]] was named [[Most Valuable Player|MVP]] of the [[American League]].


In the [[1981 Major League Baseball strike|strike]]-divided season of 1981, the [[1981 Toronto Blue Jays season|Blue Jays]] finished last in the AL East in both halves of the season. They were a dismal 16–42 in the first half but improved dramatically in the second, finishing the 48-game second half at 21–27, for a combined record of 37–69.
In [[1988]], however, Toronto again could not duplicate the successes of the previous season, tying the [[Milwaukee Brewers]] for third in the division. Still, the season had numerous highlights. First baseman [[Fred McGriff]] hit 34 home runs, and Dave Stieb had back-to-back starts in which he lost a [[no-hitter]] with two out in the ninth inning.


====1982–1984====
===="We're Moving to the Dome!" (1989-91)====
Under new manager [[Bobby Cox]], Toronto's first solid season came in 1982<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dwIrDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT100|page=100|title=From Hockey to Baseball: I kept them in stitches|author=Ken Carson and Larry Millson|publisher=FriesenPress|date=2016|isbn=9781460280126}}</ref> as the Jays finished 78–84. Their pitching staff was led by starters [[Dave Stieb]], [[Jim Clancy (baseball)|Jim Clancy]], and [[Luis Leal (baseball)|Luis Leal]], and the outfield featured a young [[Lloyd Moseby]] and [[Jesse Barfield]]. 1982 was also the first year the Jays did [[1982 Toronto Blue Jays season|not place last]], finishing sixth in the East out of seven teams.
[[1989]], which saw the opening of the Jays' new retractable-roofed home, [[SkyDome]], also marked the start of an extremely successful five-year period for Toronto. Early in the season, in May, management fired [[Jimy Williams]] and replaced him with hitting instructor [[Cito Gaston]]. The club had a 12-24 record at the time of the firing, but recorded a 77-49 record under their new manager to win the American League East by 2 games. In the [[1989 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], [[Rickey Henderson]] led the [[Oakland Athletics]] to a 4-1 series win.


In 1983, the Blue Jays compiled their [[1983 Toronto Blue Jays season|first winning record]], 89–73, finishing in fourth place, nine games behind the eventual [[1983 World Series|World Series]] champions, the [[1983 Baltimore Orioles season|Baltimore Orioles]]. First baseman [[Willie Upshaw]] became the first Blue Jay to get at least 100 [[run batted in|RBIs]] in a season.
In [[1990]], the Blue Jays again had a strong season, but finished in second place, 2 games behind the [[Boston Red Sox]]. Dave Stieb pitched his first and only no-hitter, beating the [[Cleveland Indians]] 3 games to 0. During the offseason, the Blue Jays made one of the two biggest trades in franchise history, sending [[shortstop]] [[Tony Fernandez]] and [[first baseman]] [[Fred McGriff]] to the [[San Diego Padres]] for [[outfielder]] [[Joe Carter]] and [[second baseman]] [[Roberto Alomar]]. This would prove to be an excellent trade, as the Blue Jays again won the division in [[1991]]. Once again, however, they fell short in the postseason, losing to the [[Minnesota Twins]] in the [[1991 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], who were on their way to their second [[World Series]] victory in five years.


The [[1984 Toronto Blue Jays season|Jays' progress]] continued in 1984, finishing with the same 89–73 record, but this time in a distant second place behind another [[1984 World Series|World Series]] champion, the [[1984 Detroit Tigers season|Detroit Tigers]]. After 1984, Alfredo Griffin went to the [[Oakland Athletics]],<ref>{{cite news|author=ROSS NEWHAN|date=October 18, 1988|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1988-10-18/sports/sp-4657_1_world-series|title=THE WORLD SERIES : OAKLAND ATHLETICS vs. LOS ANGELES DODGERS : Griffin Covers Gap at Shortstop for Dodgers|newspaper=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> thus giving a permanent spot to young [[Dominican Republic|Dominican]] shortstop [[Tony Fernández]], who would become a fan favourite for many years.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q-TPBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA18|title=Toronto Blue Jays|author=Joanne Gerstner|year=2015|publisher=ABDO|page=18|isbn=9781629688411}}</ref>
Toronto became the first Major League club ever to draw over 4 million fans in one season.


====1985: The "Drive of '85" and first AL East title====
* Team Record 1989: 89 Wins - 73 Losses, W%- 0.549
[[Image:Dave Stieb in 1985.jpg|thumb|[[Dave Stieb]] has the second highest number of wins among pitchers in the 1980s.]]
{{main|1985 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
In 1985, Toronto won its first championship of any sort: the first of its six American League East division titles. The Blue Jays featured strong pitching and a balanced offense. Tony Fernández excelled in his first full season, and veteran pitcher [[Doyle Alexander]] led the team with 17 wins, including a division-clinching complete-game win. Their mid-season call-up of relief pitcher [[Tom Henke]] also proved to be important. The team finished 99–62 (the franchise record for most wins), two games in front of the [[1985 New York Yankees season|New York Yankees]]. The Jays faced the [[1985 Kansas City Royals season|Kansas City Royals]] in the [[1985 American League Championship Series|American League Championship Series]] (ALCS), and took a three-game-to-one lead. However, Kansas City won three consecutive games to win the series 4–3, on the way to their first [[1985 World Series|World Series]] championship. The Blue Jays' successful season was dubbed the "Drive of '85".<ref>{{cite book |title=The Drive of '85: A Salute to the Blue Jays by the Toronto Star|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BZoYAAAACAAJ|first1=Wayne|last1=Braun|first2=Jack |last2=Brehl|publisher=Doubleday Canada|year=1985 |isbn=978-0-385-25037-5}}</ref>


After the playoffs, Cox, the [[Major League Baseball Manager of the Year Award|AL Manager of the Year]], suddenly left the Blue Jays to become general manager of the [[1986 Atlanta Braves season|Atlanta Braves]], the team he had previously managed.
* Team Record 1990: 86 Wins - 76 Losses, W%- 0.531, GB-2


====1986–1988====
* Team Record 1991: 91 Wins - 71 Losses, W%- 0.562
[[File:George Bell 1985.jpg|thumb|left|Left fielder [[George Bell (outfielder)|George Bell]] was named the [[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|American League MVP]] in [[1987 Major League Baseball season|1987]].]]
With [[Jimy Williams]]<!-- Jimy's name is spelled with one "m" --> taking over as manager, the [[1986 Toronto Blue Jays season|Blue Jays]] could not duplicate their success in 1986, sliding to a fourth-place tie at 86–76. [[Jesse Barfield]] and [[George Bell (outfielder)|George Bell]] led the way with 40 and 31 home runs, respectively, while [[Jim Clancy (baseball)|Jim Clancy]], [[Mark Eichhorn]], and [[Jimmy Key]] tied for the team wins lead with 14 each.


In 1987, the Blue Jays held a {{frac|3|1|2}}-game lead with a week to go [[1987 Toronto Blue Jays season|in the season]], then lost their last seven in a row to finish two games behind the [[1987 Detroit Tigers season|Detroit Tigers]], getting swept on the last weekend by the Tigers. The Jays finished with a 96–66 record, second-best in the major leagues, but to no avail. However, George Bell (.308 [[batting average (baseball)|batting average]], 47 home runs, 134 RBI) was named the AL's [[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|Most Valuable Player]] (MVP), the first Blue Jay to earn that honor.
===The Glory Years (1992-1993)===
After the 1991 season had ended, the Blue Jays acquired pitcher [[Jack Morris]], who had led the Minnesota Twins to victory in the World Series by pitching a 10-inning [[Complete game|complete game]] [[shutout]] in Game 7 and had been named the [[World Series MVP Award|World Series MVP]].


In 1988, however, Toronto [[1988 Toronto Blue Jays season|could not duplicate]] the successes of the previous season. The team tied the [[1988 Milwaukee Brewers season|Milwaukee Brewers]] for third in the division at 87–75, only two games behind the division champion [[1988 Boston Red Sox season|Boston Red Sox]]. Still, the season had numerous highlights. First baseman [[Fred McGriff]] hit 34 home runs, and Dave Stieb had back-to-back starts in which he lost a [[no-hitter]] with two out and two strikes in the ninth inning.
The [[1992]] regular season went well, as the Jays finished four games in front of the [[Milwaukee Brewers]], with a record of 96-66. They met the [[Oakland Athletics]] in the [[1992 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], winning 4 games to 2. The pivotal game of the series was Game 4. The Blue Jays rallied back from a 6-1 deficit, capped by [[Roberto Alomar]]'s huge game tying 2-run homer off [[Relief pitcher|reliever]] [[Dennis Eckersley]], on their way to an 11-inning, 7-6 win, to lead the series 3 games to 1. The Blue Jays then faced the [[Atlanta Braves]] in the World Series. The pivotal game in this series turned out to be Game 2, in which reserve player [[Ed Sprague]] hit a 9th-inning 2-run home run off [[Jeff Reardon]] to give the Blue Jays a 5-4 lead, which would hold up. Game 6, with the Blue Jays leading 3 games to 2, was a very close game. Toronto was one strike away from winning in the bottom of the 9th inning, 2-1, but [[Jeff Blauser]] singled in the tying run off Blue Jays' closer [[Tom Henke]]. It was the first run the Toronto bullpen had given up in the series. The game was decided in the 11th inning, when [[Dave Winfield]] doubled, driving in 2 runs. The Braves would again come within one run in the bottom of the 11th, but Jays reliever [[Mike Timlin]] fielded [[Otis Nixon]]'s bunt, throwing to Joe Carter at first base for the final out. The Blue Jays became the first team based outside of the United States to win the World Series. [[Pat Borders]], the Jays' catcher, was the unlikely player who was named MVP after hitting .450 with one home run in the World Series. Oddly, Morris was acquired in large part for his reputation as a clutch postseason pitcher, but he went 0-3 in the playoffs. Morris, however, pitched well in the regular season, becoming the Blue Jays' first 20-game winner, with a record of 21-6 and an ERA of 4.04.
{{Clear}}


====1989–1991: Cito Gaston takes charge, two more AL East titles====
[[image:jays_original_logo.gif|thumb|120px|left|The Original Logo of the Toronto Blue Jays (1977-1996)]]
[[File:Cito.jpg|thumb|[[Cito Gaston]] was named Blue Jays' manager during the [[1989 Major League Baseball season|1989]] season.]]
After the [[1992]] season, the Blue Jays let [[Dave Winfield]] and [[Tom Henke]] go, but signed free agents [[Paul Molitor]] from the Milwaukee Brewers and [[Dave Stewart (baseball player)|Dave Stewart]] from the Oakland Athletics.
[[1989 Toronto Blue Jays season|In 1989]], the Blue Jays' new [[retractable roof]]ed home, [[Rogers Centre|SkyDome]], opened mid-season. It also marked the beginning of an extremely successful five-year period for the team. In May, management fired manager Jimy<!-- This is the correct spelling --> Williams and replaced him with [[Cito Gaston]], the team's hitting instructor. The club had a dismal 12–24 record at the time of the firing, but went 77–49 under Gaston to win the AL East title by two games, with an 89–73 record. Fred McGriff's 36 home runs led the AL. On May 28, George Bell's [[walk-off home run]], off of [[1989 Chicago White Sox season|Chicago White Sox]] closer [[Bobby Thigpen]], marked the end of the Exhibition Stadium era. The first game at the new stadium took place on June 5 against the [[1989 Milwaukee Brewers season|Milwaukee Brewers]]; the Jays lost 5–3. In the [[1989 American League Championship Series|1989 ALCS]], [[Rickey Henderson]] led the eventual [[1989 World Series|World Series]] champion [[1989 Oakland Athletics season|Oakland Athletics]] to a 4–1 series win.


In 1990, the Blue Jays again had [[1990 Toronto Blue Jays season|a strong season]], but finished second, two games behind the [[1990 Boston Red Sox season|Boston Red Sox]]. Dave Stieb pitched his only no-hitter, beating the [[1990 Cleveland Indians season|Cleveland Indians]] 3–0 in front of a less-than-capacity crowd at [[Cleveland Stadium|Cleveland Municipal Stadium]]. As of 2018, it remains the only no-hitter ever pitched by a Blue Jay. During the [[Season (sports)#Off-season|off-season]], the Blue Jays made one of the two biggest trades in franchise history, sending All-Star shortstop [[Tony Fernández]] and first baseman [[Fred McGriff]] to the [[San Diego Padres]] in exchange for outfielder [[Joe Carter]] and second baseman [[Roberto Alomar]]. The Jays also obtained centre<!-- Baseball terminology supersedes Canadian English in preference for this article --> fielder [[Devon White (baseball)|Devon White]] from the [[Los Angeles Angels|California Angels]]. These deals, particularly the trade with San Diego, were instrumental in the team's future success.
In [[1993]], the Blue Jays had seven All-Stars: hitters [[Devon White]], Roberto Alomar, Paul Molitor, Joe Carter and [[John Olerud]], starter [[Pat Hentgen]], and closer [[Duane Ward]]. In August, the Jays acquired former nemesis [[Rickey Henderson]] from the Athletics. The Blue Jays cruised to a 95-67 record, seven games ahead of the [[New York Yankees]], winning their third straight division title. The Jays beat the [[Chicago White Sox]] 4 games to 2 in the ALCS, and then the [[Philadelphia Phillies]], 4 games to 2, for their second straight [[World Series]] victory. The World Series featured several exciting games, including Game 4, played under a slight rain, in which the Blue Jays came back from a 14-9 deficit to win 15-14 and take a 3 games to 1 lead in the series. It remains the highest scoring game in World Series history. Game 6 saw the Blue Jays lead 5-1, but give up 5 runs in the 7th inning to trail 6-5. In the bottom of the 9th inning, in the SkyDome, Joe Carter (who was on the brink of going to the [[Kansas City Royals]] before the season began) hit a one-out, three-run walkoff home run to clinch the series, off Phillies closer "The Wild Thing" [[Mitch Williams]]. This is the only time in the history of Major League Baseball that a team hit a walk-off home run in the bottom of a 9th inning to turn what would have been a loss into a win, and win the World Series. In the regular season, three Blue Jays, John Olerud, Paul Molitor and Roberto Alomar finished 1-2-3 for the AL [[batting average|batting]] crown.


Carter, Alomar and White would prove to be extremely effective additions, as the Blue Jays again [[1991 Toronto Blue Jays season|won the division]] in 1991, as Carter drove in Alomar for the division-winning run. Once again, however, the team fell short in the postseason, losing to the [[1991 Minnesota Twins season|Minnesota Twins]], who were on the way to their second [[1991 World Series|World Series]] victory in five seasons, in the [[1991 American League Championship Series|ALCS]]. In 1991, the Blue Jays became the first Major League club ever to draw over [[Major League Baseball attendance records|four million fans]] in one season.
* Team Record 1992: 96 Wins - 66 Losses, W%- 0.593


* Team Record 1993: 95 Wins - 67 Losses, W%- 0.586
* Team record 1989: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- 0.549
* Team record 1990: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 2 games behind division leader
* Team record 1991: 91 wins–71 losses, W%- 0.562


===Post-World Series letdowns (1994-2001)===
====1992–1993: World Series champions====
=====1992: Canada's first World Series title=====
Expectations were high for the Blue Jays for the [[1994]] season, following back-to-back championships, but they slumped to a 55-60 record before the players' strike. It was their first losing season since [[1982]]. Joe Carter, Paul Molitor and John Olerud enjoyed good years at the plate, but the pitching fell off. [[Juan Andres Guzman Correa|Juan Guzmán]] slumped considerably from his first three years (40-11, 3.28 ERA), finishing 1994 at 12-11 with a 5.68 ERA.
{{main|1992 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
After the 1991 season had ended, the Blue Jays acquired pitcher [[Jack Morris]], who had led the Minnesota Twins to victory in the World Series by pitching a 10-inning complete-game shutout in Game 7 and had been named the [[World Series Most Valuable Player Award|World Series MVP]]. To add veteran leadership to their explosive offence, Toronto signed [[Dave Winfield]] to be the team's designated hitter.


The 1992 regular season went well, as the Jays clinched their second straight AL East crown with a final record of 96–66, four games ahead of the [[1992 Milwaukee Brewers season|Milwaukee Brewers]]. They also went the entire season without being swept in any series, becoming the first team in 49 years to accomplish the feat.<ref>[https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/STL/1943-schedule-scores.shtml 1943 St. Louis Cardinals] Baseball-Reference.com. Accessed on June 13, 2014.</ref> The Blue Jays met the [[1992 Oakland Athletics season|Oakland Athletics]] (who had the same record as the Jays and won the [[American League West|AL West]] by six games over the defending champion [[1992 Minnesota Twins season|Twins]]) in the [[1992 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], winning four games to two. The pivotal game of the series was Game 4, considered by many to be one of the most important games in Blue Jays history: the Blue Jays rallied back from a 6–1 deficit after seven innings, capped off by [[Roberto Alomar]]'s huge game-tying two-run homer off A's closer [[Dennis Eckersley]] in the top of the ninth. This paved the way for a 7–6 victory in 11 innings, a 3-games-to-1 lead in the series and an eventual 4–2 ALCS series win.
[[1995]] was an even worse season for the Blue Jays, as they finished 56-88 in another strike-shortened season. Three young players, [[Alex S. Gonzalez]], [[Carlos Delgado]] and [[Shawn Green]], did show a lot of promise for the future. Labatt Breweries was bought by [[Belgium|Belgian]]-based brewer [[Interbrew]], making the Blue Jays the second baseball team owned by interests outside the United States or [[Canada]]. Interestingly, the first was the Blue Jays' expansion brethren, the Mariners, owned by [[Nintendo]].


The Blue Jays then faced the [[1992 Atlanta Braves season|Atlanta Braves]] in the [[1992 World Series|World Series]]. The Braves returned after being beaten by the Twins the previous year. The pivotal game in this series turned out to be Game 2, in which reserve player [[Ed Sprague Jr.|Ed Sprague]] hit a 9th-inning two-run home run off Braves closer [[Jeff Reardon]] to give the Blue Jays a 5–4 lead, which would hold up. After winning Game 3 thanks to Candy Maldonado's ninth-inning RBI hit and Game 4 due to Jimmy Key's superb {{frac|7|1|3}}-inning pitching effort in which he retired 15 straight batters (five innings), the Jays could not win the Series on home turf as the Braves struck back with a 7–2 win in Game 5. Game 6 in Atlanta, with the Blue Jays leading 3 games to 2, was a very close game. Toronto was one strike away from winning in the bottom of the 9th inning, 2–1,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/ATL/ATL199210240.shtml |title=October 24, 1992 World Series Game 6 at Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium Play by Play and Box Score |website=Baseball-Reference.com |date=October 24, 1992 |access-date=February 19, 2011}}</ref> but [[Otis Nixon]] singled in the tying run off the Blue Jays' closer [[Tom Henke]]. It was the first run the Toronto bullpen had given up in the series. The game was decided in the 11th inning, when [[Dave Winfield]] doubled down the left-field line, driving in two runs. The Braves would again come within one run in the bottom of the 11th, but Jays reliever [[Mike Timlin]] fielded [[Otis Nixon]]'s bunt, throwing to Joe Carter at first base for the final out. The Blue Jays became the first team based outside of the United States to win the World Series. [[Pat Borders]], the Jays' catcher, was the unlikely player who was named MVP after hitting .450 with one home run in the World Series. Oddly, Morris was acquired in large part for his reputation as a clutch postseason pitcher, but he went 0–3 in the playoffs. Morris, however, pitched well in the regular season, becoming the Blue Jays' first 20-game winner, with a record of 21–6 and an [[earned run average|ERA]] of 4.04.
[[1996]] was another mediocre year for the Blue Jays, highlighted by [[Pat Hentgen]]'s [[Cy Young Award]] (20-10. 3.22 ERA). [[Ed Sprague]] had a career year, hitting 36 home runs and driving in 101 runs.


* Team record 1992: 96 wins–66 losses, W%- 0.593
[[image:JaysLate90s.jpg|framed|right|Blue Jays logo ([[1997]]&ndash;[[2002]]).]]


=====1993: Back-to-back champs=====
The Blue Jays started [[1997]] with high hopes. Not only did the Jays drastically change their uniforms, they signed former [[Boston Red Sox]] ace [[Roger Clemens]] to a $24,750,000 contract. Clemens had one of the best pitching seasons ever as he won the pitcher's [[Triple crown (baseball)|Triple Crown]], leading the American League with a record of 21-7, a 2.05 ERA and 292 strikeouts. This was not enough to lead the Blue Jays to the postseason, however, as they ended the year 76-86. [[Cito Gaston]], the manager, was fired at the end of the year.
{{main|1993 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
[[File:Blue Jays Win the 1993 World Series.jpg|thumb|Fireworks at the [[Rogers Centre|SkyDome]] following the Blue Jays' victory in the [[1993 World Series]].]]
After the 1992 season, the Blue Jays let World Series hero Dave Winfield and longtime closer Tom Henke go, but signed two key free agents: designated hitter [[Paul Molitor]] from the Milwaukee Brewers and perennial playoff success [[Dave Stewart (baseball)|Dave Stewart]] from the Oakland Athletics.


In 1993, the Blue Jays had seven All-Stars: outfielders Devon White and Joe Carter, infielders [[John Olerud]] and Roberto Alomar, designated hitter Molitor, plus starting pitcher [[Pat Hentgen]], and closer [[Duane Ward]]. In August, the Jays acquired former nemesis [[Rickey Henderson]] from the Athletics. The Blue Jays cruised to a 95–67 record, seven games ahead of the [[1993 New York Yankees season|New York Yankees]], winning their third straight division title. The Jays beat the [[1993 Chicago White Sox season|Chicago White Sox]] four games to two in the [[1993 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], and then the [[1993 Philadelphia Phillies season|Philadelphia Phillies]], four games to two, for their second straight [[1993 World Series|World Series]] victory. The World Series featured several exciting games, including Game 4, played under a slight rain, in which the Blue Jays came back from a 14–9 deficit to win 15–14 and take a 3 games to 1 lead in the series. It remains the highest-scoring game in World Series history. Game 6 in Toronto saw the Blue Jays lead 5–1, but give up 5 runs in the 7th inning to trail 6–5. In the bottom of the 9th inning, Joe Carter hit a one-out, three-run walk-off home run to clinch the series off of Phillies closer [[Mitch Williams]]. Only the second World Series-winning walk-off home run in the history of Major League Baseball (following [[Bill Mazeroski]]'s in Game 7 in [[1960 World Series|1960]]), Carter's hit differed from the first in that Toronto, while not facing elimination, was trailing in the bottom of the 9th. The home run is also memorable for late Blue Jays radio broadcaster [[Tom Cheek]]'s call:
Before the start of the [[1998]] season, the Blue Jays acquired closer [[Randy Myers]] and slugger [[José Canseco]]. Gaston was replaced with [[Tim Johnson (baseball)|Tim Johnson]], a relative unknown but a former Blue Jay. The pitching was strong, again led by Clemens' second straight pitching triple crown (20-6, 2.65 ERA, 271 strikeouts), but the hitting was mediocre, and the Blue Jays finished 88-74, in third place, 26 games behind the [[New York Yankees]], who posted one of the greatest records in all of baseball history.


{{Blockquote
Before the [[1999]] season, the Blue Jays traded [[Roger Clemens]] to the Yankees for starting pitcher [[David Wells]], second baseman [[Homer Bush]] and relief pitcher [[Graeme Lloyd]]. They also fired Tim Johnson, after Johnson lied about several things (including killing people in the [[Vietnam War]]), in order to motivate his players. Johnson was replaced with [[Jim Fregosi]], who managed the Phillies when they lost to the Blue Jays in the [[1993 World Series]]. The offense picked up somewhat in 1999, but the pitching suffered without Clemens, as the Blue Jays finished 84-78.
|quote=A swing, and a belt! Left field! Way back! Blue Jays win it! The Blue Jays are World Series champions as Joe Carter hits a three-run home run in the ninth inning and the Blue Jays have repeated as World Series champions! Touch 'em all, Joe, you'll never hit a bigger home run in your life!
|author=[[Tom Cheek]]
}}


Molitor was named the World Series MVP after hitting .500 in the series. In the regular season, three Blue Jays—Olerud, Molitor and Alomar—finished 1–2–3 for the AL [[List of Major League Baseball batting champions|batting crown]], led by Olerud's franchise record .363 average. It was the first time in 100 years that the top three hitters in the league were from the same team.<ref name="history"/><ref>[https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/NL/1893-batting-leaders.shtml 1893 National League Batting Leaders] Baseball-Reference.com. Accessed on May 29, 2012.</ref>
On [[November 8th]], [[1999]], Toronto traded star outfielder [[Shawn Green]] to the [[Los Angeles Dodgers]] for left-handed relief pitcher [[Pedro Borbón, Jr.|Pedro Borbón]] and right-fielder [[Raúl Mondesí]]. This was due to the fact that the Blue Jays had only enough money to sign one of Green or Delgado, and the Jays decided to keep Delgado.


* Team record 1993: 95 wins–67 losses, W%- 0.586
[[2000]] proved to be a similar season, as the Jays had an 83-79 record, well out of the wild card race. [[Carlos Delgado]] had a stellar year, hitting .344 with 41 home runs, 57 doubles, 137 RBI, 123 walks and 115 runs. In addition, six other players hit 20 or more home runs, an outstanding feat. [[José Cruz, Jr.|José Cruz Jr.]], [[Shawn Green]], [[Tony Batista]], [[Darrin Fletcher]], [[Shannon Stewart]], and [[Brad Fullmer]] all contributed to the powerful heart of the lineup.


====1994 season====
On [[September 1st]], [[2000]], [[Rogers Communications]] Inc. purchased 80% of the baseball club with Interbrew (now [[InBev]]) maintaining 20% interest and the [[Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce]] relinquishing its 10% share.
{{main|1994 Toronto Blue Jays season}}


Expectations were high for the Blue Jays for the 1994 season, following back-to-back championships, but they slumped to a 55–60 record and a third-place finish (16 games back of the [[1994 New York Yankees season|New York Yankees]]) before the [[1994–95 Major League Baseball strike|players' strike]]. It was their first losing season since 1982. [[Joe Carter]], [[Paul Molitor]] and [[John Olerud]] enjoyed good years at the plate, but the pitching fell off. [[Juan Guzmán (baseball)|Juan Guzmán]] slumped considerably from his first three years (40–11, 3.28 ERA), finishing 1994 at 12–11 with a 5.68 ERA. Three young players, [[Alex Gonzalez (shortstop, born 1973)|Alex Gonzalez]], [[Carlos Delgado]] and [[Shawn Green]], did show much promise for the future. At the time of the strike, their fellow Canadian cousins, the [[1994 Montreal Expos season|Montreal Expos]], had the best record in the majors, leading some to consider the possibility of a Canadian three-peat in 1994.
[[Buck Martinez]], a former catcher and broadcast announcer for the Blue Jays, took over as manager before the [[2001]] season. The Blue Jays were back under .500 for 2001, finishing at 80-82, with mediocre pitching and hitting. Delgado led the team again with 39 home runs and 102 RBI. After the 2001 season ended, the Blue Jays let go of general manager [[Gord Ash]], who had taken over from [[Pat Gillick]] following the 1994 season.


On October 31, 1994, Gillick, the longtime Blue Jays general manager, resigned and handed the reins of the team to assistant general manager and Toronto native [[Gord Ash]],<ref name="history"/> who would lead the team in its most tumultuous era yet.
===The Sabermetric regime (2002-current)===
[[J.P. Ricciardi]] was named general manager and was expected to slash the payroll, in order to stem the tide of red ink. Ricciardi, a former assistant to [[Oakland Athletics]] [[general manager (baseball)|general manager]] [[Billy Beane]], is known as one of the more [[sabermetrics|sabermetrically]] aware GMs in the game. During the off-season, the team traded or let go several regular players, including [[Alex S. Gonzalez]], [[Paul Quantrill]], [[Brad Fullmer]] and [[closer (baseball)|closer]] [[Billy Koch]].


* Team record 1994: 55 wins–60 losses, W%- 0.478, 16 games behind division leader
====2002: Year of transition====
The Blue Jays started the [[2002]] season with slow progress in performance. [[Buck Martinez]] was fired about a third of the way through the season, with a 20-33 record. He was replaced by third base coach [[Carlos Tosca]]. They went 58-51 under Tosca to finish the season 78-84. [[Roy Halladay]] was the team's top pitcher, finishing the season with a 19-7 record and a 2.93 ERA. The hitters were led once again by [[Carlos Delgado]]. Ricciardi was credited for dumping [[Raul Mondesi]] in mid-season to the [[New York Yankees]] to free up his salary, which in turn was used for the off-season signing of [[Mike Bordick]], [[Frank Catalanotto]] and [[Tanyon Sturtze]]. Promising young players were assigned to key roles, including starting [[third baseman]] [[Eric Hinske]] and 23-year old [[center fielder]] [[Vernon Wells (baseball player)|Vernon Wells]] who had his first 100 RBI season.


===1995–2001: The Gord Ash era===
* Team Record 2002: 78 Wins - 84 Losses, W%- 0.481, GB- 25.5


====1995–2000====
====2003: A spectacular preview of the future====
[[File:Pat Hentgen and Galen Cisco 1993.jpg|thumb|left|Blue Jays pitcher [[Pat Hentgen]] won the [[Cy Young Award]] in [[1996 Major League Baseball season|1996]].]]
The [[2003]] season was a surprise to both team management and baseball analysts. After a poor April, the team had its most successful month ever in May. The offense was mainly responsible for the stunning turnaround. Delgado took over the major league lead in runs batted in, followed closely by Wells. The middle infield positions remained a gametime decision - Bordick played shortstop and third base, [[Dave Berg (baseball)|Dave Berg]] second base and third base, [[Chris Woodward]] shortdtop and [[Orlando Hudson]] second base. [[Minor league baseball|Minor league]] call-up [[Howie Clark]] entered the mix as a utility player after Hinske underwent surgery to repair a broken [[hamate bone]] in his right hand, which he had tried to play through for the first six weeks.
In [[1995 Toronto Blue Jays season|their 1995 season]], the Blue Jays showed they had lost their contending swagger of the past 12 years. Although they had most of the World Series teams cast, the Jays dropped dramatically to a dismal 56–88 record, placing last in the AL East, 30 games behind the [[1995 Boston Red Sox season|Boston Red Sox]]. That year, team owner Labatt Breweries was bought by [[Belgium|Belgian]]-based brewer [[Interbrew]], making the Blue Jays the second major league team owned by interests outside of North America, after their expansion cousins, the Seattle Mariners (then owned by Japanese video game company [[Nintendo]]).


1996 was [[1996 Toronto Blue Jays season|another mediocre year]] for the Jays, despite [[Pat Hentgen]]'s [[Cy Young Award]] (20–10, 3.22 ERA). [[Ed Sprague Jr.|Ed Sprague]] had a career year, hitting 36 home runs and driving in 101 runs. And the team's 74 wins did put them in fourth place, improving over 1995's last-place finish.
[[image:JaysEarly2000s.jpg|framed|right|Blue Jays logo ([[2003]]).]]


The Blue Jays started [[1997 Toronto Blue Jays season|their 1997 season]] with high hopes. Not only did they radically change their uniforms, the team signed former Boston Red Sox ace [[Roger Clemens]] to a $24.75 million contract. Clemens had one of the best pitching seasons ever, winning the pitcher's [[Triple Crown (baseball)|Triple Crown]] and leading the AL with a record of 21–7, a 2.05 ERA, and 292 strikeouts. This was not enough to lead the Jays to the postseason, however, as they finished last for the second time in three years with a record of 76–86. [[Cito Gaston]], the longtime manager who led the team to four division titles and two World Series crowns, was fired five games before the end of the season. The season did provide a unique experience for its fans with the advent of [[Interleague play]], when the Blue Jays faced their Canadian rival, the [[1997 Montreal Expos season|Montreal Expos]], for the first official games between the two teams. Before the start of [[1998 Toronto Blue Jays season|their 1998 season]], the Jays acquired closer [[Randy Myers]] and slugger [[Jose Canseco]]. Gaston was replaced with former Blue Jay [[Tim Johnson (baseball)|Tim Johnson]], who was a relative unknown as a manager. Despite mediocre hitting, strong pitching led by Clemens' second straight pitching Triple Crown (20–6, 2.65 ERA, 271 strikeouts) sparked the Blue Jays to an 88–74 record—their first winning season since 1993. However, this was only good enough to finish a distant third, 26 games behind the [[1998 New York Yankees season|New York Yankees]], who posted one of the greatest records in all of baseball history at 114–48. The Jays were, however, in contention for the wildcard spot until the final week.
Despite their hitting successes, poor pitching continued to plague the team. [[Roy Halladay]] was spectacular in winning his first [[Cy Young Award]], going 22-7, with a 3.25 ERA, but he didn't get much help from his fellow pitchers. Rookie [[Aquilino Lopez]] was a pleasant surprise out of the bullpen. [[Kelvim Escobar]] and former [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] player [[Mark Hendrickson]] were inserted into the [[rotation]] with their places in the [[bullpen]] filled by waiver acquisitions [[Doug Davis]] and [[Josh Towers]]. The closer role was a season-long revolving door, with nobody able to take hold of the reins. Trade speculation had focussed on the acquisitions of pitching at the expense of hitters, but in the end the team simply divested itself of impending free agent [[Shannon Stewart]] without getting a pitcher in return. Instead [[Bobby Kielty]], another outfielder with a much lower batting average than Stewart's, was obtained from the [[Minnesota Twins]] and later traded in [[November 2003]] to the [[Oakland Athletics]] for [[starting pitcher|starter]] [[Ted Lilly]]. The top four pitchers for the projected [[2004]] [[starting pitcher#rotation|rotation]] would include Halladay, Lilly, [[free agent]] [[Miguel Batista]], and the return of [[Pat Hentgen]].


Before the 1999 season, the Blue Jays traded Clemens to the Yankees for starting pitcher [[David Wells]], second baseman [[Homer Bush]] and relief pitcher [[Graeme Lloyd]]. They also fired manager Tim Johnson during spring training after he lied about several things (including killing people in the [[Vietnam War]]) to motivate his players. The Blue Jays had initially been willing to stand by Johnson. A blizzard of questions about his credibility during spring training, however, led Ash to fire him less than a month before opening day. Johnson was replaced with [[Jim Fregosi]], who managed the Phillies when they lost to the Blue Jays in the [[1993 World Series]]. The offence picked up somewhat in 1999, but the pitching suffered without Clemens, as the [[1999 Toronto Blue Jays season|Blue Jays]] finished at 84–78, in third place. After the 1999 season, the Blue Jays' original mascot for 20 years, BJ Birdy, was replaced by a duo named [[Toronto Blue Jays mascots|Ace and Diamond]].
After the spectacular turnaround in [[May 2003]], which helped the team move to just few games behind the wildcard leading [[Boston Red Sox]], team performance slowly returned to reality, as predicted by team management. Carlos Delgado was second in the voting for the [[MLB Most Valuable Player award|American League MVP]] although the Jays were in third place in their division. The Jays also announced that a new [[logo]] and new [[uniforms]] would be used as of [[January 1st]], [[2004]].
* Team Record 2003: 86 Wins - 76 Losses, W%- 0.531, GB- 15


On November 8, 1999, Toronto traded star outfielder [[Shawn Green]] to the [[Los Angeles Dodgers]] for left-handed relief pitcher [[Pedro Borbón Jr.|Pedro Borbón]] and right-fielder [[Raúl Mondesí]]. Green had told the Jays that he would not be re-signing when his contract was up at the end of the year (he wished to play closer to his home in Southern California).
====2004: Dreadful Rebuilding Process====
The 2004 season was a disappointing year for the Blue Jays right from the beginning. They started the season 0-8 at the [[Skydome]] and never started a lengthy winning streak. Much of that was due to injuries to All-Stars [[Carlos Delgado]], [[Vernon Wells (baseball player)|Vernon Wells]] and [[Roy Halladay]] among others. Although the additions of starting pitchers [[Ted Lilly]] and [[Miguel Batista]] and reliever [[Justin Speier]] were relatively successful, veteran [[Pat Hentgen]] faltered throughout the season and [[retired]] on [[July 24th]]. Rookies and [[minor league]] callups [[David Bush]], [[Jason Frasor]], [[Josh Towers]] and others filled the void in the rotation and the [[bullpen]]; however, inconsistent performances were evident. Most starting pitchers did not pitch further than the sixth inning; thus, the overused bullpen contributed to the frequent relinquishing of early scoring leads.


The [[2000 Toronto Blue Jays season|2000 season]] proved similar, as the Blue Jays had an 83–79 record, well out of the wild card race but only a slim {{frac|4|1|2}} games behind the three-time defending World Series champion [[2000 New York Yankees season|Yankees]] in the AL East, the first time since 1993 they had contended for the division. [[Carlos Delgado]] had a stellar year, hitting .344 with 41 home runs, 57 doubles, 137 RBI, 123 walks and 115 runs. In addition, six other players hit 20 or more home runs, an outstanding feat.
[[image:TorontoBlueJays.jpg|framed|right|Current Blue Jays logo ([[2004]]&ndash;present).]]


====2000–2001====
The offense really sputtered due to the injuries of Wells, Delgado, Catalanotto and others. Five different catchers were used: [[Greg Myers]], [[Bobby Estalella (baseball catcher)|Bobby Estalella]], [[Kevin Cash]], [[Gregg Zaun]], and rookie [[Guillermo Quiroz]]. Greg Myers was injured running the bases in Minnesota, early in the season, and was lost for the year. Bobby Estalella was called up, but he proved to be brittle as well. Gregg Zaun landed the starting catching job for the rest of the season. Kevin Cash continued to struggle from an offensive standpoint and would be moved in the [[offseason]]. The highly-touted Guillermo Quiroz was promoted from the minors near the end of the season.
[[File:BobFile FenwayPark 2001 3.jpg|thumb|[[Bob File]] pitching for the Blue Jays at [[Fenway Park]] during the [[2001 Major League Baseball season|2001]] season.]]
On September 1, 2000, [[Rogers Communications]] Inc. purchased 80% of the baseball club for $160 million,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ted-rogers-buys-the-blue-jays-1.253587|title=Ted Rogers buys The Blue Jays
|date=September 1, 2000|access-date=December 28, 2013|work=[[CBC News]]}}</ref> with Interbrew (later [[InBev]]) maintaining a 20% interest and the [[Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce]] relinquishing its 10% share. Rogers eventually acquired the 20% owned by Interbrew and now has full ownership of the team.


The [[2001 Toronto Blue Jays season|2001 season]] marked the 25th anniversary of the franchise's inception. [[Buck Martinez]], former catcher and broadcast announcer for the Blue Jays, took over as manager before the season began with a home game in Puerto Rico. The team had a disappointing season, falling back under .500 and finishing 80–82, with mediocre pitching and hitting. Delgado led the team again with 39 home runs and 102 RBI. After the season ended, the Jays fired Gord Ash, ending a seven-year tenure as general manager.
The once highly-regarded [[slugger]] [[Josh Phelps]] was limited to playing against lefthanded pitching and was traded to the [[Cleveland Indians]] for first baseman [[Eric Crozier]].


[[J. P. Ricciardi]], then director of player development under [[Oakland Athletics]] general manager [[Billy Beane]], was named Blue Jays' General Manager; he was expected to slash payroll immediately, stemming the tide of red ink. During the off-season, the team traded or let go of several popular players, including [[Alex Gonzalez (shortstop, born 1973)|Alex Gonzalez]], [[Paul Quantrill]], [[Brad Fullmer]] and [[closer (baseball)|closer]] [[Billy Koch]] to let talented youngsters such as [[Eric Hinske]] and [[Felipe López (baseball)|Felipe López]] get a chance to develop into major leaguers.
With the team struggling in last place and mired in a five-game losing streak, manager [[Carlos Tosca]] was fired on [[August 8th]], [[2004]] and was replaced by first-base coach [[John Gibbons]] through the end of the season. The Jays' trying year would also touch long-time radio announcer [[Tom Cheek]], who had to break his streak of calling all 4,306 regular season games in franchise history, upon the death of his father. Cheek had to take more time off later to remove a [[brain tumor]], and by the end of the season, Cheek only called the home games.


===2002–2009: The J. P. Ricciardi and Roy Halladay era===
Nevertheless, [[prospect|prospects]] [[Russ Adams]], [[Gabe Gross]], and [[Alexis Rios]] provided excitement for the fans. Adams hit his first major league [[home run]] in his second game, in which Gross also earned his own first major league [[grand slam (baseball)|grand slam]]. Alexis Rios was among the [[MLB Rookie of the Year Award]] candidates. However, the award went to [[Bobby Crosby]] of the [[Oakland Athletics]]. Rookie pitchers [[David Bush]], [[Gustavo Chacin]] and [[Jason Frasor]] also showed promise for the club's future.
====2002 season====
{{Main|2002 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The Blue Jays started the 2002 season with slow progress in performance. [[Buck Martinez]] was fired about a third of the way through the season, with a 20–33 record. He was replaced by third base coach [[Carlos Tosca]], an experienced minor league manager. They went 58–51 under Tosca to finish the season 78–84. [[Roy Halladay]] was relied on as the team's ace and rose to the challenge of being the team's top pitcher, finishing the season with a 19–7 record and 2.93 ERA. The hitters were led once again by [[Carlos Delgado]]. Promising young players were assigned to key roles; starting third baseman [[Eric Hinske]] won the Rookie of the Year Award at the season's conclusion, and 23-year-old centre fielder [[Vernon Wells]] had his first 100 RBI season.


* Team record 2002: 78 wins–84 losses, W%- 0.481, 25.5 games behind division leader, third in division
On [[October 2nd]], [[2004]], the Toronto Blue Jays announced the dismissals of pitching coach [[Gil Patterson]] and first-base coach [[Joe Breeden]], effective at the end of the season. One day later, the Blue Jays finished the 2004 campaign with a 3-2 loss against the [[New York Yankees]] in front of an announced crowd of 49,948. However, the Jays' ''[[annus horribilis]]'' continued after the game, when it was announced that former pitcher and current TV broadcaster [[John Cerutti]] died suddenly of natural causes at the age of 44.


====2003 season====
More losses to the Jays family came in the offseason. [[Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame]] member [[Bobby Mattick]], the manager from 1980 to 1981 and perhaps the best baseball man in the organization, suffered a [[strok]]e and died at the age of 89. Mattick had also served as the [[Vice President]] of Baseball Operations for the Blue Jays. A few days before [[Christmas]], the Jays also mourned the loss of former [[first baseman]] [[Doug Ault]], who had hit two [[home run]]s in the team's inaugural game in 1977; he was 54.
{{Main|2003 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The 2003 season was a surprise to both team management and baseball analysts. After a poor April, the team had its most successful month ever in May. Carlos Delgado led the majors in RBI, followed closely by Wells. Despite their hitting successes, poor pitching continued to plague the team. Halladay was an exception, winning his first [[Cy Young Award]], going 22–7, with a 3.25 ERA. In July, [[Shannon Stewart (baseball)|Shannon Stewart]] was traded to the [[Minnesota Twins]] for [[Bobby Kielty]], another outfielder with a much lower batting average than Stewart's. Although the Jays finished in third place in their division, Delgado was second in the voting for the [[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|American League MVP Award]]. In the off-season, Kielty was traded to the [[Oakland Athletics]] for starter [[Ted Lilly]].


* Team record 2003: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 15 games behind division leader, third in division
[[Rogers Communications]], the owner of the Jays, purchased SkyDome from [[Sportsco International]] in [[November 2004]] for approximately $25,000,000 [[Canadian dollar|CAD]] ($21,240,000 million [[USD]]), just a fraction of the construction cost.


====2004 season====
Just days after superstar Carlos Delgado became a free agent after the club refused [[arbitration]], the Jays announced the signing of [[Manitoban]] [[third baseman]] [[Corey Koskie]], formerly of the [[Minnesota Twins]]. One month after Koskie was inked, the Jays traded pitching prospect [[Adam Peterson]] to the [[Arizona Diamondbacks]] for corner [[infielder]]/[[Designated hitter|DH]] [[Shea Hillenbrand]].
{{Main|2004 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The 2004 season was a disappointing year for the Blue Jays right from the beginning. They started the season 0–8 at SkyDome and never started a lengthy winning streak. Much of that was due to injuries to All-Stars Carlos Delgado, Vernon Wells and Roy Halladay among others. Although the additions of starting pitchers Ted Lilly and [[Miguel Batista]] and reliever [[Justin Speier]] were relatively successful, veteran [[Pat Hentgen]] faltered throughout the season and retired on July 24. Rookies and minor league callups [[Dave Bush|David Bush]], [[Jason Frasor]], [[Josh Towers]] and others filled the void in the rotation and the bullpen; however, inconsistent performances were evident. With the team struggling in last place and mired in a five-game losing streak, manager [[Carlos Tosca]] was fired on August 8, 2004, and was replaced by first base coach [[John Gibbons]]. Long-time first baseman Carlos Delgado became a free agent in the off-season. Nevertheless, prospects [[Russ Adams]], [[Gabe Gross]], and [[Alex Ríos]] provided excitement for the fans. Rookie pitchers David Bush, [[Gustavo Chacín]] and Jason Frasor also showed promise for the club's future. The Blue Jays' lone MLB All-Star Game representative was Lilly.


* Team Record 2004: 67 Wins - 94 Losses, W%- 0.416, GB- 33.5
* Team record 2004: 67 wins–94 losses, W%- 0.416, 33.5 games behind division leader, fifth in division


====2005 season====
====2005: Showing promise, loss of a legend and opening the wallet====
[[Image:Toronto, Skydome, N.Y. Yankees vs. BlueJays.JPG|thumb|After the [[2004 Major League Baseball season|2004 season]], [[FieldTurf]] replaced [[AstroTurf]] as the Rogers Centre's playing surface.]]
On [[February 2nd]], [[2005]], several days after finalising the purchase of SkyDome by [[Rogers Communications]], Rogers, to the widespread chagrin and derision of Jays fans, renamed the stadium the [[Rogers Centre]]. In spite of the best efforts of the new ownership, a wide majority of Blue Jays fans continued (and still continue) to refer to the stadium as SkyDome. By the start of the season Rogers had upgraded the stadium with a new "[[Jumbotron|JumboTron]]" videoboard and added other [[state-of-the-art]] video screens around the stadium. Also, the [[AstroTurf]] surface was replaced by the more natural-looking [[FieldTurf]]. Owner [[Edward S. Rogers|Ted Rogers]] also promised a [[payroll]] increase to $210,000,000 over the next 3 years, which allowed the team to have a team payroll of $80,000,000 per year.


{{Main|2005 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The Blue Jays finished [[spring training]] with a 16-10 record. Among the stars of spring training was Gabe Gross, who tied the Jays' record for most home runs in spring training with eight (the previous record breaker was long time Blue Jay [[Carlos Delgado]]). The Jays were able to translate their success in spring training into an excellent start - the team led the AL East from early to mid-April and held their record around .500 until late August. The Jays were hit with the injury bug when third baseman Corey Koskie broke his [[finger]], taking him out of the lineup, but the club was pleasantly surprised with the performance of rookie callup [[Aaron Hill (baseball player)|Aaron Hill]] in his stead.
SkyDome was renamed Rogers Centre and was extensively renovated. The Blue Jays had a good start to the 2005 season. They led the AL East from early to mid-April and held their record around .500 until late August. The Jays were hit with the injury bug when third baseman [[Corey Koskie]] broke his finger, taking him out of the line-up, but the club was pleasantly surprised with the performance of rookie call-up [[Aaron Hill (baseball)|Aaron Hill]] in his stead. On July 8, just prior to the All-Star break, Blue Jays ace Roy Halladay was struck on the shin by a line drive, resulting in a fractured leg. Though Halladay's injury was hoped to be minor, the recovery process was met with constant delays, and eventually, he was out for the rest of the season. Prior to his injury, the Blue Jays were in serious wild card contention, but soon fell out of the playoff race. The team received glimpses of the future from September call-ups [[Guillermo Quiróz]], [[John-Ford Griffin]], and [[Shaun Marcum]]. Marcum made himself noteworthy by posting an ERA of 0.00 over five relief appearances and eight innings in September. Josh Towers also stepped up, showing largely unseen potential by going 7–5 with a 2.91 ERA in the second half of the season.


* Team record 2005: 80 wins–82 losses, W%- 0.494, 15 games behind division leader, third in division
On [[July 8th]], just prior to the All-Star break, Blue Jays ace [[Roy Halladay]] was struck on the shin by a line drive from Texas left fielder [[Kevin Mench]] and was placed on the DL with a fractured leg. The injury cost Halladay his chance to be the American League starter in the [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star Game]] in [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]]; his place on the All-Star squad was taken by Red Sox pitcher [[Matt Clement]]. Though Halladay's injury was hoped to be minor, the recovery process was met with constant delays, and Halladay did not play a single game in 2005 after the All-Star break. Team management officially announced that he would miss the rest of the season in August. The Halladay injury is seen by many as the negative turning point in the Jays season; the team had been in serious [[wild card (sports)|wild card]] contention at the time, but afterwards fell out of the race and failed to make the playoffs for the 12th consecutive year.


====2006 season====
On [[July 22nd]], Toronto traded utility infielder [[John McDonald (baseball)|John McDonald]] to the [[Detroit Tigers]] for cash considerations. This gave the Blue Jays an open spot on the roster so that [[Aaron Hill (baseball player)|Aaron Hill]] could stay with the team when [[Corey Koskie]] returned from injury.
{{Main|2006 Toronto Blue Jays season}}


In 2006, the team experienced its most successful season in years. On July 2, Troy Glaus, Vernon Wells, Roy Halladay, [[B. J. Ryan]], and Alex Ríos were picked to represent the Blue Jays at the All-Star Game.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060702&content_id=1534446&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor |title=Five Jays named to AL All-Star squad |first=Jordan |last=Bastian |date=July 2, 2006 |access-date=June 18, 2007 |publisher=MLB }}{{Dead link|date=July 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=no }}</ref> It was the largest number of Blue Jay All-Stars selected for the game since 1993. The team played well in the critical month of September, going 18–10. This, combined with the slumping of the [[2006 Boston Red Sox season|Boston Red Sox]], enabled the Blue Jays to take sole possession of second place in the American League East by the end of the season. This marked the first time that the Jays had finished above third place in their division since their World Championship season of 1993, and with the most wins since the 1998 season. On December 18, the Blue Jays announced that they had re-signed centre fielder Wells to a seven-year contract worth $126 million, which came into effect after the 2007 season.
On [[July 28th]], Toronto played in the longest game in franchise history, inningswise, an 18-inning marathon against the [[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim]] at Rogers Centre. The Jays won 2-1, after nearly five hours of play when [[Orlando Hudson]] hit a line drive past a drawn in infield, scoring [[Alex Rios]] from third base.


* Team record 2006: 87 wins–75 losses, W%- 0.537, 10 games behind division leader, second in division
The shutdown of Halladay for the remainder of the season seemed to affect the performance of the Jays. They went on a slump that brought their record under .500 in the beginning of September. From there, the Blue Jays finished the season 80-82 while receiving glimpses of the future from September call-ups [[Guillermo Quiroz]], [[John-Ford Griffin]], and [[Shaun Marcum]]. Marcum made himself noteworthy by posting an ERA of 0.00 over 5 relief appearances and 8 innings in September. Griffin hit his first career home run in the last game of the season and ended up going 4 for 13.


====2007 season====
[[Josh Towers]] also stepped up, showing largely unseen potential going 7-5 with a 2.91 ERA in the 2nd half of the year and a 13-12, 3.71 ERA season overall, making him arguably the unlikely ace of the Jays rotation with Halladay injured and [[Gustavo Chacín]] faltering somewhat after the All-Star break.
[[File:Dustin McGowan.jpg|thumb|right|[[Dustin McGowan]] pitching for the Blue Jays in the [[2007 Major League Baseball season|2007]] season.]]
{{Main|2007 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The 2007 season was blighted by persistent injuries, with 12 Blue Jays landing on the disabled list. The most serious injury was that of B. J. Ryan, who was out for the entire season having had [[Ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction|Tommy John surgery]]. Prior to the season, the team signed starting pitchers [[John Thomson (baseball)|John Thomson]], [[Tomo Ohka]], and [[Víctor Zambrano]]; each of them was released before the end of the season. However, young starters [[Shaun Marcum]] and [[Dustin McGowan]] had break-out years, with 12 wins each. On June 24, McGowan pitched a complete game one-hitter. On June 28, [[Frank Thomas (designated hitter)|Frank Thomas]] became the 21st major league player to hit [[500 home run club|500 career home runs]]. Aaron Hill also had a break-out year, setting a team record for second baseman with 47 doubles.


* Team record 2007: 83 wins–79 losses, W%- 0.512, 13 games behind division leader, third in division
The 2005 Jays inability to score with men in scoring position was a turning point in many games that ended up as losses, also contributing to the 80-82 record.


====2008 season====
On [[October 9th]], the Jays, along with their fans, mourned the loss of inaugural broadcaster [[Tom Cheek]]. Cheek, 66, succumbed to [[brain cancer]] after just over a year-long battle. Cheek had broadcasted 4,306 consecutive games since the first day of the franchise. His streak was ended in [[June 2004]] when he took time off to visit his ailing father.
{{Main|2008 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The Blue Jays' 2008 season featured a strong pitching staff, which led the major leagues with a 3.49 ERA. For much of the season, however, the team struggled to hit home runs and drive in runs. On May 24, starter [[Jesse Litsch]] set a team record, with 38 consecutive innings without giving up a walk. On June 20, following a five-game losing streak and with the Jays in last place in the AL East, management fired [[John Gibbons]] and several members of his coaching staff, and re-hired [[Cito Gaston]]. Meanwhile, Alex Ríos had 32 stolen bases, making him the first Blue Jay with 30 since 2001. On September 5, Roy Halladay earned his 129th career win, moving him into second spot on Toronto's all-time wins list. Halladay also came second in the voting for the Cy Young Award, after posting a 20–11 record and 2.78 ERA.


* Team record 2008: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 11 games behind division leader, fourth in division
In the off-season, general manager J.P. Ricciardi began to make good use of the money that had been granted to the Jays by Rogers Communications before the season. Rogers had given Ricciardi $210,000,000 over 3 years, which became $75,000,000 a season to spend, $25,000,000 more than the previous year. Ricciardi fulfilled the team's need for a stable [[closer (baseball)|closer]] by signing former [[Baltimore Orioles]] standout [[B.J. Ryan]] to the richest contract ever for a reliever - a 5-year, $47,000,000 on [[November 28th]]. Following that, the club awarded a 5-year, $55,000,000 contract to highly coveted starting pitcher [[A.J. Burnett]], formerly of the [[Florida Marlins]], on [[December 6th]]. Just a day later, the Jays acquired solid-hitting first baseman [[Lyle Overbay]] and right-handed pitching prospect [[Ty Taubenheim]] in a trade with the Milwaukee Brewers; with pitcher [[David Bush]], pitching prospect [[Zach Jackson]], and outfielder [[Gabe Gross]] going to Milwaukee


====2009 season====
On [[December 23rd]], [[2005]], [[Rogers Sportsnet]] reported that the Jays added a much needed 30 plus home run hitter to their lineup by getting third baseman [[Troy Glaus]] and minor league shortstop Sergio Santos in a trade with the [[Arizona Diamondbacks]]. In return, the Diamondbacks received second baseman and 2005 [[Gold Glove Award]] winner [[Orlando Hudson]] and pitcher [[Miguel Batista]]. Glaus passed a team physical on [[December 26th]], and the trade was officially announced the next day, with Glaus being introduced to the Toronto media.
[[File:Roy Halladay 2009 (1).jpg|thumb|Blue Jays pitcher [[Roy Halladay]] during the [[2009 Major League Baseball season|2009]] season.]]
{{Main|2009 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The 2009 season saw the addition of two new patches on the Blue Jays' uniforms: on the right arm, a bright red [[maple leaf]] (part of the [[Flag of Canada|Canadian flag]]), and on the left arm, a small black band with "TED" written on it, in reference to the late team owner [[Edward S. Rogers Jr.|Ted Rogers]], who died in the off-season.


On Opening Day at the Rogers Centre, the Blue Jays, led by Roy Halladay, beat the [[2009 Detroit Tigers season|Detroit Tigers]] 12–5. Aaron Hill and Roy Halladay both had excellent years and represented the Blue Jays at the [[2009 Major League Baseball All-Star Game|2009 All-Star Game]] in St. Louis. The Jays started the season well, posting a 27–14 record; however, immediately afterwards, the Jays fell into a nine-game losing streak and was never able to recover for the remainder of the season. In mid-August, GM J. P. Ricciardi allowed the Chicago White Sox to claim Alex Ríos off waivers. With two games remaining in what was a disappointing season, Ricciardi was fired on October 3. He was replaced by assistant general manager [[Alex Anthopoulos]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Bastian|first=Jordan|title=Ricciardi out as Blue Jays GM|url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20091003&content_id=7302990&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|date=October 3, 2009|access-date=October 3, 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091006025339/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20091003&content_id=7302990&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor|archive-date=October 6, 2009|df=mdy-all}}</ref>
* Team Record 2005: 80 Wins - 82 Losses, W%- 0.494, GB- 15


Despite a 75-win season, the Jays saw the strong return of Aaron Hill, who won the American League [[Major League Baseball Comeback Player of the Year Award|Comeback Player of the Year Award]] and the [[Silver Slugger Award|Silver Slugger]] for second base. [[Adam Lind]], who also had a strong season, earned the Silver Slugger for designated hitter.
====2006: A New Hope====


* Team record 2009: 75 wins–87 losses, W%- 0.463, 28 games behind division leader, fourth in division
[[Image:Jaysrogerscentre.jpg|thumb|300px|The "new" Toronto Blue Jays Playing at Rogers Centre, 2006]]


===2010–2015: The Alex Anthopoulos and José Bautista era===
On [[January 3rd]], [[2006]], J.P. Ricciardi signed free-agent catcher [[Jason Phillips]] to a minor league contract. Phillips, who hit .238 the previous season for the [[Los Angeles Dodgers]], also had an invitation to spring training, was supposed to have competed with [[Guillermo Quiroz]] for the role of the Blue Jays' backup catcher. Quiroz was later claimed on waivers by the [[Seattle Mariners]], and Phillips started the season with the team after Gregg Zaun was put on the disabled list.
====2010 season====
[[File:Drabek pic.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Kyle Drabek]] with the Blue Jays during the [[2010 Major League Baseball season|2010]] season. Drabek was acquired by the Jays in a multi-player trade involving Roy Halladay.]]
{{Main|2010 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
In the off-season, the Jays' ace [[Roy Halladay]] was traded to the [[Philadelphia Phillies]] for [[Kyle Drabek]], [[Travis d'Arnaud]], and [[Michael Taylor (baseball, born 1985)|Michael Taylor]]; Taylor was immediately traded to the [[Oakland Athletics]] for [[Brett Wallace]]. The team's significant free agent signings were that of catcher [[John Buck (baseball)|John Buck]] and shortstop [[Álex González (infielder, born 1977)|Álex González]].<ref>{{cite web |author=Jordan Bastian&nbsp;/&nbsp;MLB.com |url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20091126&content_id=7721268&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor |title=Blue Jays ink shortstop Gonzalez |website=Toronto Blue Jays |publisher=MLB |access-date=February 19, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330032537/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20091126&content_id=7721268&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor |archive-date=March 30, 2012 |df=mdy-all }}</ref>


The 2010 season was a surprising 10-win improvement over the last season. It was a career year for [[José Bautista]], who hit 54 home runs, breaking [[George Bell (outfielder)|George Bell]]'s franchise record of 47. In doing so, he became the 26th player to reach [[50 home run club|50 home runs]] and the first since [[Alex Rodriguez]] and [[Prince Fielder]] achieved the feat in 2007. The Blue Jays also set a franchise record for the most home runs in a single season as they hit 257, 13 more than their previous record of 244 set by the [[2000 Toronto Blue Jays season|2000 Blue Jays]]. The Blue Jays tied the [[1996 Baltimore Orioles season|1996 Baltimore Orioles]] for the third-most home runs by a team in a single season. Seven players (José Bautista, [[Vernon Wells]], [[Aaron Hill (baseball)|Aaron Hill]], [[Adam Lind]], [[Lyle Overbay]], John Buck, and [[Edwin Encarnación]]) hit 20 home runs or more throughout the season, tying an MLB record previously set by four teams, including the 2000 Blue Jays.
The trades for Glaus and Overbay in the off season created a glut of corner infielders for the Jays, as the team now had five players (Troy Glaus, Lyle Overbay, Eric Hinske, Corey Koskie, and Shea Hillenbrand) who could play third base, first base, or designated hitter. The Jays relieved some of this pressure on [[January 6th]], [[2006]] by trading Corey Koskie to the Brewers in the second deal between the two clubs in less than a month. Coming to the Blue Jays in return for Koskie was minor league pitcher [[Brian Wolfe]]. The Blue Jays also converted former third-baseman Eric Hinske, to right field.


On July 14, the Jays traded Álex González and two minor league prospects—left-handed pitcher [[Tim Collins (baseball)|Tim Collins]] and shortstop [[Tyler Pastornicky]]—to the Atlanta Braves for [[Jo-Jo Reyes]] and [[Yunel Escobar]].
On [[February 6th]], Toronto signed former Angels catcher [[Bengie Molina]] to a one-year contract worth with an option for a second. Three days later, Toronto wrapped up its off season moves by re-signing [[Shea Hillenbrand]] and [[Pete Walker]], each to a one year deal.


On August 7, catching prospect [[J. P. Arencibia]] made his major league debut. He went 4-for-5 with two home runs, including a home run hit on the first pitch he saw. The next day, starting pitcher [[Brandon Morrow]] came within one out of a [[no-hitter]], finishing with 17 strikeouts in a complete-game one-hitter.
Fox Sports News' Ken Rosenthal predicted that the Toronto Blue Jays would be the 2006 World Series Champions[http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/5455724].


* Team record 2010: 85 wins–77 losses, W%- 0.525, 11 games behind division leader, fourth in division
[http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060702&content_id=1534446&vkey=news_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor] On [[July 2nd]], [[2006]] Troy Glaus, Vernon Wells, Roy Halladay, B.J. Ryan, and Alex Rios (unable to play due to injury, replaced) were picked to go to the [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game]]. Along with them the manager [[John Gibbons]] was also picked as an assistant coach for the AL team. This was the most all stars selected for the game since 1993. The only [[AL]] team with more All-Stars than the Jays was the World Series champion the [[Chicago White Sox]], with six.[http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060707&content_id=1543972&vkey=allstar2006&fext=.jsp]


====2011 season====
On [[July 7th]], [[2006]] Troy Glaus was picked to compete in the 2006 [[Homerun Derby]], during the Homerun Derby, Troy only hit one home run and was eliminated in the first round.
{{Main|2011 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
Led by new manager [[John Farrell (baseball manager)|John Farrell]], the 2011 Blue Jays finished with a .500 record. After signing a five-year $64 million contract extension, José Bautista followed up his record-setting 2010 season with an arguably better season. He finished with a Major League-leading 43 home runs, along with 103 RBI, 132 walks, and a .302 average. Rookie J. P. Arencibia also had a successful year, setting a Blue Jays single-season record with 23 home runs by a catcher. In August, third base prospect [[Brett Lawrie]] made his Major League debut and hit .293 with 9 home runs, 4 triples, and 25 RBI, in just 43 games.


Starting pitcher and ace [[Ricky Romero]] led the team with 15 wins and a 2.92 ERA. He also became an All-Star for the first time in his career. The other starting pitchers were inconsistent, and Farrell used 12 different starters over the course of the season.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/al/bluejays/story/2012-03-12/blue-jays-spring-preview/53500120/1 |title=Spring preview: Rotation key for Blue Jays |work=USA Today |date=January 25, 2011 |access-date=March 12, 2012 |archive-date=March 13, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313151702/http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/al/bluejays/story/2012-03-12/blue-jays-spring-preview/53500120/1 |url-status=dead }}</ref> [[Jon Rauch]] and [[Frank Francisco]], both acquired in the off-season, shared the closer role.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.tsn.ca/mlb/story/?id=351016 |title=Blue Jays acquire Francisco in exchange for Napoli |publisher=Tsn.ca |date=January 25, 2011 |access-date=February 19, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110128023717/http://www.tsn.ca/mlb/story/?id=351016 |archive-date=January 28, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> They both struggled through the first half of the season, though Francisco improved in the last two months of the season, and had six saves in September.
On [[July 19th]], infielder Shea Hillenbrand was designated for assignment after an altercation with the team management. Shortly after Hillenbrand, along with reliever [[Vinnie Chulk]], was traded to the San Francisco Giants for reliever [[Jeremy Accardo]].


On July 31, the Blue Jays [[List of Major League Baseball retired numbers|retired their first number]], [[Roberto Alomar]]'s #12, one week after Alomar became the first [[National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Hall of Famer]] to be inducted as a Blue Jay.<ref>{{citation |last=Zwelling|first=Arden |title=Game Changers: The New Blue Jays |work=Sportsnet Magazine |date=December 12, 2012 }}</ref>
On [[August 3rd]], rookie second baseman [[Ryan Roberts]] started his first game in the MLB, and had his first hit, which was a homerun. He is one of few Blue Jays rookies to have his first hit a homerun in his first start.


* Team record 2011: 81 wins–81 losses, W%- 0.500, 16 games behind division leader, fourth in division
On [[August 12th]], the Blue Jays got the Minnesota Twins to hit into 6 double plays tying a Blue Jays record set on [[April 16th]], [[1996]]. (Blue Jays vs. Detroit).


====2012 season====
On [[August 16th]], Blue Jays traded reliever Scott Schoeneweis to the Cincinnati Reds for a player to be named later.
[[File:Jose Bautista of the Toronto Blue Jays, June 30, 2012.jpg|thumb|Jose Bautista warming up prior to a game against the [[Los Angeles Angels]] during the [[2012 Major League Baseball season|2012]] season.]]
{{main|2012 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
The 2012 season was an injury-plagued year for the Blue Jays, having used 31 total pitchers, which set a franchise record.<ref name="theglobe">{{cite news |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/baseball/a-season-to-forget-in-blue-jay-land/article4583808/ |title=A season to forget in Blue Jay land |date=October 2, 2012 |work=[[The Globe and Mail]]}}</ref> In June, three starting pitchers (Brandon Morrow, [[Kyle Drabek]], and [[Drew Hutchison (baseball)|Drew Hutchison]]) were lost to injury in a span of four days, two of whom required [[Ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction|Tommy John surgery]];<ref name="theglobe"/> in addition, starters [[Dustin McGowan]] and [[Jesse Litsch]] missed the entire season due to injury. In the second half of the season, some key players in Toronto's line-up, including [[2012 Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star]] José Bautista, missed a significant amount of playing time due to injury, sending the team into a freefall and culminating in a 73–89 record. Despite the underachievements of Ricky Romero and Adam Lind, [[Casey Janssen]] established himself as a reliable closer (22 [[save (baseball)|SV]], 2.52 ERA) and Edwin Encarnación developed into one of the league's best power hitters (.280 average, 42 home runs, 110 RBI).


On April 5, 2012, the team opened on the road in Cleveland, where they beat the Indians 7–4 in 16 full innings, during this game they set the record of the longest opening-day game in the Major League history. The previous record of 15 innings had been set by the Washington Senators and Philadelphia Athletics on April 13, 1926, and tied by the Detroit Tigers and the Indians on April 19, 1960.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cbc.ca/sports/baseball/mlb/story/2012/04/05/sp-mlb-toronto-blue-jays-indians-opener.html |title=Blue Jays outlast Indians in 16-inning marathon opener |date=April 5, 2012 |work=[[CBC Sports]]}}</ref>
==Players==
===Current roster===
{{:Toronto Blue Jays roster}}


On April 20, the Jays turned a [[triple play]] against the Kansas City Royals in a 4–3 win. It was the first triple play they turned since September 21, 1979.<ref>{{cite news|last=Zwolinski|first=Mark|title=Blue Jays turn triple play in 4-3 win over Kansas City Royals|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/mlb/bluejays/article/1165692--blue-jays-show-faith-in-saturday-starter-drew-hutchison|newspaper=[[Toronto Star]]|date=April 21, 2012|access-date=April 22, 2018}}</ref>
===[[Baseball Hall of Fame]]rs===
The Blue Jays have had 3 future Hall of Famers play for them but none are inducted into the Hall as Blue Jays. They are:


* Team record 2012: 73 wins–89 losses, W%- 0.451, 22 games behind division leader, fourth in division
* 35 [[Phil Niekro]], Pithcer, 1987
* 32 [[Dave Winfield]], Outfielder, 1992
* 19 [[Paul Molitor]], Designated hitter/first baseman, 1993-1995
* 42 [[Jackie Robinson]], retired by the entire league


===Level Of Excellence===
====2013 season====
[[File:Mike DiMuro and John Gibbons in 2013 (8679776768).jpg|thumb|[[John Gibbons]] arguing with umpire [[Mike DiMuro]]. He returned as the Blue Jays manager prior to the start of the [[2013 Major League Baseball season|2013]] season.]]
While the Blue Jays have never retired a number (except for the number 42 retired by all of baseball for Jackie Robinson), they have instituted a "Level of Excellence" in between the 300 and 400 levels in the right-field, and left-field at the [[Rogers Centre]], where the following Jays personnel are honored:
{{main|2013 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
During the off-season, the Toronto Blue Jays traded Farrell to the [[Boston Red Sox]] per his wishes, and former manager [[John Gibbons]] returned to manage the Blue Jays. The Jays also made a blockbuster trade with the [[Miami Marlins]], leading to a series of other blockbuster trades and signings, including with the [[New York Mets]] for National League [[Cy Young Award|Cy Young winner]] [[R. A. Dickey]] and free agents including [[Melky Cabrera]]. On June 8, the Blue Jays played the then-longest game in franchise history by innings, winning 4–3 in 18 innings against the visiting [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]], which would be broken one season later.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2013/06/08/toronto_blue_jays_win_longest_game_in_18_innings.html|title=Toronto Blue Jays win longest game in 18 innings|last=Kennedy|first=Brendan|work=TheStar.com|date=June 8, 2013|access-date=June 8, 2013}}</ref> The Jays matched their franchise record of 11 consecutive wins in a 13–5 home win over the [[Baltimore Orioles]] on June 23.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/gameday/index.jsp?gid=2013_06_23_balmlb_tormlb_1&mode=recap_home&c_id=tor|title=Blowout win puts Blue Jays firmly in AL East race|last=Chisholm|first=Gregor|work=MLB.com|date=June 23, 2013|access-date=June 23, 2013}}</ref> However, the Jays had a losing season overall.
* Team record 2013: 74 wins–88 losses, W%- 0.457, 23 games behind division leader, fifth in division, 17.5 games behind AL wild card cutoff, eighth in AL wild card


====2014 season====
* 37 [[Dave Stieb]], Pitcher, 1978-1992, 1998
{{main|2014 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
* 11 [[George Bell (baseball player)|George Bell]], Leftfielder, 1981, 1983-1990
Pitcher [[Roy Halladay]] signed a one-day contract with the Blue Jays before retiring from baseball, citing injuries. The Jays had a nine-game win streak from May 20 to 28, as well as wins in 18 of 21 between May 15 and June 6.
* 1 [[Tony Fernandez]], Shortstop, 1983-1990, 1993, 1998-1999, 2001
On August 10, the Blue Jays played the longest game in franchise history by both time and innings, winning 6–5 in 19 innings and playing 6 hours, 37 minutes against the visiting Detroit Tigers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/gameday/index.jsp?gid=2014_08_10_detmlb_tormlb_1&mode=box|title=Detroit Tigers at Toronto Blue Jays – August 10, 2014|work=MLB.com|access-date=August 10, 2014}}</ref>
* 43 [[Cito Gaston]], Manager, 1989-1997

* 29 [[Joe Carter]], Rightfielder/first baseman, 1991-1997
* Team record 2014: 83 wins–79 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|83|79}}, 13 games behind division leader, third in division, 5 games behind AL wild card cutoff, sixth in AL wild card
* 4306 [[Tom Cheek]], Broadcaster, 1977-2005, number of consecutive games he broadcast (4,306), 1977-2004

* [[Pat Gillick]], General Manager, 1977-95
====2015: Return to the playoffs, AL East champions====
{{main|2015 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
During the off-season, the Jays signed Toronto-born catcher [[Russell Martin (baseball)|Russell Martin]]<ref>{{cite news|last1=MacLeod|first1=Robert|title=Blue Jays make Russell Martin signing official|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/baseball/blue-jays-make-russell-martin-signing-official/article21636268/|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=Globe and Mail|date=November 18, 2014}}</ref> through free agency. The Jays acquired [[Marco Estrada (baseball)|Marco Estrada]],<ref>{{cite news|last1=Lott|first1=John|title=Toronto Blue Jays trade Adam Lind, GM hopes it will pave the way for a roster shake-up|url=http://sports.nationalpost.com/2014/11/01/toronto-blue-jays-trade-first-baseman-adam-lind-to-brewers-for-right-hander-marco-estrada/|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=National Post|date=November 1, 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://archive.today/20141101193026/http://sports.nationalpost.com/2014/11/01/toronto-blue-jays-trade-first-baseman-adam-lind-to-brewers-for-right-hander-marco-estrada/|archive-date=November 1, 2014|df=mdy-all}}</ref> [[Devon Travis]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2014/11/12/blue_jays_trade_anthony_gose_to_tigers.html|title=Blue Jays trade Anthony Gose to Tigers|last=Kennedy|first=Brendan|work=thestar.com|date=November 12, 2014|access-date=December 16, 2014|archive-date=November 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141116024010/http://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2014/11/12/blue_jays_trade_anthony_gose_to_tigers.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> All-Star third baseman [[Josh Donaldson]],<ref>{{cite news|last1=Kennedy|first1=Brendan|title=Blue Jays trade Brett Lawrie to A's for Josh Donaldson|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2014/11/28/blue_jays_trade_brett_lawrie_to_as_for_josh_donaldson_reports.html|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=Toronto Star|date=November 28, 2014}}</ref> and [[Michael Saunders]]<ref>{{cite news|last1=Stark|first1=Jayson|title=J.A. Happ traded to Mariners|url=http://espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/id/11974742/seattle-mariners-trade-michael-saunders-toronto-blue-jays-ja-happ|access-date=December 16, 2014|publisher=ESPN|date=December 3, 2014}}</ref> in trades. The Jays claimed [[Justin Smoak]],<ref>{{cite news|last1=Divish|first1=Ryan|title=Justin Smoak claimed off waivers by the Blue Jays|url=http://blogs.seattletimes.com/mariners/2014/10/28/justin-smoak-claimed-off-waivers-by-the-blue-jays/|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=Seattle Times|date=October 28, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171004085044/http://blogs.seattletimes.com/mariners/2014/10/28/justin-smoak-claimed-off-waivers-by-the-blue-jays/|archive-date=October 4, 2017|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> [[Andy Dirks]],<ref name="Toronto Sun">{{cite news|title=Blue Jays add Andy Dirks, Jeff Francis|url=http://www.torontosun.com/2014/10/31/blue-jays-add-andy-dirks-jeff-francis|access-date=December 16, 2014|newspaper=Toronto Sun|date=October 31, 2014}}</ref> and [[Chris Colabello]] off waivers.<ref>{{cite news|title=Toronto Blue Jays claim first baseman and outfielder Chris Colabello off waivers|url=http://sports.nationalpost.com/2014/12/08/toronto-blue-jays-claim-first-baseman-and-outfielder-chris-colabello-off-waivers/|archive-url=https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20141208220018/http://sports.nationalpost.com/2014/12/08/toronto-blue-jays-claim-first-baseman-and-outfielder-chris-colabello-off-waivers/|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 8, 2014|access-date=December 16, 2014|agency=Canadian Press|work=National Post|date=December 8, 2014|df=mdy-all}}</ref> However, Dirks, along with [[John Mayberry Jr.]], were eventually non–tendered; the Jays later signed Dirks to a minor league contract.<ref>{{cite news|title=Blue Jays make Andy Dirks, John Mayberry Jr and Justin Smoak free agents|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/baseball/blue-jays-make-andy-dirks-john-mayberry-jr-and-justin-smoak-free-agents/article21903470/|access-date=December 16, 2014|agency=Associated Press|work=Globe and Mail|date=December 3, 2014}}</ref> [[Melky Cabrera]]<ref>{{cite news|last1=Sullivan|first1=Paul|title=Melky Cabrera deal official: $42 million from White Sox over 3 years|url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/whitesox/chi-melky-cabrera-on-board--sox-20141215-story.html|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=Chicago Tribune|date=December 15, 2014}}</ref> and [[Brandon Morrow]]<ref>{{cite news|last1=Kennedy|first1=Brendan|title=Oft-injured Blue Jays starter Brandon Morrow signs with San Diego Padres|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2014/12/16/oftinjured_blue_jays_starter_brandon_morrow_signs_with_san_diego_padres.html|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=Toronto Star|date=December 16, 2014|archive-date=December 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141216232145/http://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2014/12/16/oftinjured_blue_jays_starter_brandon_morrow_signs_with_san_diego_padres.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> left through free agency and [[Juan Francisco]] was claimed off waivers by the Boston Red Sox.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Kennedy|first1=Brendan|title=Red Sox claim Juan Francisco on waivers from Blue Jays|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/2014/11/19/red_sox_claim_juan_francisco_on_waivers_from_blue_jays.html|access-date=December 16, 2014|work=Toronto Star|date=November 19, 2014}}</ref>
[[File:Blue Jays clinch 2015 AL East.jpg|thumb|left|The Blue Jays celebrate after clinching the American League East in [[2015 Major League Baseball season|2015]]; they went as far as the [[2015 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], only to lose against the eventual [[2015 World Series|World Series]]-winning Kansas City Royals.]]
The Jays later traded [[José Reyes (infielder)|José Reyes]] and pitching prospects [[Miguel Castro]], [[Jeff Hoffman]], and Jesus Tinoco to the [[Colorado Rockies]] for All-Star shortstop [[Troy Tulowitzki]] and reliever [[LaTroy Hawkins]]. Two days later, they acquired All-Star pitcher [[David Price (baseball)|David Price]] from the Detroit Tigers in exchange for pitching prospects [[Daniel Norris]], [[Matthew Boyd (baseball)|Matt Boyd]], and [[Jairo Labourt]].

The Jays had two 11-game winning streaks during this season. On September 25, the Blue Jays clinched a playoff berth, ending the longest active playoff drought in North American professional sports (see [[List of Major League Baseball franchise postseason droughts]]).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2015/09/26/blue-jays-clinch-first-playoff-spot-since-1993.html|title=Toronto Blue Jays clinch playoff spot for first time in 22 years|last=Kennedy|first=Brendan|work=thestar.com|date=September 25, 2015|access-date=September 26, 2015}}</ref> They subsequently claimed the AL East division title on September 30, after defeating the Baltimore Orioles 15–2 in the first game of a doubleheader.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sbnation.com/mlb/2015/9/30/9428603/toronto-blue-jays-american-league-east-champions-2015|title=Blue Jays clinch AL East|date=September 30, 2015}}</ref>

The Blue Jays faced the [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]] in the [[2015 American League Division Series|ALDS]]. After losing back-to-back home games, they won the next three games in a row to take the five-game series, advancing to the [[2015 American League Championship Series|ALCS]]; a three-game comeback series victory had not been accomplished since 2012 by the [[San Francisco Giants]].<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/blue-jays-advance-to-alcs-after-emotional-win-over-rangers/ | title=Blue Jays advance to ALCS after emotional win over Rangers - Sportsnet.ca}}</ref> During game five of the series in Toronto, Blue Jays' [[right fielder]] [[José Bautista]] executed what Andrew Keh of ''[[The New York Times]]'' described as possibly "the most ostentatious [[bat flip]] in MLB history" after hitting a go-ahead, three-run [[home run]] off Rangers relief pitcher [[Sam Dyson]].<ref name="akeh">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/16/sports/baseball/bat-flip-bautista-blue-jays.html|title=Baseball reaches a flipping point|last=Keh|first=Andrew|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=October 15, 2015|access-date=November 11, 2015}}</ref> Bautista wrote an article about the bat flip published in November 2015 in ''[[The Players' Tribune]]''.<ref name="Bautista">{{cite web|url=http://www.theplayerstribune.com/jose-bautista-bat-flip/|title=Are you flipping kidding me?|last=Bautista|first=José|author-link=José Bautista|others=The Players' Tribune staff|publisher=[[The Players' Tribune]]|date=November 9, 2015|access-date=November 17, 2015}}</ref>

The Blue Jays then faced the [[Kansas City Royals]] in the [[2015 American League Championship Series|ALCS]], losing the series 4–2 in Kansas City; the Royals would eventually win the [[2015 World Series|World Series]].<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/blue-jays-season-ends-1.3287101 | title=Blue Jays tough playoff loss ends season of discovery &#124; CBC News}}</ref>

After the playoffs, Donaldson was named [[Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award|AL MVP]], becoming the first Blue Jay to win the award since [[George Bell (outfielder)|George Bell]] in 1987.

* Team record 2015: 93 wins–69 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|93|69}}

===2016–present: The Ross Atkins era===
====2016: Wild Card winners====
{{main|2016 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
Upon the expiration of [[Paul Beeston]]'s contract, [[Mark Shapiro (sports executive)|Mark Shapiro]] replaced him as president of the Blue Jays. Alex Anthopoulos resigned two months after the hiring of Shapiro. [[Ross Atkins (baseball)|Ross Atkins]] subsequently took his place.

On October 2, 2016, the Blue Jays clinched their first Wild Card berth with a Detroit Tigers loss to the Atlanta Braves. On October 4, 2016, the Blue Jays defeated the [[Baltimore Orioles]] in the [[2016 American League Wild Card Game|American League Wild Card Game]] in extra innings, via a walk-off three-run home run by [[Edwin Encarnación]] in the bottom of the 11th inning. On October 9, 2016, the Blue Jays completed a sweep of the Texas Rangers in the [[2016 American League Division Series|American League Division Series]] to advance to the American League Championship Series for the second consecutive year. On October 19, 2016, the Blue Jays were eliminated from World Series contention with a 3–0 loss to the [[Cleveland Indians]] in Game 5 of the [[2016 American League Championship Series|American League Championship Series]].

* Team record 2016: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|89|73}}

====2017 season====
{{main|2017 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
On November 11, 2016, it was announced that Toronto had signed designated hitter [[Kendrys Morales]] to a three-year, $33 million deal.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://sports.yahoo.com/news/report-blue-jays-sign-kendrys-morales-to-three-year-deal-213010326.html|title=Report: Blue Jays sign Kendrys Morales to three-year deal|website=sports.yahoo.com|date=November 11, 2016 }}</ref> The contract became official on November 18.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://m.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article/209159782/blue-jays-sign-free-agent-kendrys-morales/|title=Blue Jays announce signing of slugger Morales|last=Kruth|first=Cash|work=MLB.com|date=November 18, 2016|access-date=November 18, 2016|archive-date=November 19, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161119061449/http://m.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article/209159782/blue-jays-sign-free-agent-kendrys-morales/|url-status=dead}}</ref>
[[File:Roberto Osuna May 2017.jpg|left|thumb|[[Roberto Osuna]] during the [[2017 Major League Baseball season|2017]] season]]
On December 5, 2016, [[Steve Pearce (baseball)|Steve Pearce]] signed a two-year, $12.5 million contract with Toronto.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/report-blue-jays-sign-steve-pearce-two-year-deal/ |title=Blue Jays sign Steve Pearce to two-year, $12.5M deal |work=sportsnet.ca |date=December 5, 2016 |access-date=December 5, 2016 |first=Ben |last=Nicholson-Smith}}</ref> On January 5, 2017, [[Edwin Encarnación]] signed a three-year, $60 million contract with the Cleveland Indians.<ref>{{cite web |title=Indians sign free agent Edwin Encarnación to a three-year contract |url=http://m.indians.mlb.com/news/article/212729276/indians-introduce-edwin-encarnacion/ |access-date=January 5, 2017 |first=Jordan |last=Bastian |work=mlb.com |date=January 5, 2017 |archive-date=January 5, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170105173832/http://m.indians.mlb.com/news/article/212729276/indians-introduce-edwin-encarnacion/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> On January 18, 2017, Bautista signed a one-year, $18 million contract with the Blue Jays. The contract includes a $17 million mutual option for the 2018 season, as well as a $20 million vesting option for 2019.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://m.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article/213596024/jose-bautista-signs-1-year-deal-with-blue-jays/|title=Bautista returns to Blue Jays on 1-year deal|last1=Chisholm|first1=Gregor|last2=Sanchez|first2=Jesse|work=MLB.com|date=January 18, 2017|access-date=January 18, 2017|archive-date=January 18, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170118203927/http://m.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article/213596024/jose-bautista-signs-1-year-deal-with-blue-jays/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The following day, Michael Saunders signed with the [[Philadelphia Phillies]]. However, in late June, the Phillies released Saunders and the Jays signed him to a minor league contract.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/blue-jays-sign-michael-saunders-minor-league-deal/|title=Blue Jays sign Michael Saunders to minor-league deal|last=Nicholson-Smith|first=Ben|work=[[Sportsnet]]|date=June 28, 2017|access-date=June 29, 2017}}</ref>

The Blue Jays wore special [[National colours of Canada|red-and-white]] uniforms at select games during the 2017 season to celebrate the [[150th anniversary of Canada]].<ref>{{cite press release|title=Blue Jays unveil new 'Canadiana' uniforms|url=https://www.mlb.com/press-release/blue-jays-unveil-new-canadiana-uniforms-213966278|publisher=[[MLB Advanced Media]]|website=BlueJays.com|date=January 20, 2017|access-date=May 19, 2020}}</ref>

* Team record 2017: 76 wins–86 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|76|86}}, 17 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 9 games behind AL wild card cutoff, eighth in AL wild card

====2018 season====
{{main|2018 Toronto Blue Jays season}}

The Blue Jays declined their mutual option on [[José Bautista]], allowing him to enter free agency. He then signed with the [[Atlanta Braves]], later the [[New York Mets]], and eventually with the Philadelphia Phillies.

The Blue Jays traded two prospects to the [[San Diego Padres]] for [[Yangervis Solarte]]. The Blue Jays also acquired [[Curtis Granderson]] and [[Seung-hwan Oh]] as free agents.

On June 22, Roberto Osuna was [[List of Major League Baseball players suspended for domestic violence|suspended for 75 games]] after being accused of [[sexual assault]] on May 8 and applied retroactively from the date of the incident.

In July, the Blue Jays traded Pearce to the Boston Red Sox for a prospect, [[Santiago Espinal]]. They also dealt three pitchers: J. A. Happ to the New York Yankees, Seung-hwan Oh to the Colorado Rockies, and Roberto Osuna to the Houston Astros.

In August, the Blue Jays traded Josh Donaldson to the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named later, later revealed to be a pitching prospect, [[Julian Merryweather]]. The Blue Jays also traded Curtis Granderson to the [[Milwaukee Brewers]] for a prospect.

On September 26, it was confirmed by the Blue Jays that manager [[John Gibbons]] would not return for the [[2019 Toronto Blue Jays season|2019 season]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Armstrong |first1=Laura |title=Blue Jays make it official: John Gibbons won't be back as manager next year |url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2018/09/26/blue-jays-to-make-it-official-today-john-gibbons-wont-be-back-as-manager-next-year.html |newspaper=Toronto Star |access-date=September 27, 2018 |date=September 26, 2018}}</ref>

* Team record 2018: 73 wins–89 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|73|89}}, 35 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 24 games behind AL wild card cutoff, seventh in AL wild card

====2019 season====
{{main|2019 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
[[File:Vladimir Guerrero Jr.jpg|right|thumb|Vladimir Guerrero Jr. during the [[2019 Major League Baseball season|2019]] season]]
On October 25, 2018, the Blue Jays announced that [[Charlie Montoyo]] had been hired as their new manager.<ref name="Blue Jays hire Rays coach Montoyo as skipper">{{cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/blue-jays-tab-charlie-montoyo-as-manager/c-299694134|title=Blue Jays hire Rays coach Montoyo as skipper|last=Chisholm|first=Gregor|date=October 25, 2018|publisher=Major League Baseball|work=[[MLB.com]]|access-date=October 25, 2018}}</ref>

Early in the season, the Blue Jays traded [[Kendrys Morales]] to the [[Oakland Athletics]] and [[Kevin Pillar]] to the [[San Francisco Giants]].

During the season, the Blue Jays called up [[Vladimir Guerrero Jr.]], [[Cavan Biggio]], and [[Bo Bichette]] for the first time. The three are [[List of second-generation Major League Baseball players|second-generation Major League Baseball players]] with the first two also being sons of [[National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Hall of Famers]] [[Vladimir Guerrero|Vladimir Guerrero Sr.]] and [[Craig Biggio]], respectively; Bo Bichette is the son of [[Dante Bichette]].

Nearing the trade deadline, the Blue Jays traded [[Marcus Stroman]] to the New York Mets and [[Aaron Sanchez (baseball)|Aaron Sanchez]] to the Houston Astros.

* Team record 2019: 67 wins–95 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|67|95}}, 36 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 29 games behind AL wild card cutoff, ninth in AL wild card

====2020 season: Temporarily in Buffalo====
{{main|2020 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
[[File:Sahlen Field - Toronto Blue Jays (51325049130).jpg|thumb|right|A Blue Jays home game at [[Sahlen Field]] in [[Buffalo, New York]] in July 2021]]
Over the 2019–20 off-season, the Blue Jays signed free agents [[Tanner Roark]]<ref>{{cite news|last1=Matheson|first1=Keegan|last2=Brudnicki|first2=Alexis|title=Roark, Blue Jays finalize 2-year deal|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/tanner-roark-signs-with-blue-jays|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|website=BlueJays.com|date=December 18, 2019|access-date=December 18, 2019}}</ref> and [[Hyun-jin Ryu]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Harrigan|first=Thomas|title=Blue Jays sign left-hander Ryu to 4-year deal|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/hyun-jin-ryu-deal-with-blue-jays|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|website=BlueJays.com|date=December 27, 2019|access-date=January 2, 2020}}</ref> The Blue Jays also signed [[Shun Yamaguchi]] from the [[Yomiuri Giants]], the first player the Blue Jays successfully signed via the [[posting system]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Matheson|first=Keegan|title=Yamaguchi's deal with Blue Jays finalized|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/blue-jays-shun-yamaguchi-deal|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|website=BlueJays.com|date=December 28, 2019|access-date=May 5, 2020}}</ref>

On January 18, 2020, the Toronto Blue Jays unveiled a new blue alternate uniform.<ref>{{cite press release|title=Blue Jays unveil #NEWBLUE alternate uniform|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/press-release/press-release-blue-jays-unveil-newblue-alternate-uniform|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|website=BlueJays.com|date=January 18, 2020|access-date=May 5, 2020}}</ref>

On July 24, 2020, it was announced that the Toronto Blue Jays would play a majority of their home games in [[Buffalo, New York]], at their [[Triple-A (baseball)|Triple-A]] affiliate [[Buffalo Bisons]] ballpark, [[Sahlen Field]], as the Canadian government disallowed the Blue Jays and their opponents from playing in Canada during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].<ref>{{cite press release|title=Blue Jays will play 'majority' of home games in Buffalo|url=https://www.cbc.ca/sports/baseball/mlb/blue-jays-home-games-buffalo-1.5661735|website=cbc.ca|date=July 24, 2020|access-date=July 24, 2020}}</ref>

The Blue Jays reached [[2020 American League Wild Card Series|the Wild Card series of the postseason]], only to be swept by the Tampa Bay Rays in two games. The Blue Jays scored only three runs total in the two games.

* Team record 2020: 32 wins–28 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|32|28}}

====2021 season: Temporarily in Dunedin and Buffalo====
{{main|2021 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
On successive days in January 2021, the Blue Jays signed relief pitchers [[Kirby Yates]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/news/kirby-yates-blue-jays|title=Toronto adds high-upside reliever Kirby Yates|website=MLB.com}}</ref> and [[Tyler Chatwood]],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/news/tyler-chatwood-deal-blue-jays|title=Blue Jays add depth with RHP Chatwood|website=MLB.com}}</ref> and outfielder [[George Springer]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/news/george-springer-deal-blue-jays|title=Springer, Blue Jays finalize 6-year deal|website=MLB.com}}</ref> The Blue Jays also signed infielder [[Marcus Semien]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Blue Jays officially announce Marcus Semien signing|url=https://int-www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/blue-jays-officially-announce-marcus-semien-signing/|access-date=2021-07-30|website=Sportsnet.ca|language=en}}</ref> However, Yates was out for the entire season to recover from [[Ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction|Tommy John surgery]].

The Toronto Blue Jays played their home games in [[TD Ballpark]] in [[Dunedin, Florida]] until June 1 when they moved back to Sahlen Field in Buffalo.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/article/sources-blue-jays-moving-back-buffalos-sahlen-field-june-1/ |title=Blue Jays announce move back to Buffalo's Sahlen Field for June 1 |work=Sportsnet |last=Davidi |first=Shi |date=May 5, 2021 |access-date=July 7, 2021 }}</ref> On July 16, the Blue Jays announced that they would finally return to Rogers Centre in Toronto on July 30 after the Canadian government allowed the Blue Jays and their opponents to play in Canada.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Blue Jays Receive National Interest Exemption To Return To Canada On July 30|url=https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2021/07/blue-jays-receive-national-interest-exemption-to-return-to-canada.html|access-date=July 16, 2021|website=MLB Trade Rumors.com|date=July 16, 2021 }}</ref>

[[2019 Major League Baseball draft|2019 first-round draft]] pick and pitcher [[Alek Manoah]] was called up to the majors for the first time this season.

Despite having 91 wins in 2021, the Toronto Blue Jays were fourth in the American League East and one game back of the Wild Card cutoff, preventing them from reaching the postseason.

* Team record 2021: 91 wins–71 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|91|71}}, 9 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 1 game behind AL wild card cutoff, third in AL wild card.

====2022 season: Full return to Toronto since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic====
{{main|2022 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
During the off-season, the Blue Jays signed [[Kevin Gausman]], [[Yimi García]], and [[Yusei Kikuchi]] as [[Robbie Ray]], Marcus Semien, and Kirby Yates left for free agency. The off-season is mainly affected by [[2021–22 Major League Baseball lockout|a lockout that lasted from December 2021 to March 2022]]. After the lockout, the Blue Jays traded for infielder [[Matt Chapman]] from the [[Oakland Athletics]], as well as traded Randal Grichuk for [[Raimel Tapia]]. On July 13, the team released [[Charlie Montoyo]] as the manager for the team. With his four seasons with Toronto (2019–2022), he had a win-loss record of 236–235 (.501), and made it to the playoffs once ([[2020 American League Wild Card Series|2020 ALWC]]). The new interim manager is bench coach [[John Schneider (baseball)|John Schneider]]. At the trade deadline, the Blue Jays traded for utility player [[Whit Merrifield]] from the [[Kansas City Royals]]. After the trade deadline, the Blue Jays claimed outfielder [[Jackie Bradley Jr.]] from waivers.

The Blue Jays clinched home advantage for the [[2022 American League Wild Card Series|American League Wild Card Series]] and hosted the [[Seattle Mariners]]. However, the Mariners swept the Blue Jays in two games, overcoming an 8–1 deficit in game 2.

* Team record 2022: 92 wins–70 losses, W%- {{Winning percentage|92|70}}

====2023 season: Continued playoff failure====
{{main|2023 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
During the off-season, the Blue Jays traded outfielder [[Teoscar Hernández]] to the Seattle Mariners for relief pitcher [[Erik Swanson]] and pitching prospect [[Adam Macko]]. The Blue Jays hired [[Don Mattingly]] as the new bench coach. The Blue Jays later signed starting pitcher [[Chris Bassitt]] and outfielder [[Kevin Kiermaier]] and traded catcher [[Gabriel Moreno]] and outfielder [[Lourdes Gurriel Jr.]] to the [[Arizona Diamondbacks]] for outfielder and catcher [[Daulton Varsho]].

The Blue Jays qualified for [[2023 American League Wild Card Series|American League Wild Card Series]] and played against the [[Minnesota Twins]] in Target Field. The Twins swept the Blue Jays in two games. This marked the third time in four seasons that the Blue Jays qualified for postseason wildcard series and swept by their opponents each time.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Verducci |first=Tom |date=2023-10-04 |title=Blue Jays Blow Another Playoff Series by Following a Flawed Analytics Script |language=en |magazine=Sports Illustrated |url=https://www.si.com/mlb/2023/10/05/toronto-blue-jays-blow-playoff-series-flawed-analytics-script |access-date=2023-10-07}}</ref>

*Team record 2022: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- .549

====2024 season====
{{main|2024 Toronto Blue Jays season}}
During the off-season, the Blue Jays re-signed Kiermaier and signed utility player [[Isiah Kiner-Falefa]], designated hitter [[Justin Turner]], and pitcher [[Yariel Rodríguez]]. The Blue Jays also traded Santiago Espinal for a prospect.

==Popularity==
{{image frame
|content={{Graph:Chart
| width = 600
| height = 300
| xAxisTitle = Year valuation reported
| x = 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
| yAxisTitle = Valuation (USD)
| yAxisFormat = $,.10
| colors = blue, red, green
| y1 = 178000000, 160000000, 155000000, 150000000, 146000000, 152000000, 155000000,
| y2 = {{repeat|7| ,}} 141000000, 162000000, 162000000, 161000000, 182000000, 166000000, 169000000, 214000000, 286000000, 344000000, 352000000, 353000000, 326000000, 337000000, 413000000, 568000000, 610000000, 870000000, 900000000, 1300000000, 1350000000, 1500000000, 1625000000, 1675000000, 1780000000, 2100000000, 2100000000
| y3 = {{repeat|22| ,}} 950000000
| showSymbols =
}}
|width=730
|align=none
|caption=Valuation of the Blue Jays 1991–present (in US dollars)<br/>{{legend inline|blue|[[Financial World]]<ref>Data from the following annual reports:
*{{Cite journal|title=Secrets of the front office: What America's pro teams are worth|date=July 9, 1991|last1=Baldo|first1=Anthony|last2=Biesada|first2=Alexandra|last3=Hackney|first3=Holt|last4=Ozanian|first4=Michael K|last5=Taub|first5=Stephen|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=28}}
*{{Cite journal|title=Big leagues, bad business|date=July 7, 1992|last1=Ozanian|first1=Michael K|last2=Taub|first2=Stephen|last3=Morris|first3=Kathleen|last4=Fink|first4=Ronald|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=34}}
*{{Cite journal|title=Foul ball|date=May 25, 1993|last1=Ozanian|first1=Michael K|last2=Taub|first2=Stephen|last3=Fink|first3=Ronald|last4=Kimelman|first4=John|last5=Reingold|first5=Jennifer|last6=Starr|first6=Jason|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=50}}
*{{Cite journal|title=The $11 billion pastime: Why sports franchise values are soaring even as team profits fall|date=May 10, 1994|last1=Ozanian|first1=Michael K|last2=Fink|first2=Ronald|last3=Kimelman|first3=John|last4=Reingold|first4=Jennifer|last5=Osterland|first5=Andrew|last6=Starr|first6=Jason|last7=Grabarek|first7=Brooke|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=50}}
*{{Cite journal|title=Suite deals: Why new stadiums are shaking up the pecking order of sports franchises|date=May 9, 1995|last1=Ozanian|first1=Michael K|last2=Atre|first2=Tushar|last3=Fink|first3=Ronald|last4=Reingold|first4=Jennifer|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=42}}
*{{Cite journal|title=The high-stakes game of team ownership|date=May 20, 1996|last1=Atre|first1=Tushar|last2=Auns|first2=Kristine|last3=Badenhausen|first3=Kurt|last4=McAuliffe|first4=Kevin|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=49}}
*{{Cite journal|title=More than a game: An in-depth look at the raging bull market in sports franchises|date=June 17, 1997|last1=Badenhausen|first1=Kurt|last2=Nikolov|first2=Christopher|journal=[[Financial World]]|pages=40}}</ref>}}{{spaces|2|em}}{{legend inline|red|Forbes<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/teams/toronto-blue-jays/|title=Toronto Blue Jays
|date=March 2014|access-date=June 3, 2014|work=[[Forbes]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/lists/2007/33/07mlb_Toronto-Blue-Jays_339533.html|title=#20 Toronto Blue Jays|date=April 19, 2007|access-date=June 3, 2014|work=[[Forbes]]}}</ref>}}{{spaces|2|em}}{{legend inline|green|[[Bloomberg News]]<ref name=bloomberg>{{cite web|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/infographics/2013-10-23/mlb-team-values.html|title=Major League Baseball Franchise Valuations|date=October 23, 2013|access-date=June 3, 2014|publisher=[[Bloomberg L.P.]]}}</ref>{{efn|Unlike the Forbes valuations, Bloomberg includes contributions from regional sports networks and related businesses in the total value.<ref name=bloomberg/>}}}}
|pos=
|border=no
|mode=
}}

In 1977, after just 50 home games, the Blue Jays set an MLB record for a first-year expansion team, with an overall attendance of 1,219,551 during those games.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/history/timeline|title=Timeline|website=MLB.com}}</ref> By the end of the season, 1,701,152 fans had attended. After setting an attendance record in 1990, with 3,885,284 fans, in 1991, the Blue Jays became the first MLB team to attract over [[Major League Baseball attendance records|four million fans]], with an attendance of 4,001,526, followed by 4,028,318 in 1992.<ref name="history">[http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/tor/history/timeline3.jsp Blue Jays Timeline] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141129030443/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/tor/history/timeline3.jsp |date=November 29, 2014 }} BlueJays.com. Accessed on December 7, 2011.</ref> Each of those records were broken in 1993 by the expansion [[1993 Colorado Rockies season|Colorado Rockies]], although the Blue Jays' 1993 attendance of 4,057,947 stood as an AL record for 12 years until it was broken by the [[2005 New York Yankees season|2005 New York Yankees]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/press_releases/press_release.jsp?ymd=20060702&content_id=1535941&vkey=pr_nyy&fext=.jsp&c_id=nyy|title=Yankees reach four million in tickets sales for second consecutive season|publisher=MLB|date=July 2, 2006|access-date=December 13, 2011}}{{Dead link|date=December 2021 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

Several Blue Jays became very popular in Toronto and across the major leagues, starting with [[Dave Stieb]], whose seven All-Star selections is a franchise record. He is closely followed by [[Roy Halladay]] and [[José Bautista]], who were selected six times each, and by [[Roberto Alomar]] and [[Joe Carter]], who were selected five times each. Bautista set a major league record in 2011 (which only stood for just one year), with 7,454,753 All-Star votes.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/mlb/bluejays/article/1018759--grand-slam-jose-bautista-s-off-to-the-all-star-game |title=Grand slam: Jose Bautista nabs a record number of All-Star votes |work=Toronto Star |date=July 3, 2011 |access-date=December 7, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110826140036/http://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/mlb/bluejays/article/1018759--grand-slam-jose-bautista-s-off-to-the-all-star-game |archive-date=August 26, 2011 }}</ref> In his first season with the Blue Jays in 2015, [[Josh Donaldson]] set a new major league record by receiving 14,090,188 All-Star votes.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://m.mlb.com/news/article/134823354/josh-donaldson-gets-most-all-star-votes-ever |title=Donaldson receives most ASG votes in history |publisher=MLB |date=July 8, 2015 |access-date=February 28, 2016 |archive-date=March 4, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304092349/http://m.mlb.com/news/article/134823354/josh-donaldson-gets-most-all-star-votes-ever |url-status=dead }}</ref>

==Culture==
[[File:Ace and Junior exchange greetings before the game (7968713240).jpg|thumb|Ace and Junior exchange greetings before the game. Ace was the Blue Jays' second mascot, introduced in 2000. Junior is a mascot occasionally seen for Junior Jays day promotions.]]

==="OK Blue Jays"===
{{main|OK Blue Jays}}
During the [[seventh-inning stretch]] of home games, before singing "[[Take Me Out to the Ball Game]]", Blue Jay fans sing and clap to the pop song "[[OK Blue Jays]]" by [[Keith Hampshire]] and The Bat Boys, which was released in 1983. The song was remixed in 2003, and since then, the new, shortened version is played at home games.

==="Let's Go Blue Jays"===
At home games, the "Let's Go Blue Jays" chant is played four times followed by [[Charge (fanfare)|Charge]] being played thrice.

===Mascots===
{{main|Toronto Blue Jays mascots}}
From 1979 to 1999, BJ Birdy served as the Blue Jays' sole mascot, played by Kevin Shanahan. In 2000, he was replaced by a duo named Ace and Diamond. After the 2003 season, Diamond was removed by the team, leaving Ace as the team's sole mascot. Since the 2010s, Ace has been accompanied by his younger brother, Junior. This usually happens on the Jr. Jay Saturday promotions until the end of the [[2017 Toronto Blue Jays season|2017 season]]. The promotions were moved to select Sundays since the [[2018 Toronto Blue Jays season|2018 season]], since the Blue Jays can no longer hold early Saturday afternoon games to accommodate [[MLB on Fox|American national broadcasts on Fox]], though Fox did occasionally broadcast Blue Jays games at the Rogers Centre.

===Sunday Salute===
Since 2012, every Sunday home game, the Blue Jays pay tribute to a member of the [[Canadian Armed Forces]]. During the third inning, the team presents the honoured member a personalized jersey.<ref name=canada>{{cite web |url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/tor/downloads/y2013/2012_community_report.pdf |title=Beyond the Ballpark |access-date=2018-05-06 |archive-date=August 12, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140812181151/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/tor/downloads/y2013/2012_community_report.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref>

===National anthems===
Since 2005, "[[The Star-Spangled Banner]]" has been sung before "[[O Canada]]" at every home game. In some home games (including Canada Day home games and playoffs), "O Canada" is sung in English and French. When "O Canada" was sung during the Home Opener, Canada Day, and playoff games, a giant Canadian flag was carried by members of the Canadian Armed Forces. Sportsnet only airs the national anthems during the home opener, Canada Day, and playoff games. On June 29, 2019, "O Canada" was sung in [[Cree language|Cree]] and English.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/kiya-bruno-sings-o-canada-cree-english-blue-jays-game/ |title=Kiya Bruno sings O Canada in Cree & English at Blue Jays game |date=June 29, 2019 |access-date=June 30, 2019 |work=sportsnet.ca}}</ref> On September 30, 2021, the [[National Day for Truth and Reconciliation]], "O Canada" was sung in English, French, and [[Anishinaabemowin]]. On September 30, 2022, "O Canada" was sung in French, English, and [[Blackfoot language|Blackfoot]]. For Blue Jays road games, "O Canada" is sung before the "Star Spangled Banner" as all road games (since the Expos moved to Washington, DC) for the Blue Jays are in the United States.

===Canada Day===
The Blue Jays traditionally host an afternoon home game during [[Canada Day]]. During the game, the team wears red jerseys instead of blue jerseys. During the pre-game ceremony, a giant Canadian flag is carried by members of the Canadian Armed Forces while "O Canada" is sung in English and French by a member of the [[Royal Canadian Air Force Band]]. The game was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the game was held in [[Buffalo, New York]], due to Canada–U.S. travel restrictions.

===Jays Shop===
[[File:Toronto_Blue_Jays_Shop,_Rogers_Centre_-throughglass_(35678680363).jpg|thumb|Exterior entrance to one of two Jays Shop locations at Rogers Centre]]
The Blue Jays operate a store that sells primarily Blue Jays merchandise called the Jays Shop. This store has two locations at Rogers Centre, though until January 2023, there was an additional location in the [[Toronto Eaton Centre]] shopping mall.

==Uniforms==
===1977–1988: Pullovers and powder blue===
The Blue Jays wore pullover uniforms during their first decade of existence. The front of the home white uniforms contained the team name in a unique blue/white/blue split-letter style, with the team logo centred below. The road uniforms were powder blue, with the city name in front and the team logo centred below. Initially, the city name was rendered in bold blue letters, before gaining a white outline the following season. By 1979 it was replaced by the team name in split-lettered white/blue/white style. Player numerals also used the split-letter style, except on the road uniform during its first two seasons. Player names in blue were added to both uniforms for the 1980 season, but were dropped from the road uniform in 1981. Caps were blue with the Blue Jays logo on a white panel in front.<ref name=originaljays>{{cite web|url=https://www.bluebirdbanter.com/2011/11/17/2565793/thread-on-threads-part-i-blue-jays-logos-and-uniforms-1977-1996|title=Thread on Threads Part I: Blue Jays' Logos and Uniforms, 1977-1996|work=SB Nation|date=November 17, 2011|access-date=September 12, 2020}}</ref>

In 2008, the Blue Jays' powder blue road uniform from this era was restored as an alternate home uniform worn every Friday until 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bluebirdbanter.com/2020/4/30/21240816/blue-jays-jerseys-history-of-powder-blue-uniforms|title=The history of the Blue Jays' powder blue jerseys|work=SB Nation|date=April 30, 2020|access-date=June 7, 2023}}</ref>

===1989–1996: Championship blues===
The Blue Jays adopted buttoned uniforms upon moving to [[Rogers Centre]] (then SkyDome) in 1989. Aside from the additions of buttons and belts, the only change affecting the home uniforms was the relocation of the team logo to the left chest. The road uniforms changed from powder blue to grey, while the city name and numerals in blue/white/blue split-letters was emblazoned and the logo moved to the left chest. Player names were also added to the road uniform. All-blue caps were worn with their road uniform while keeping the white-paneled blue caps at home. By 1993, the all-blue caps were worn universally, supplanting and eventually retiring the original cap design.<ref name=originaljays/>

In 1994 the Blue Jays began wearing blue alternate uniforms with the team name and numerals in white/blue/white split letters.<ref name=originaljays/>

===1997–2003: Red, teal and blue===
The Blue Jays updated their logo prior to the 1997 season, with a new bird design and enlarged red maple leaf at the back. The usage of red was greatly increased on the team's new uniforms. On the home uniforms, the letters and numerals were changed to blue/teal/blue split letters, while road uniform letters and numerals were changed to blue/red/blue split letters. On the alternate blue uniforms, split letters and numerals became red/blue/red. Red also appeared on the pant and sleeve stripes while the new logo occupied the left sleeve. Player names also took on the new block split-letter style. An updated all-blue cap was paired with the home and road uniforms, while a red-brimmed blue cap (with a modified logo without a baseball) was used with the blue alternates.<ref name=redjays>{{cite web|url=https://www.bluebirdbanter.com/2011/11/18/2570581/thread-on-threads-part-ii-blue-jays-logos-and-uniforms-1997-2003|title=Thread on Threads Part II: Blue Jays' Logos and Uniforms, 1997-2003|work=SB Nation|date=November 18, 2011|access-date=September 12, 2020}}</ref>

In 1999 the Blue Jays unveiled an alternate sleeveless white uniform, featuring the same lettering style as the regular home uniform. However, the chest numerals were replaced with the primary logo. Blue undershirts were worn with this uniform.<ref name=redjays/>

Before the 2001 season slight modifications were made with the uniforms, eliminating the tricolour stripes and adding a single colour piping along the chest and neck. While the home uniforms remained mostly intact, the road uniforms gained blue sleeves in a faux-vest design. On the alternate white uniform (now a faux-vest instead of a straight sleeveless design), the new "T-bird" logo replaced the primary "jay leaf" logo, which moved to the left sleeve. In 2003, the "T-bird" logo became the primary, taking over the previous logo's placement on the caps and sleeve, while the alternate white uniforms brought back chest numerals.<ref name=redjays/>

===2004–2011: The "Black-and-Graphite Jays"===
Before the 2004 season, the Blue Jays adopted a new visual identity, going with a black, silver and graphite motif. The home and black alternates simply read "Jays" in front and in a 3D-oriented diagonal arrangement, with the bird connected to the letter "J". Letters and numerals were in graphite with light blue and silver trim. The road uniforms featured the city name in a similar letter style as the logo, with graphite letters and numerals trimmed in light blue and silver. In 2008, however, amid complaints of illegibility, the Blue Jays tweaked their road uniforms to include 3D-style block letters and numerals in light blue trimmed in black and white, along with chest numerals. The "J-bird" alternate was added to the left sleeve. A red maple leaf would be added on the right sleeve starting in 2009. The Blue Jays wore all-black caps with the "J-bird" logo for much of the uniforms' existence, save for the 2004 and 2005 seasons when they wore all-graphite caps at home, and in 2007 when an alternate all-black cap with the "T" from the previous road uniform was used.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sportingnews.com/us/mlb/list/mlb-playoffs-2015-toronto-blue-jays-graphics-history-1993-world-series/12st7zydmsfb71v1kis9msqul4/11|title=Know your postseason graphics: Toronto Blue Jays edition|work=SportingNews.com|date=October 7, 2015|access-date=September 12, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/big-read-origins-blue-jays-hated-jersey/|title=Dark Days|author=David Singh|work=Sportsnet|date=October 7, 2015|access-date=September 12, 2020}}</ref>

===2012–present: Return to traditional look===
Prior to the 2012 season, the Blue Jays unveiled new uniforms and a new logo. The logo is a modernized version of the original logo used from 1977 to 1996. The bird's head was also made sleeker than its 1977–1996 predecessor. The uniforms are similar to the ones used from 1989 to 1996, the team's most successful era. New serifed split-letters were also released.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/mlb/bluejays/article/1037201--jays-making-a-uniform-change?bn=1|title=Jays making a uniform change|newspaper=The Toronto Star|date=August 9, 2011|first=Mark|last=Zwolinski}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20111117&content_id=25996396&vkey=news_tor&c_id=tor|title=Blue Jays unveil new logo for 2012 season|date=November 18, 2011|first=Gregor|last=Chisholm|work=BlueJays.MLB.com|access-date=November 19, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111121011820/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20111117&content_id=25996396&vkey=news_tor&c_id=tor|archive-date=November 21, 2011|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> In 2015, the Blue Jays began wearing a modernized version of the white-paneled blue caps they originally wore from 1977 to 1993 as an alternate.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bluebirdbanter.com/2015/8/11/9132723/blue-jays-will-be-wearing-new-white-panel-caps-on-sunday|title=Blue Jays will be wearing new white panel caps on Sunday|work=SB Nation|date=August 11, 2015|access-date=September 12, 2020}}</ref>

Before the 2020 season, the Blue Jays unveiled a modernized version of the powder blue uniforms, featuring navy/white/navy serifed split letters and numerals. These uniforms are paired with a powder-brimmed navy cap and an all-navy helmet.<ref>{{cite web|last=Brudnicki |first=Alexis |url=https://www.mlb.com/news/blue-jays-jerseys-unveiled|title=Blue Jays unveil 'New Blue' jerseys for 2020|work=mlb.com |date=January 18, 2020 |access-date=September 12, 2020}}</ref>

===Canada Day uniforms===
Since 1996, the Blue Jays wore predominantly red or red-accented uniforms every July 1, [[Canada Day]]. The uniforms were based on the team's alternate uniforms they wore at the time, but with red as the primary colour. On a few occasions, the Blue Jays added red trim to an existing white uniform (or in the case of the 2006 uniforms, their black alternates), and sometimes add the [[flag of Canada]] or a red maple leaf on the uniform.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://tipofthetower.com/2020/10/31/toronto-blue-jays-top-5-jerseys-all-time/3/|title=Toronto Blue Jays: Ranking the top 5 jerseys of all time|work=FanSided|date=October 31, 2020 |access-date=July 2, 2022}}</ref>

==Rivalries==

===Montreal Expos===
{{main|Pearson Cup}}
The [[Montreal Expos]] were the Blue Jays' geographic [[National League (baseball)|National League]] rival, being the other Canadian MLB team before it was relocated. From 1978 to 1986, the teams played an annual mid-season exhibition game, known as the [[Pearson Cup]], named after former [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]] [[Lester B. Pearson]]. The teams began facing each other in the regular season in 1997, with the advent of [[interleague play]]. During the 2003 and 2004 seasons, the Expos' last two seasons before relocating to Washington, D.C., as the [[Washington Nationals|Nationals]], the Pearson Cup was awarded after a pair of three-game sets.
<!--Please don't add the Baltimore Orioles unless there is a notable fan rivalry with reliable sources from both Toronto and Baltimore media; the rivalry is primarily between Jose Bautista and Darren O'Day--><!--Please don't add the Jays–Rangers rivalry, as it is too minor in the grand scheme of things and being too recent--><!--Please don't add the Atlanta Braves or the Philadelphia Phillies, as the rivalries are designated by the MLB-->

===Detroit Tigers===
The [[Detroit Tigers]] are the Blue Jays' geographic and traditional rival, dating back to the 1980s, when the teams were AL East contenders. The Tigers moved to the [[American League Central|AL Central]] in 1998, and the rivalry has died down as a result, with the teams facing each other only six to seven times per year since 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.torontosun.com/2014/06/03/jays-tigers-rivalry-isnt-what-it-used-to-be|title=Jays-Tigers rivalry isn't what it used to be|last=Buffery|first=Steve|work=torontosun.com|date=June 3, 2014|access-date=June 25, 2015}}</ref> Depending on traffic and border delays, Detroit is about a four-hour drive from Toronto. According to ''[[The Detroit News]]'', a July 2017 three-game series at [[Comerica Park]] against the Blue Jays drew a season-best-to-date total attendance of 115,088.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.detroitnews.com/story/sports/columnists/john-niyo/2017/07/16/niyo-picture-still-cloudy-muddled-tigers/103761204/|title=Niyo: Picture still cloudy for muddled Tigers|work=Detroit News|access-date=July 18, 2017|quote=Not just with all those Blue Jays fans flocking to downtown Detroit, thousands of them among a crowd for the finale of three-game series that drew a season-best 115,088 attendance.}}</ref>
<!--Please don't add the Baltimore Orioles unless there is a notable fan rivalry with reliable sources from both Toronto and Baltimore media; the rivalry is primarily between Jose Bautista and Darren O'Day--><!--Please don't add the Jays–Rangers rivalry, as it is too minor in the grand scheme of things and being too recent--><!--Please don't add the Atlanta Braves or the Philadelphia Phillies, as the rivalries are designated by the MLB-->

===Seattle Mariners===
Although the [[Seattle Mariners]] are not a divisional rival, many Blue Jays fans from Western Canada travel to Seattle when the Blue Jays play there as Seattle is geographically closer to Western Canada than Toronto is. Depending on traffic and border delays, Seattle is about a three-hour drive from [[Vancouver]]. ''[[The Seattle Times]]'' estimated that Blue Jays fans represented around 70 percent of the crowd in [[T-Mobile Park|Safeco Field]] for a June 2017 weekend series.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://sports.vice.com/en_ca/article/new4nq/what-safeco-field-is-like-when-it-gets-invaded-by-blue-jays-fans|title=What Safeco Field Is Like When It Gets Invaded by Blue Jays Fans|website=Sports|date=June 12, 2017 |language=en-ca|access-date=July 18, 2017}}</ref>
<!--Please don't add the Baltimore Orioles unless there is a notable fan rivalry with reliable sources from both Toronto and Baltimore media; the rivalry is primarily between José Bautista and Darren O'Day--><!--Please don't add the Blue Jays–Rangers rivalry, as it is too minor in the grand scheme of things and being too recent--><!--Please don't add the Atlanta Braves or the Philadelphia Phillies, as the rivalries are designated by the MLB-->

==Broadcasting==
{{See also|List of Toronto Blue Jays broadcasters}}
[[File:Canadian MLB blackout area.svg|thumb|Canadian regions subject to [[Major League Baseball blackout policy|MLB blackout]]
{{legend|#144A9B|Toronto Blue Jays exclusively}}
{{legend|#005F50|Shared with [[Seattle Mariners]]}}
{{legend|#7D1703|Shared with [[Minnesota Twins]]}}
{{legend|#DD2726|Shared with [[Boston Red Sox]]}}
Note: Toronto Blue Jays territory covers all of Canada]]

===Radio===
{{see also|Toronto Blue Jays Radio Network}}
The Blue Jays' former radio play-by-play announcer, [[Tom Cheek]], called every Toronto Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7, 1977, until June 3, 2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father—a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular-season games and 41 postseason games. Cheek later died on October 9, 2005, and the team commemorated him during their 2006 season by wearing a circular patch on the left sleeve of their home and road game jerseys. The patch was adorned with the letters 'TC', Cheek's initials, as well as a stylized [[microphone]]. Cheek is also honoured with a place in the Blue Jays' "Level of Excellence" in the upper level of the Rogers Centre; the number 4,306 is depicted beside his name. In 2008, Cheek received the third most votes by fans to be nominated for the [[Ford C. Frick Award]] for broadcasting excellence. Cheek finally received the Frick Award, posthumously, in 2013 after nine years on the ballot.<ref>{{cite web|last=Fordin|first=Spencer|title=Cheek's wife accepts Frick Award with moving speech|date=July 27, 2013 |url=http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130727&content_id=54970258&c_id=mlb|publisher=MLB|access-date=August 22, 2013}}</ref>

Radio broadcasts of Blue Jays games are originated from [[CJCL|Sportsnet 590 CJCL]] in Toronto which, like the Blue Jays, is owned by Rogers Communications. After Cheek's retirement in 2005, [[Jerry Howarth]], who had been Cheek's broadcasting partner since 1982, took over as lead play-by-play announcer, with [[Mike Wilner]] as the secondary play-by-play announcer. During the 2007 to 2012 seasons, former Blue Jays catcher [[Alan Ashby]] was the colour commentator. Former Blue Jays pitcher [[Jack Morris]] served as the [[Color commentator|colour commentator]] during the 2013 season, after which he was replaced by former Montreal Expos catcher [[Joe Siddall]] since the 2014 season.

Former Blue Jays pitcher [[Dirk Hayhurst]] filled in for Morris for some games during the 2013 season.

Another former catcher for the Blue Jays, [[Gregg Zaun]], has served as the occasional colour commentator from the [[2011 Toronto Blue Jays season|2011 season]] until the end of the [[2017 Toronto Blue Jays season|2017 season]] when he was terminated amid accusations of improper conduct from several female employees.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/sportsnet-terminates-zaun-allegations-inappropriate-behaviour/|title=Sportsnet terminates Gregg Zaun after allegations of inappropriate behaviour|work=[[Sportsnet]]|date=November 30, 2017|access-date=November 30, 2017}}</ref>

Following Howarth's retirement in the 2017 season, [[Ben Wagner]] was hired as the primary radio play-by-play announcer, splitting said duties with [[Dan Shulman]] and Mike Wilner.

In November 2020, Mike Wilner was laid off by the team.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-11-27|title=Sportsnet parts ways with veteran Blue Jays announcer Mike Wilner|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/2020/11/27/sportsnet-parts-ways-with-veteran-blue-jays-announcer-mike-wilner.html|access-date=2021-02-27|website=thestar.com|language=en}}</ref> In February 2021, it was announced that "in an effort to minimize travel and closely adhere to team, league, and government protocols related to the [[COVID-19 pandemic in Canada|pandemic]]", all radio broadcasts for the [[2021 Major League Baseball season|2021 season]] will be a simulcast of the television broadcast. Wagner will assume an alternative role.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2021-02-26|title=Sportsnet cuts Blue Jays radio broadcast for 2021, will simulcast TV coverage over airwaves|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/2021/02/26/sportsnet-release-tv-schedule-for-blue-jays-spring-training-games.html|access-date=2021-02-27|website=thestar.com|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=2021-02-27|title=Blue Jays become first MLB team without a dedicated radio feed|url=https://awfulannouncing.com/mlb/rogers-blue-jays-radio-simulcast-tv.html|access-date=2021-02-27|website=Awful Announcing|language=en-US}}</ref> However, once the Blue Jays returned to Rogers Centre in late July 2021, dedicated radio broadcasts resumed.

The Blue Jays have the largest geographical home market in all of baseball, encompassing all of Canada. Despite this, the number of radio stations that broadcast games is actually quite small. Only 18 radio stations across the country aired at least some Blue Jays games during the 2021 season,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/schedule/blue-jays-radio-network |title=Blue Jays Radio Network|website=Toronto Blue Jays|publisher=MLB |date=April 1, 2021}}</ref> which is fewer affiliates than most MLB teams, which have more stations covering smaller geographic areas.

===Television===
All Blue Jays games are carried nationally on [[Sportsnet]] (which, like the Blue Jays, is owned by Rogers Communications). As of 2023, [[Dan Shulman]] serves as the lead play-by-play announcer, with [[Buck Martinez]] as the primary colour commentator; on select series, [[Toronto Raptors]] play-by-play announcer [[Matt Devlin (sportscaster)|Matt Devlin]] calls the game in place of Shulman, and Joe Siddall works colour commentary in place of Martinez.<ref name=TBJannouncers>{{cite web|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/team/broadcasters |title=Blue Jays Broadcasters |website=Toronto Blue Jays}}</ref> Prior to that, Martinez had been the primary play-by-play announcer alongside colour commentator [[Pat Tabler]], with Shulman only calling games sporadically since 2016. In previous years, the colour analyst role rotated between Pat Tabler, [[Rance Mulliniks]], [[Darrin Fletcher]], and from 2011 to 2017, [[Gregg Zaun]]. Sportsnet became the team's primary carrier soon after it launched in the late 1990s, and became the team's exclusive broadcaster in 2010.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20100518073220/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/press_releases/press_release.jsp?ymd=20100513&content_id=10022884&vkey=pr_tor&fext=.jsp&c_id=tor Blue Jays Now Exclusively on Sportsnet], Blue Jays press release, May 13, 2010</ref> As of August 2010, [[Sportsnet One]] also broadcasts Blue Jays games (often in case of scheduling conflicts with the main Sportsnet channels). Rogers was, however, criticized by fans and critics due to Sportsnet One only being carried by [[Rogers Cable]] systems on launch.<ref>{{cite news|last=Dowbiggun|first=Bruce|title=Pelley will need all his smarts to fix Sportsnet One fiasco|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/pelley-will-need-all-his-smarts-to-fix-sportsnet-one-fiasco/article1679219/|work=Globe and Mail|location=Canada|access-date=August 23, 2010|archive-date=August 23, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100823073324/http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/pelley-will-need-all-his-smarts-to-fix-sportsnet-one-fiasco/article1679219/|url-status=dead}}</ref>

Sportsnet's broadcasts of the [[2015 American League Division Series]] involving the Blue Jays were among the highest-rated telecasts in network history, with Game 4 drawing an audience of 4.38 million viewers.<ref name=yahoo-jaysrecord>{{cite web|title=Great Canadian Ratings Report: Blue Jays continue to set records for Sportsnet|url=https://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/eh-game/blue-jays-continue-to-set-records-for-sportsnet-024554485.html|website=Yahoo! Sports Canada|date=October 15, 2015 |access-date=October 16, 2015}}</ref>

[[File:Jamie Campbell and Gregg Zaun.jpg|thumb|left|[[Jamie Campbell (sportscaster)|Jamie Campbell]] and [[Gregg Zaun]] providing [[Sportsnet]] coverage of a Toronto Blue Jays game in 2011]]
In September 2012, [[AMI-tv]] simulcast three Blue Jays games with [[Descriptive Video Service|described video]] provided by CJCL correspondent [[Sam Cosentino]], which included explanations of on-screen graphics. Paul Beeston praised AMI's involvement, stating that "to our knowledge, we are the first sports organization to have our games provided through this revolutionary approach to accommodating the needs of the blind and low-vision community."<ref name=jays-amitv>{{cite web|title=Three Blue Jays games to feature described video|url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20120828&content_id=37476848&vkey=news_tor&c_id=tor|work=BlueJays.com|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|access-date=June 8, 2013|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131022022119/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20120828&content_id=37476848&vkey=news_tor&c_id=tor|archive-date=October 22, 2013|df=mdy-all}}</ref>

On June 27, 2013, Rogers' over-the-air Toronto multicultural [[Omni Television]] station [[CJMT-DT]] simulcast a Blue Jays game, scheduled to be started by Taiwanese player [[Chien-Ming Wang]], with commentary in [[Standard Chinese|Mandarin]], marking the first ever Canadian MLB broadcast in the language.<ref name=omni-bluejays>{{cite web|title=OMNI to air Blue Jays vs Red Sox in Mandarin, Thursday|url=http://www.citynews.ca/2013/06/25/omni-to-air-blue-jays-vs-red-sox-in-mandarin-thursday/|work=Citynews.ca|publisher=Rogers Media|access-date=June 28, 2013}}</ref><ref name=bc-omnijays>{{cite web|title=OMNI TV To Air First Mandarin Broadcast of MLB Game in Canada|url=http://www.broadcastermagazine.com/news/omni-tv-to-air-first-mandarin-broadcast-of-mlb-game-in-canada/1002431677/|work=Broadcaster Magazine|access-date=June 28, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203001845/http://www.broadcastermagazine.com/news/omni-tv-to-air-first-mandarin-broadcast-of-mlb-game-in-canada/1002431677/|archive-date=December 3, 2013|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> In June 2018, Omni announced that it would air Sunday afternoon games in [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]], the most spoken [[Languages of the Philippines|language of the Philippines]], through the remainder of the season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cartt.ca/article/omni-field-blue-jays-games-tagalog-summer|title=OMNI to field Blue Jays games in Tagalog this summer|date=June 1, 2018|website=Cartt.ca|access-date=May 12, 2019}}{{Dead link|date=January 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.columbiavalleypioneer.com/sports/blue-jays-baseball-games-in-tagalog-language-coming-to-omni-television/|title=Blue Jays baseball games in Tagalog language coming to OMNI Television|date=2018-06-01|website=The Columbia Valley Pioneer|language=en-US|access-date=2019-05-12|archive-date=May 12, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190512190911/https://www.columbiavalleypioneer.com/sports/blue-jays-baseball-games-in-tagalog-language-coming-to-omni-television/|url-status=dead}}</ref> Sportsnet and Omni announced a regular season of Sunday broadcasts in Tagalog for the 2019 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cartt.ca/article/sportsnet-field-all-toronto-blue-jays-games|title=Sportsnet to field all Toronto Blue Jays games|date=March 26, 2019|website=Cartt.ca|access-date=May 12, 2019}}{{Dead link|date=January 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

[[TVA Sports]] has aired games in [[French language|French]] since 2011, with Denis Casavant and François Paquet on play-by-play and [[Rodger Brulotte]] on colour. The channel currently has rights to 81 Blue Jay games per season, in a three-year deal signed in 2023.<ref>{{Cite web |title=TVA Sports: French-language home of the Blue Jays for the next three seasons |url=https://www.mlb.com/news/press-release-tva-sports-french-language-home-of-the-blue-jays-for-the-next-thre |access-date=2023-03-03 |website=MLB.com |language=en}}</ref> [[Jacques Doucet (sportscaster)|Jacques Doucet]], former Montreal Expos radio announcer, broadcast the Blue Jays on TVA Sports from 2011 until his retirement in 2022.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Gendron-Martin |first=Raphaël |title=Doucet et Brulotte de nouveau réunis |url=https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2011/08/18/doucet-et-brulotte-de-nouveau-reunis-1 |access-date=2023-03-03 |website=Le Journal de Montréal|date=August 18, 2011 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |author=TSN ca Staff |date=2022-10-05 |title=Ford C. Frick Award finalists Jerry Howarth Jacques Doucet Toronto Blue Jays Montreal Expos |url=https://www.tsn.ca/ford-c-frick-award-finalists-jerry-howarth-jacques-doucet-toronto-blue-jays-montreal-expos-1.1858315 |access-date=2023-03-03 |website=TSN |language=en-CA |quote=Since 2011, Doucet has been the French-language voice of the Blue Jays for TVA. The Montreal native announced his retirement effective at season's end last month.}}</ref>

[[The Sports Network]] (TSN), which (like the Jays) was owned by Labatt from 1984 to 1995, served as the primary cable television outlet for the Blue Jays prior to the launch of Sportsnet. TSN (and later, its sister channel [[TSN2]]) continued to carry approximately ten Jays games through the 2009 season until May 2010; most recently, [[Rod Black]] handled play-by-play while Tabler served as colour commentator on these telecasts. [[CBC Television|CBC]] has carried Blue Jays games intermittently throughout the team's history, most recently in 2007 and 2008; those broadcasts featured [[Jim Hughson]] as the play-by-play announcer, and former Blue Jays [[Rance Mulliniks]] and [[Jesse Barfield]] on colour commentary.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cbc.ca/sports/baseball/story/2007/06/07/jays-cbc-broadcast-team.html?ref=rss |title=Mulliniks, Barfield join CBC's Blue Jays booth |date=June 7, 2007 |access-date=June 18, 2007 |publisher=CBC |location=Canada }}</ref> Games also aired on [[CTV Television Network|CTV]] (except in Montreal) from the team's inception until the late 1990s. The Blue Jays have not appeared over-the-air in Canada in English since 2008.

In 2008, Rogers Communications, owner of the Jays, was granted a license by the [[Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission|Canadian Radio-Television Commission]] (CRTC) for a "Baseball TV" [[specialty channel]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/archive/2008/db2008-171.pdf|title=Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2008-171|date=August 13, 2008|access-date=July 2, 2015|publisher=[[Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130707212323/http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/archive/2008/db2008-171.pdf|archive-date=July 7, 2013|url-status=live}}</ref> The channel would have been dedicated to coverage of baseball, combining content from the United States-based [[MLB Network]] with original Canadian content.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/baseball-tv-may-launch-this-year/article1146213/|title=Baseball TV may launch this year|first=William|last=Houston|newspaper=[[The Globe and Mail]]|date=January 7, 2009|access-date=July 2, 2015}}</ref> However, the channel was never launched, and Rogers sponsored an application to allow distribution of the U.S. MLB Network on Canadian providers instead.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/archive/2012/2012-637.htm|title=Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2012-637|date=November 21, 2012|access-date=July 2, 2015|publisher=[[Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission|Canadian Radio-Television Commission]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/rogers-bids-to-bring-mlb-network-to-canada-1.1175509|title=Rogers bids to bring MLB Network to Canada|date=June 20, 2012|access-date=July 2, 2015|publisher=[[CBC News]]}}</ref>

Due to the structure of Rogers' MLB broadcast contracts, Sportsnet is not permitted to use its domestic production for Blue Jays games if the team is in postseason play (as it is technically still considered a regional broadcaster), and instead carries the U.S. broadcast (such as [[MLB on Fox|Fox]] in 2015, and [[MLB on TBS|TBS]] in 2016). This is in contrast to the [[National Basketball Association|NBA]]'s [[Toronto Raptors]] (via TSN and Sportsnet), as well as the [[National Hockey League|NHL]] and [[Major League Soccer|MLS]]'s Canadian-based teams (via [[Hockey Night in Canada]] on CBC and Sportsnet, and TSN respectively) who were allowed to produce their own broadcasts during postseason games. Buck Martinez has served as a colour commentator for post-season coverage ultimately simulcast by Sportsnet, however, having formerly worked Division Series games for TBS, and on the [[MLB International]] broadcast of the [[2016 World Series]].<ref name="metro-4mill">{{cite web|title=Sportsnet touts four million viewers for Jays vs. Orioles matchup|url=http://www.metronews.ca/sports/2016/10/05/sportsnet-touts-four-million-viewers-for-jays-vs-orioles-matchup.html|work=Metro|access-date=11 October 2016|archive-date=October 10, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161010025503/http://www.metronews.ca/sports/2016/10/05/sportsnet-touts-four-million-viewers-for-jays-vs-orioles-matchup.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> In 2022, however, MLB allowed Sportsnet to carry its own production of Blue Jays postseason games.<ref name="dh-jays-playoffs-broadcasters">{{cite web|url=https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/buck-martinez-blue-jays-playoff-games-sportsnet|title=Buck Martinez to lead Sportsnet's Blue Jays' playoff broadcasts|first=Adam|last=Laskaris|work=[[Daily Hive]]|date=October 3, 2022|access-date=October 4, 2022}}</ref>

==Roster==
{{Toronto Blue Jays roster}}


==Minor league affiliations==
==Minor league affiliations==
{{Main|List of Toronto Blue Jays minor league affiliates}}
* '''AAA:''' [[Syracuse SkyChiefs]], [[International League]] 1978-present
* '''AA:''' [[New Hampshire Fisher Cats]], [[Eastern League]] 2004-present
* '''Advanced A:''' [[Dunedin Blue Jays]], [[Florida State League]] 1978-present
* '''A:''' [[Lansing Lugnuts]], [[Midwest League]] 2005-present
* '''Short A:''' [[Auburn Doubledays]], [[New York-Penn League]] 2000-present
* '''Rookie:''' [[Pulaski Blue Jays]], [[Appalachian League]] 2003-present
* '''Rookie:''' VSL Blue Jays, Venezuelan Summer League


The Toronto Blue Jays [[farm team|farm system]] consists of six [[Minor League Baseball|minor league]] affiliates.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/register/affiliate.cgi?id=TOR|title=Toronto Blue Jays Minor League Affiliates|website=Baseball-Reference|publisher=Sports Reference|access-date=October 22, 2023}}</ref>
Former teams:


{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable"
* '''Rookie:''' [[Medicine Hat Blue Jays]], [[Pioneer League]] 1978-2002
|-
* '''AA:''' [[Knoxville Smokies]], [[Southern League (baseball)|Southern League]] 1980-1999
!scope="col" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Class
* '''Short A:''' [[St. Catharines Blue Jays]]/[[St. Catharines Stompers]], [[New York-Penn League]] 1986-1998
!scope="col" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Team
* '''A:''' [[Florence Blue Jays]], [[South Atlantic League]] 1981-1985
!scope="col" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|League
* '''A:''' [[Myrtle Beach Blue Jays]], [[South Atlantic League]] 1986-1992
!scope="col" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Location
* '''A:''' [[Hagerstown Suns]], [[South Atlantic League]] 1993-2000
!scope="col" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Ballpark
* '''A:''' [[Charleston Alley Cats]], [[South Atlantic League]] 2001-2004
!scope="col" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Affiliated
* '''Short A:''' [[Utica Blue Sox]]/[[Utica Blue Jays]], [[New York-Penn League]] 1977-1980
|-
* '''Short A:''' [[Queens Kings]], [[New York-Penn League]] 1999
| [[Triple-A (baseball)|Triple-A]]
* '''A:''' [[Kinston Eagles]], [[Carolina League]] 1979-1985
!scope="row"| [[Buffalo Bisons]]
* '''A:''' [[Ventura County Gulls]], [[California League]] 1986
| [[International League]]
* '''AA:''' [[New Haven Ravens]], [[Eastern League]] 2003 - renamed [[New Hampshire Fisher Cats]]
| [[Buffalo, New York]]
* '''AAA:''' [[Syracuse Chiefs]], [[International League]] 1978-1996 - renamed [[Syracuse SkyChiefs]]
| [[Sahlen Field]]
| align="right"| 2013
|-
| [[Double-A (baseball)|Double-A]]
!scope="row"| [[New Hampshire Fisher Cats]]
| [[Eastern League (1938–present)|Eastern League]]
| [[Manchester, New Hampshire]]
| [[Delta Dental Stadium]]
| align="right"| 2003
|-
| [[High-A]]
!scope="row"| [[Vancouver Canadians]]
| [[Northwest League]]
| [[Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]]
| [[Nat Bailey Stadium]]
| align="right"| 2011
|-
| [[Single-A]]
!scope="row"| [[Dunedin Blue Jays]]
| [[Florida State League]]
| [[Dunedin, Florida]]
| [[TD Ballpark]]
| align="right"| 1987
|-
| rowspan=3| [[Rookie league|Rookie]]
!scope="row"| [[Florida Complex League Blue Jays|FCL Blue Jays]]
| [[Florida Complex League]]
| [[Englebert Complex]]
| [[Dunedin, Florida]]
| align="right"| 2007
|-
!scope="row"| [[Dominican Summer League Blue Jays|DSL Blue Jays]]
| [[Dominican Summer League]]
| [[Boca Chica]], [[Santo Domingo Province|Santo Domingo]]
| Baseball City Complex
| align="right"| 2009
|}


==Season by season record==
==Team trivia==
{{Main|List of Toronto Blue Jays seasons}}
*The Blue Jays are the only team outside the [[United States]] to win the World Series.
*They also won the 1993 World Series on Canadian soil, the first time ever the World Series was won outside of the United States.
*Toronto is the first and only American League team in [[Canada]].
*Their Spring Training facility is [[Knology Park]] in [[Dunedin, FL]].
*The Blue Jays motto is "You Gotta Believe".


==Awards and other achievements==
==See also==
*[[List of Toronto Blue Jays players]]
*[[Toronto Blue Jays award winners and league leaders]]
*[[Toronto Blue Jays team records]]
*[[Toronto Blue Jays broadcasters]]
*[[Toronto Blue Jays managers and ownership]]
*[[The Canada Series]]
*[[Pearson Cup]]


===Award winners and league leaders===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=2
{{main|Toronto Blue Jays award winners and league leaders}}

===Franchise records===
{{Main|Toronto Blue Jays team records}}

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};" | Statistic !! colspan="3" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};" | Single season record !! colspan="2" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};" | Career record
!Year
!Record
!colspan=2|[[American League Division Series|ALDS]] (after 1995)
!colspan=2|[[American League Championship Series|ALCS]] (after 1969)
!colspan=2|[[World Series]]
|-
|-
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};"|Player
|[[1977 in baseball|1977]]
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};"|Record
|54-107 (7th AL East)
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};"|Season
|
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};"|Player
|
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}};"|Record
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Games played: || [[Tony Fernández]] || 163 || [[1986 Toronto Blue Jays season|1986]] || Tony Fernández || 1,450
|[[1978 in baseball|1978]]
|59-102 (7th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Plate appearance]]s: || [[Vernon Wells]] || 735 || [[2003 Toronto Blue Jays season|2003]] || [[Carlos Delgado]] || 6,018
|[[1979 in baseball|1979]]
|53-109 (7th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[At bat]]s: || Tony Fernández || 687 || 1986 || Vernon Wells || 5,470
|[[1980 in baseball|1980]]
|67-95 (7th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Batting average (baseball)|Batting average]]: || [[John Olerud]] || .363 || [[1993 Toronto Blue Jays season|1993]] || [[Roberto Alomar]] || .307
|[[1981 in baseball|1981]]
|37-69 (7th/7th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[On-base percentage]]: || John Olerud || .473 || 1993 || John Olerud || .395
|[[1982 in baseball|1982]]
|78-84 (6th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Slugging percentage]]: || Carlos Delgado || .664 || [[2000 Toronto Blue Jays season|2000]] || Carlos Delgado || .556
|[[1983 in baseball|1983]]
|89-73 (4th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[On-base plus slugging]]: || Carlos Delgado || 1.134 || 2000 || Carlos Delgado || .949
|[[1984 in baseball|1984]]
|89-73 (2nd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Runs scored: || [[Shawn Green]] || 134 || [[1999 Toronto Blue Jays season|1999]] || Carlos Delgado || 889
|[[1985 in baseball|1985]]
|99-62 (1st AL East)
|
|
|[[Kansas City Royals]]
|L (3-4)
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Hit (baseball)|Hit]]s: || Vernon Wells || 215 || 2003 || Tony Fernández || 1,583
|[[1986 in baseball|1986]]
|86-76 (4th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Total bases: || Carlos Delgado || 378 || 2000 || Carlos Delgado || 2,786
|[[1987 in baseball|1987]]
|96-66 (2nd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Double (baseball)|Double]]s: || Carlos Delgado || 57 || 2000 || Carlos Delgado || 343
|[[1988 in baseball|1988]]
|87-75 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Triple (baseball)|Triple]]s: || Tony Fernández || 17 || [[1990 Toronto Blue Jays season|1990]] || Tony Fernández || 72
|[[1989 in baseball|1989]]
|89-73 (1st AL East)
|
|
|[[Oakland Athletics]]
|L (1-4)
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Home run]]s: || [[José Bautista]] || 54 || [[2010 Toronto Blue Jays season|2010]] || Carlos Delgado || 336
|[[1990 in baseball|1990]]
|86-76 (2nd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Run batted in|RBI]] || Carlos Delgado || 145 || 2003 || Carlos Delgado || 1,058
|[[1991 in baseball|1991]]
|91-71 (1st AL East)
|
|
|[[Minnesota Twins]]
|L (1-4)
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Base on balls|Walks]]: || José Bautista || 132 || [[2011 Toronto Blue Jays season|2011]] || Carlos Delgado || 827
|[[1992 in baseball|1992]]
|96-66 (1st AL East)
|
|
|[[Oakland Athletics]]
|W (4-2)
|[[Atlanta Braves]]
|'''W (4-2)'''
|-
|-
| [[Stolen base]]s: || [[Dave Collins]] || 60 || [[1984 Toronto Blue Jays season|1984]] || [[Lloyd Moseby]] || 255
|[[1993 in baseball|1993]]
|95-67 (1st AL East)
|
|
|[[Chicago White Sox]]
|W (4-2)
|[[Philadelphia Phillies]]
|'''W (4-2)'''
|-
|-
| Games played (pitcher): || [[Mark Eichhorn]] || 89 || 1987 || [[Jason Frasor]] || 505
|[[1994 in baseball|1994]]
|55-60 (3rd AL East)
|*
|
|*
|
|*
|
|-
|-
| Games started: || [[Jim Clancy (baseball)|Jim Clancy]] || 40 || [[1982 Toronto Blue Jays season|1982]] || [[Dave Stieb]] || 408
|[[1995 in baseball|1995]]
|56-88 (5th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Wins: || [[Roy Halladay]] || 22 || 2003 || Dave Stieb || 175
|[[1996 in baseball|1996]]
|74-88 (4th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Losses: || [[Jerry Garvin]]<br />[[Phil Huffman]] || 18 || [[1977 Toronto Blue Jays season|1977]]<br />[[1979 Toronto Blue Jays season|1979]] || Jim Clancy || 140
|[[1997 in baseball|1997]]
|76-86 (5th AL East, WC)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Winning percentage: || [[Dennis Lamp]] || 1.000 || [[1985 Toronto Blue Jays season|1985]] || [[Roger Clemens]] || .759
|[[1998 in baseball|1998]]
|88-74 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Innings pitched]]: || Dave Stieb || 288.1 || 1982 || Dave Stieb || 2,873
|[[1999 in baseball|1999]]
|84-78 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Earned run average|ERA]]: || Mark Eichhorn || 1.72 || 1986 || [[Tom Henke]] || 2.48
|[[2000 in baseball|2000]]
|83-79 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[Earned run]]s: || [[Erik Hanson (baseball)|Erik Hanson]] || 129 || [[1996 Toronto Blue Jays season|1996]] || Dave Stieb || 1,091
|[[2001 in baseball|2001]]
|80-82 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Strikeouts: || Roger Clemens || 292 || 1997 || Dave Stieb || 1,658
|[[2002 in baseball|2002]]
|78-84 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Complete Games: || Dave Stieb || 19 || 1982 || Dave Stieb || 102
|[[2003 in baseball|2003]]
|86-76 (3rd AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Shutouts: || Dave Stieb || 5 || 1982 || Dave Stieb || 30
|[[2004 in baseball|2004]]
|67-94 (5th AL East)
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| Saves: || [[Duane Ward]] || 45 || 1993 || [[Tom Henke]] || 217
|[[2005 in baseball|2005]]
|-
|80-82 (3rd AL East)
! colspan="6" | <ref>{{cite web|title=Toronto Blue Jays Top 10 Batting Leaders|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/TOR/leaders_bat.shtml|website=Baseball Reference|access-date=December 15, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Toronto Blue Jays Top 10 Pitching Leaders|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/TOR/leaders_pitch.shtml|website=Baseball Reference|publisher=Sports Reference LLC|access-date=December 15, 2014}}</ref>
|
|
|}

|
===No-hitters===
|
Only one Blue Jays pitcher has thrown a [[no-hitter]] in franchise history. It was accomplished by [[Dave Stieb]] on September 2, 1990, after losing three no-hit bids with two outs in the ninth inning.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/alltime/franchise?team=TOR|title=Toronto Blue Jays Franchise History|publisher=ESPN|access-date=November 22, 2010}}</ref>
|

|
No [[Perfect game (baseball)|perfect games]], a special subcategory of no-hitter, have been thrown in Blue Jays history. The franchise came closest on August 4, 1989, when Stieb gave up a double to Yankees' batter [[Roberto Kelly]] with two outs in the ninth and he scored by the next batter.<ref name="history 2">{{cite web|url=http://www.baseball-almanac.com/teams/toro.shtml|title=Toronto Blue Jays|work=Baseball Almanac|access-date=November 22, 2010}}</ref>

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center; border:1"
|-
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|#
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Date
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Pitcher
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Final score
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Base-<br />runners
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Opponent
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Catcher
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Plate umpire
! style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"|Manager
!class="unsortable" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"| Notes
!class="unsortable" style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays|border=2}}"| Ref
|-
| 1
| {{dts|September 2, 1990}}
| {{sortname|Dave|Stieb}}
| {{nts|3}}–0
| 4
| [[1990 Cleveland Indians season|Cleveland Indians]]
| {{sortname|Pat|Borders}}
| {{sortname|Drew|Coble}}
| {{sortname|Cito|Gaston|}}
|align="left"|
*First and only [[no-hitter]] in franchise history
*First and only no-hitter on the road
*First and only right-handed pitcher to throw a no-hitter in franchise history
| <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/CLE/CLE199009020.shtml|title=September 2, 1990 Toronto Blue Jays at Cleveland Indians Play by Play and Box Score |work=Baseball-Reference.com|publisher=Sports Reference LLC|access-date=November 22, 2010}}</ref>
|-
|}

===Triple Crown champions===
[[Roger Clemens]] won the pitching [[Triple Crown (baseball)|Triple Crown]] in 1997 and 1998.<ref>{{cite web|title=Triple Crown Winners|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/awards/triple_crowns.shtml|website=Baseball Reference|access-date=December 17, 2014}}</ref>

===Baseball Hall of Famers===
Ten former Blue Jays, one former manager, and one former general manager, have been elected into the [[National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Baseball Hall of Fame]]. Second baseman Roberto Alomar, elected to the Hall of Fame in 2011, is the first player to be inducted based primarily on service as a player for the Blue Jays.

{{Baseball hall of fame list
| Current Team Name = Toronto Blue Jays
| All Team Names = Blue Jays
| ColorA# = 134A8E
| ColorB# = FFFFFF
| ColorC# = 1D2D5C
| ColorD# = FFFFFF
| Team Name 1 = '''Toronto Blue Jays'''
| List 1.1 = '''[[Roberto Alomar]]'''<br />[[Bobby Cox]]
| List 1.2 = [[Pat Gillick]]<sup>†</sup><br />[[Roy Halladay]]<sup>‡</sup> <br >[[Rickey Henderson]]
| List 1.3 = [[Fred McGriff]]<br />[[Paul Molitor]]
| List 1.4 = [[Jack Morris]]<br />[[Phil Niekro]] <br />[[Scott Rolen]]
| List 1.5 = [[Frank Thomas (designated hitter)|Frank Thomas]]<br />[[Dave Winfield]]
| Team Name 2 =
| List 2.1 =
| List 2.2 =
| List 2.3 =
| List 2.4 =
| List 2.5 =
| Team Name 3 =
| List 3.1 =
| List 3.2 =
| List 3.3 =
| List 3.4 =
| List 3.5 =
| Team Name 4 =
| List 4.1 =
| List 4.2 =
| List 4.3 =
| List 4.4 =
| List 4.5 =
| Footnote1 =<sup>†</sup>&nbsp;– Pat Gillick was elected as an Executive/Pioneer; accordingly he is not depicted on his plaque wearing a cap. The Hall of Fame recognizes the Blue Jays as his primary team.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gillick, Pat |url=https://baseballhall.org/hall-of-famers/gillick-pat |website=Baseball Hall of Fame - Hall of Famers |access-date=31 January 2019}}</ref>
| Footnote2 =<sup>‡</sup> – Roy Halladay's plaque does not depict him with a cap insignia;<ref>{{cite news |title=No hat logo for Halladay's Hall plaque; Mussina uncertain |url=http://www.philly.com/wires/ap/no-hat-logo-halladays-hall-plaque-mussina-uncertain-20190124.html |access-date=31 January 2019 |work=The Philadelphia Inquirer |date=23 January 2019}}</ref> however, the Hall of Fame recognizes the Blue Jays as his primary team.<ref>{{cite web |title=Halladay, Roy |url=https://baseballhall.org/hall-of-famers/halladay-roy |website=Baseball Hall of Fame - Hall of Famers |access-date=31 January 2019}}</ref>
| Footnote3 =
| Footnote4 =
| }}

[[Bobby Doerr]], a second baseman with the [[Boston Red Sox]], served as a hitting coach with the Blue Jays early in their history, 1977–1981, and was the first person associated with the franchise to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, in 1986.

[[Early Wynn]], the Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher (1972) and career 300-game winner, was a radio broadcaster for the Blue Jays with [[Tom Cheek]] during their first few years, 1977–1981.

===Ford C. Frick Award recipients===
{{Ford C. Frick award list
| Current Team Name = Toronto Blue Jays
| All Team Names = Blue Jays
| ColorA# = 134A8E
| ColorB# = FFFFFF
| ColorC# = 1D2D5C
| ColorD# = FFFFFF
| List 1 =
| List 2 = '''[[Tom Cheek]]'''
| List 3 =
| List 4 = [[Tony Kubek]]
| List 5 =
| Footnote1 =
| Footnote2 =
| Footnote3 =
| Footnote4 =
| }}

===BBWAA Career Excellence Award recipients===
{| class="toccolours" style="font-size:95%;" style="margin:1em auto 1em auto"
|-
! colspan="1" style="text-align:center; {{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays}};"|'''Toronto Blue Jays {{Baseball primary link|Toronto Blue Jays|BBWAA Career Excellence Award}} recipients'''
|-
| colspan="1" style="text-align:center; {{Baseball secondary style|Toronto Blue Jays}};"|'''Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum'''
|-
|-
|'''Totals'''
|2258-2315
|
|
|
{| style="margin:1em auto;"
|
|valign="top"|
|13-16 (2 series wins, 3 losses)
|width="50"|
|
|valign="top"|
|8-4 (2 series wins, 0 losses)
|width="50"|
|valign="top"|'''[[Bob Elliott (sportswriter)|Bob Elliott]]'''
|width="50"|
|valign="top"|
|width="50"|
|valign="top"|
|}
: '''Names in bold''' received the award based primarily on their work covering the Blue Jays.
|-
|-
|}
|}


===Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame===
==External links==
{{Main|Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame}}
*[http://www.bluejays.com Toronto Blue Jays official web site]
*[http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/tor/history/year_by_year_results.jsp Year by year result]
*[http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/tor/history/index.jsp Toronto Blue Jays History]
*[http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-41-611/sports/baseball_canada/ CBC Digital Archives - Major League Baseball Comes to Canada]
*[http://www.battersbox.ca Batter's Box] - Baseball news and analysis from a Canadian perspective
*[http://www.bluejayway.ca Blue Jay Way]


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! colspan=5 style="{{Baseball primary style|Toronto Blue Jays}}"|Blue Jays in the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame
|-
! style="{{Baseball secondary style|Toronto Blue Jays}}"|No.
! style="{{Baseball secondary style|Toronto Blue Jays}}"|Inductee
! style="{{Baseball secondary style|Toronto Blue Jays}}"|Position
! style="{{Baseball secondary style|Toronto Blue Jays}}"|Tenure
! style="{{Baseball secondary style|Toronto Blue Jays}}"|Notes
|-
| 12 || [[Roberto Alomar]] || [[Second baseman|2B]] || 1991–1995 ||
|-
| — || [[Gord Ash]] || [[General Manager|GM]] || 1995–2001 || Born in Toronto, attended [[York University]]
|-
| — || [[Paul Beeston]] || Executive || 1976–1997<br>2008–2015 || Born in [[Welland, Ontario]], attended [[University of Western Ontario]]
|-
| 11 || [[George Bell (outfielder)|George Bell]] || [[Left fielder|LF]] || 1981, 1983–1990 ||
|-
| 29, 43 || [[Joe Carter]] || [[Outfielder|OF]]/[[First baseman|1B]] || 1991–1997 ||
|-
| — || [[Tom Cheek]] || Broadcaster || 1977–2004 ||
|-
| 6, 21, 25 || [[Carlos Delgado]] || [[First baseman|1B]] || 1993–2004 ||
|-
| — || [[Jacques Doucet (sportscaster)|Jacques Doucet]] || Broadcaster || 2011–present || Elected mainly for his broadcasting career with [[Montreal Expos]], Born in [[Montreal]]
|-
| 20, 22, 40 || [[Rob Ducey]] || [[Outfielder|OF]] || 1987–1992, 2000 || Born in [[Toronto]], raised in [[Cambridge, Ontario|Cambridge]]
|-
| 1 || [[Tony Fernández]] || [[Shortstop|SS]] || 1983–1990, 1993<br>1998–1999, 2001 ||
|-
| 35 || [[Jeff Francis]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 2015 || Born in [[Vancouver, British Columbia]], attended [[University of British Columbia]]
|-
| 43 || [[Cito Gaston]] || Manager || 1989–1997<br>2008–2010 ||
|-
| — || [[Pat Gillick]] || [[General Manager|GM]] || 1978–1994 ||
|-
| 32, 52 || [[Roy Halladay]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 1998–2009 ||
|-
| — || [[Peter Hardy (baseball executive)|Peter Hardy]] || Executive || 1976–1993 || Born in [[Toronto]], [[Ontario]]
|-
| 50 || [[Tom Henke]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 1985–1992 ||
|-
| 41 || [[Pat Hentgen]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 1991–1999, 2004 ||
|-
| 47 || [[Corey Koskie]] || [[Third baseman|3B]] || 2005 || Born in [[Anola, Manitoba]], attended [[University of Manitoba]]
|-
| — || [[Tony Kubek]] || Broadcaster || 1977–1989 ||
|-
| 3 || [[Bobby Mattick]] || Manager || 1980–1981 ||
|-
| 39 || [[Dave McKay (baseball)|Dave McKay]] || [[Second baseman|2B]]/[[Third baseman|3B]] || 1977–1979 || Born in [[Vancouver, British Columbia]]
|-
| 15 || [[Lloyd Moseby]] || [[Center fielder|CF]] || 1980–1989 ||
|-
| 9 || [[John Olerud]] || [[First baseman|1B]] || 1989–1996 ||
|-
| 48 || [[Paul Quantrill]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 1996–2001 || Born in [[London, Ontario]]
|-
| — || [[Jim Ridley]] || Scout || 1976–2002 || Born in [[Toronto]]
|-
| — || [[Gladwyn Scott]]|| Scout || 1987–1993 || Born in [[Hamiota, Manitoba]]
|-
| 24 || [[Matt Stairs]] || [[Outfielder|OF]]/[[Designated hitter|DH]]/[[First baseman|1B]] || 2007–2008 || Born in [[St. John, New Brunswick]], grew up in [[Fredericton, New Brunswick]]
|-
| — || [[Howard Starkman]]|| Executive || 1976–2014 || Born in Toronto
|-
| 37 || [[Dave Stieb]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 1979–1992, 1998 ||
|-
| 31 || [[Duane Ward]] || [[Pitcher|P]] || 1986–1995 ||
|-
| 12 || [[Ernie Whitt]] || [[Catcher|C]] || 1977–1978, 1980–1989 ||
|}

===Retired numbers===
[[File:JaysRetired42.PNG|300px|thumb|Jackie Robinson's number was retired by every team in MLB on April 15, 1997.]]
{{See also|List of Major League Baseball retired numbers}}

{{retired number list|
{{retired number|image=BlueJays 32 retired.png|alt=32|name=[[Roy Halladay|Roy<br />Halladay]]|pos=P|date=<br />March 29, 2018}}
{{retired number|image=BlueJays-Retired-42.png|alt=42|name=[[Jackie Robinson|Jackie<br />Robinson]]|pos=All MLB|honored=April 15, 1997}}
}}
Soon after becoming the first person to be inducted in the Hall of Fame as a Blue Jay, on July 31, 2011, second baseman Roberto Alomar was the first person to have his number, #12, retired by the Blue Jays.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20110719&content_id=21993596&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb |title=Roberto Alomar's uniform number to be retired by Blue Jays|publisher=MLB|access-date=November 19, 2011}}</ref> However, #12 was unretired due to controversies surrounding Alomar.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sportingnews.com/ca/mlb/news/jordan-hicks-number-12-blue-jays-roberto-alomar-unretired/uwmzbqac8liwroyhy5tazvkp|title=Why is Jordan Hicks Wearing No. 12 for Blue Jays? How Roberto Alomar's Former Number was Unretired|last=Jarden|first=Sam|website=[[The Sporting News]]|date=July 31, 2023|access-date=February 27, 2024}}</ref> [[Jordan Hicks (baseball)|Jordan Hicks]] became the first Blue Jay since 2011 to wear this number.

On March 29, 2018, the Blue Jays retired #32 in honour of [[Roy Halladay]], who died in an airplane crash on November 7, 2017, becoming the second number to be retired by the Blue Jays.<ref>{{cite news|title=Blue Jays to retire number 32 in honour of Roy Halladay|url=https://www.mlb.com/bluejays/news/blue-jays-to-retire-number-32-in-honour-of-roy-halladay/c-266307870|publisher=MLB Advanced Media|date=February 12, 2018|access-date=April 22, 2018}}</ref>
{{Clear}}

===Level of Excellence===
In 1996, the Blue Jays instituted a "Level of Excellence" on the 500 level of the [[Rogers Centre]], honouring "tremendous individual achievement."

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:120%; border:3px"
|- style="text-align:center; background:#498bae;"
|[[Image:JaysRetired01.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Tony Fernández]]'''<br />SS, 3B: 1983–1990, 1993, 1998–1999, 2001 <br />
|[[Image:JaysRetired11.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[George Bell (outfielder)|George Bell]]'''<br />LF: 1981–1990<br />
|[[File:JaysRetired25.png|JaysRetired25]]<br />'''[[Carlos Delgado]]'''<br />1B: 1993–2004<br />
|- style="text-align:center; background:#498bae;"
|[[Image:JaysRetired29.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Joe Carter]]'''<br />RF, 1B: 1991–1997<br />
|[[Image:JaysRetired37.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Dave Stieb]]'''<br />P: 1979–1992, 1998<br />
|[[Image:JaysRetired43.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Cito Gaston]]'''<br />Manager: 1989–1997, 2008–2010<br />
|- style="text-align:center; background:#498bae;"
|[[Image:JaysRetired4306.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Tom Cheek]]'''<br />Broadcaster: 1977–2005<br />
|[[Image:JaysRetiredPB.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Paul Beeston]]'''<br />VP: 1976–1989; President: 1989–1997, 2008–2015<br />
|[[File:32 RoyHalladay.png|260x260px]]<br />'''[[Roy Halladay]]'''<br />P: 1998–2009<br />
|- style="text-align:center; background:#498bae;"
|[[Image:JaysRetiredPG.PNG|260px]]<br />'''[[Pat Gillick]]'''<br />GM: 1978–1994<br />
|[[File:JB's Level of Excellence.png|260x260px]]<br />[[José Bautista]]<br />RF, 3B: 2008–2017<br />
|}

Players' uniform numbers were listed—and in Tom Cheek's case, the number of consecutive games he called for the Blue Jays<ref name="Level of Excellence">{{cite web|title=Level of Excellence|url=http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/tor/history/level_of_excellence.jsp|publisher=Toronto Blue Jays|access-date=November 19, 2011|archive-date=November 5, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111105102726/http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/tor/history/level_of_excellence.jsp|url-status=dead}}</ref>—until the 2013 All-Star Break, even though, with the exception of [[Roberto Alomar]] and [[Roy Halladay]] these numbers have not been retired. During the 2013 All-Star Break, the Level of Excellence was redesigned for the addition of Carlos Delgado's name. The redesign removed all uniform numbers from the Level of Excellence aside from Roberto Alomar's retired #12, Roy Halladay's retired #32 and Tom Cheek's 4306 consecutive games called streak.<ref name="McNeil retired numbers">{{cite web|last=McNeil|first=Shane|title=YOUR CALL: SHOULD THE BLUE JAYS RETIRE ANY MORE NUMBERS?|url=https://www.tsn.ca/mlb/story/?id=372126|work=TSN|access-date=November 19, 2011|date=July 20, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120118083706/http://www.tsn.ca/mlb/story/?id=372126|archive-date=January 18, 2012|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> On April 30, 2021, the Blue Jays announced that they would remove Alomar from the Level of Excellence and take down his banner at Rogers Centre after he was banned from baseball for sexual harassment.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.facebook.com/BlueJays/photos/a.381692688771/10158463576833772 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/iarchive/facebook/34558408771/10158463576833772 |archive-date=2022-02-26 |url-access=limited|title=Facebook|website=www.facebook.com}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Davidi |first1=Shi |title=MLB, Blue Jays sever ties with Roberto Alomar after sexual misconduct investigation |url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/article/mlb-puts-roberto-alomar-ineligible-list-reviewing-sexual-misconduct-allegation/ |website=Sportsnet}}</ref>

On March 5, 2023, the Blue Jays announced that [[José Bautista|Jose Bautista]] would join the Level of Excellence on August 12, 2023, in a pre-game ceremony prior to their game that day versus the [[Chicago Cubs]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Blue Jays to honour Jose Bautista on Level of Excellence |url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/blue-jays-to-honour-jose-bautista-on-level-of-excellence/ |access-date=2023-03-05 |website=Sportsnet.ca |language=en}}</ref>

== Charity and partnerships ==
The Jays Care Foundation is the charitable arm of the Toronto Blue Jays baseball organization and conducts events to support local organizations and community members.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Kitchener resident wins $3.8 million in 50/50 draw to support Toronto Blue Jays charity {{!}} Globalnews.ca |url=https://globalnews.ca/news/9172874/robert-kitchener-jays-care-50-50/ |access-date=2022-12-08 |website=Global News |language=en-US}}</ref> They also provide baseball education and life skill workshops to the youth of communities across Canada.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Jays Care Foundation |url=https://www.flaghouse.ca/Pages/Jays-Care-Foundation/ |access-date=2022-12-08 |website=Flaghouse - Physical Education Equipment - Recreational Products |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=How Jays Care Foundation builds up Unstoppable Kids |url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/baseball/mlb/jays-care-foundation-builds-unstoppable-kids/ |access-date=2022-12-08 |website=www.sportsnet.ca}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=JAYS CARE FOUNDATION |url=https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/the-toronto-blue-jays-charitable-foundation/ |access-date=2022-12-08 |website=CanadaHelps - Donate to any charity in Canada |language=en}}</ref>

== Notes ==
{{Notelist}}

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
:Some text copied via the GFDL from [https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/2009_Toronto_Blue_Jays BR Bullpen article on the 2009 Blue Jays]

==External links==
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{{s-aft|after = [[Atlanta Braves]]<br />[[1995 World Series|1995]]}}
{{s-bef|before = [[Minnesota Twins]]<br />[[1991 American League Championship Series|1991]]}}
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[[Category:1977 establishments]]
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Latest revision as of 18:24, 3 May 2024

Toronto Blue Jays
2024 Toronto Blue Jays season
Team logoCap insignia
Major league affiliations
Current uniform
Retired numbers
Colours
  • Royal blue, navy blue, red, white[1][2]
           
Name
  • Toronto Blue Jays (1977–present)
Other nicknames
  • The Jays
Ballpark
Major league titles
World Series titles (2)
AL Pennants (2)
AL East Division titles (6)
Wild card berths (4)
Front office
Principal owner(s)Rogers Communications[4]
PresidentMark Shapiro
General managerRoss Atkins
ManagerJohn Schneider
Websitemlb.com/bluejays

The Toronto Blue Jays are a Canadian professional baseball team based in Toronto. The Blue Jays compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) East Division. Since 1989, the team has played its home games primarily at Rogers Centre in downtown Toronto.

The name "Blue Jays" originates from the bird of the same name, and blue is also the traditional colour of Toronto's collegiate and professional sports teams including the Maple Leafs (ice hockey) and the Argonauts (Canadian football). In 1976, out of the over 4,000 suggestions, 154 people selected the name "Blue Jays."[5] In addition, the team was originally owned by the Labatt Brewing Company, makers of the popular beer Labatt Blue. Colloquially nicknamed the "Jays", the team's official colours are royal blue, navy blue, red, and white.[1][2]

An expansion franchise, the club was founded in Toronto in 1977. Originally based at Exhibition Stadium, the team began playing its home games at SkyDome upon its opening in 1989. They are the second MLB franchise to be based outside the United States, and currently the only team based outside the U.S. after the first Canadian franchise, the Montreal Expos, became the Washington Nationals in 2005. Since 2000, the Blue Jays have been owned by Rogers Communications and in 2004, SkyDome was purchased by that company, which renamed it Rogers Centre. The Blue Jays and the Atlanta Braves[d] are the only two MLB teams under corporate ownership; the Blue Jays are the only American League team to be under such ownership.

Due to border restrictions brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Blue Jays played home games at TD Ballpark in Dunedin, Florida for April and May of the 2021 season, and Sahlen Field in Buffalo, New York for the 2020 season as well as June and July 2021, returning home to Toronto as of July 30 of that year.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Blue Jays went through struggles typical of an expansion team, frequently finishing last in their division. In 1983, they had their first winning season and two years later, became division champions. From 1985 to 1993, the Blue Jays were an AL East powerhouse, winning five division championships in nine seasons, including three consecutive from 1991 to 1993. During that run, the team also became back-to-back World Series champions in 1992 and 1993, led by a core group of award-winning All-Star players, including Hall of Famer Roberto Alomar, Joe Carter, John Olerud, and Devon White. The Blue Jays became the first (and, to date, only) team outside the U.S. to appear in and win a World Series, and the fastest AL expansion team to do so, winning in its 16th year. As of 2019, they are one of only two MLB franchises that are undefeated through multiple World Series appearances, along with the National League's Miami Marlins. After 1993, the Blue Jays failed to qualify for the playoffs for 21 consecutive seasons, until clinching a playoff berth and division championship in 2015. The team clinched a second consecutive playoff berth in 2016, after securing an AL wild card position. In both years, the Blue Jays beat the Texas Rangers in the AL Division Series, but lost the AL Championship Series. Most recently, they qualified for the playoffs as a wild card team in 2020, 2022, and 2023.

From 1977 to 2023, the Blue Jays' overall win–loss record is 3,687–3,700–3 (.499).[6]

History

Expansion team

The Blue Jays were approved as part of the 1977 Major League Baseball expansion discussions, after Toronto's original plan of getting a Major League Baseball team by buying and moving the San Francisco Giants fell through; they would be added alongside the Seattle Mariners. The team was represented by legal counsel Herb Solway and Gord Kirke. Kirke prepared the original documents which led to the founding of the team in 1976.[7]

1977–1994: The Pat Gillick era

1977–1981

The Blue Jays' second game in its inaugural season. Unlike the first game played in a snow storm, this day was bright and sunny with the temperature well below freezing.

The Blue Jays played their first game on April 7, 1977, against the Chicago White Sox before a home crowd of 44,649. The game is now perhaps best remembered for the minor snowstorm which began just before the game started. Toronto won the snowy affair 9–5, led by Doug Ault's two home runs. That win would be one of only 54 of the 1977 season, as the Blue Jays finished last in the AL East, with a record of 54–107. After the season, assistant general manager Pat Gillick succeeded Peter Bavasi as general manager of the team, a position he would hold until 1994.[8]

In 1978, the team improved their record by five games, but remained last, with a record of 59–102. In 1979, after a 53–109 last place finish, shortstop Alfredo Griffin was named American League co-Rookie of the Year. In addition, the Blue Jays' first mascot, BJ Birdy, made its debut in 1979.

In 1980, Bobby Mattick became manager, succeeding Roy Hartsfield, the Blue Jays' original manager. In Mattick's first season as manager, although the team remained at the bottom, Toronto nearly reached the 70-win mark, finishing with a record of 67–95, a 14-win improvement on 1979. Jim Clancy led with 13 wins and John Mayberry became the first Jay to hit 30 home runs in a season.

In the strike-divided season of 1981, the Blue Jays finished last in the AL East in both halves of the season. They were a dismal 16–42 in the first half but improved dramatically in the second, finishing the 48-game second half at 21–27, for a combined record of 37–69.

1982–1984

Under new manager Bobby Cox, Toronto's first solid season came in 1982[9] as the Jays finished 78–84. Their pitching staff was led by starters Dave Stieb, Jim Clancy, and Luis Leal, and the outfield featured a young Lloyd Moseby and Jesse Barfield. 1982 was also the first year the Jays did not place last, finishing sixth in the East out of seven teams.

In 1983, the Blue Jays compiled their first winning record, 89–73, finishing in fourth place, nine games behind the eventual World Series champions, the Baltimore Orioles. First baseman Willie Upshaw became the first Blue Jay to get at least 100 RBIs in a season.

The Jays' progress continued in 1984, finishing with the same 89–73 record, but this time in a distant second place behind another World Series champion, the Detroit Tigers. After 1984, Alfredo Griffin went to the Oakland Athletics,[10] thus giving a permanent spot to young Dominican shortstop Tony Fernández, who would become a fan favourite for many years.[11]

1985: The "Drive of '85" and first AL East title

Dave Stieb has the second highest number of wins among pitchers in the 1980s.

In 1985, Toronto won its first championship of any sort: the first of its six American League East division titles. The Blue Jays featured strong pitching and a balanced offense. Tony Fernández excelled in his first full season, and veteran pitcher Doyle Alexander led the team with 17 wins, including a division-clinching complete-game win. Their mid-season call-up of relief pitcher Tom Henke also proved to be important. The team finished 99–62 (the franchise record for most wins), two games in front of the New York Yankees. The Jays faced the Kansas City Royals in the American League Championship Series (ALCS), and took a three-game-to-one lead. However, Kansas City won three consecutive games to win the series 4–3, on the way to their first World Series championship. The Blue Jays' successful season was dubbed the "Drive of '85".[12]

After the playoffs, Cox, the AL Manager of the Year, suddenly left the Blue Jays to become general manager of the Atlanta Braves, the team he had previously managed.

1986–1988

Left fielder George Bell was named the American League MVP in 1987.

With Jimy Williams taking over as manager, the Blue Jays could not duplicate their success in 1986, sliding to a fourth-place tie at 86–76. Jesse Barfield and George Bell led the way with 40 and 31 home runs, respectively, while Jim Clancy, Mark Eichhorn, and Jimmy Key tied for the team wins lead with 14 each.

In 1987, the Blue Jays held a 3+12-game lead with a week to go in the season, then lost their last seven in a row to finish two games behind the Detroit Tigers, getting swept on the last weekend by the Tigers. The Jays finished with a 96–66 record, second-best in the major leagues, but to no avail. However, George Bell (.308 batting average, 47 home runs, 134 RBI) was named the AL's Most Valuable Player (MVP), the first Blue Jay to earn that honor.

In 1988, however, Toronto could not duplicate the successes of the previous season. The team tied the Milwaukee Brewers for third in the division at 87–75, only two games behind the division champion Boston Red Sox. Still, the season had numerous highlights. First baseman Fred McGriff hit 34 home runs, and Dave Stieb had back-to-back starts in which he lost a no-hitter with two out and two strikes in the ninth inning.

1989–1991: Cito Gaston takes charge, two more AL East titles

Cito Gaston was named Blue Jays' manager during the 1989 season.

In 1989, the Blue Jays' new retractable roofed home, SkyDome, opened mid-season. It also marked the beginning of an extremely successful five-year period for the team. In May, management fired manager Jimy Williams and replaced him with Cito Gaston, the team's hitting instructor. The club had a dismal 12–24 record at the time of the firing, but went 77–49 under Gaston to win the AL East title by two games, with an 89–73 record. Fred McGriff's 36 home runs led the AL. On May 28, George Bell's walk-off home run, off of Chicago White Sox closer Bobby Thigpen, marked the end of the Exhibition Stadium era. The first game at the new stadium took place on June 5 against the Milwaukee Brewers; the Jays lost 5–3. In the 1989 ALCS, Rickey Henderson led the eventual World Series champion Oakland Athletics to a 4–1 series win.

In 1990, the Blue Jays again had a strong season, but finished second, two games behind the Boston Red Sox. Dave Stieb pitched his only no-hitter, beating the Cleveland Indians 3–0 in front of a less-than-capacity crowd at Cleveland Municipal Stadium. As of 2018, it remains the only no-hitter ever pitched by a Blue Jay. During the off-season, the Blue Jays made one of the two biggest trades in franchise history, sending All-Star shortstop Tony Fernández and first baseman Fred McGriff to the San Diego Padres in exchange for outfielder Joe Carter and second baseman Roberto Alomar. The Jays also obtained centre fielder Devon White from the California Angels. These deals, particularly the trade with San Diego, were instrumental in the team's future success.

Carter, Alomar and White would prove to be extremely effective additions, as the Blue Jays again won the division in 1991, as Carter drove in Alomar for the division-winning run. Once again, however, the team fell short in the postseason, losing to the Minnesota Twins, who were on the way to their second World Series victory in five seasons, in the ALCS. In 1991, the Blue Jays became the first Major League club ever to draw over four million fans in one season.

  • Team record 1989: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- 0.549
  • Team record 1990: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 2 games behind division leader
  • Team record 1991: 91 wins–71 losses, W%- 0.562

1992–1993: World Series champions

1992: Canada's first World Series title

After the 1991 season had ended, the Blue Jays acquired pitcher Jack Morris, who had led the Minnesota Twins to victory in the World Series by pitching a 10-inning complete-game shutout in Game 7 and had been named the World Series MVP. To add veteran leadership to their explosive offence, Toronto signed Dave Winfield to be the team's designated hitter.

The 1992 regular season went well, as the Jays clinched their second straight AL East crown with a final record of 96–66, four games ahead of the Milwaukee Brewers. They also went the entire season without being swept in any series, becoming the first team in 49 years to accomplish the feat.[13] The Blue Jays met the Oakland Athletics (who had the same record as the Jays and won the AL West by six games over the defending champion Twins) in the ALCS, winning four games to two. The pivotal game of the series was Game 4, considered by many to be one of the most important games in Blue Jays history: the Blue Jays rallied back from a 6–1 deficit after seven innings, capped off by Roberto Alomar's huge game-tying two-run homer off A's closer Dennis Eckersley in the top of the ninth. This paved the way for a 7–6 victory in 11 innings, a 3-games-to-1 lead in the series and an eventual 4–2 ALCS series win.

The Blue Jays then faced the Atlanta Braves in the World Series. The Braves returned after being beaten by the Twins the previous year. The pivotal game in this series turned out to be Game 2, in which reserve player Ed Sprague hit a 9th-inning two-run home run off Braves closer Jeff Reardon to give the Blue Jays a 5–4 lead, which would hold up. After winning Game 3 thanks to Candy Maldonado's ninth-inning RBI hit and Game 4 due to Jimmy Key's superb 7+13-inning pitching effort in which he retired 15 straight batters (five innings), the Jays could not win the Series on home turf as the Braves struck back with a 7–2 win in Game 5. Game 6 in Atlanta, with the Blue Jays leading 3 games to 2, was a very close game. Toronto was one strike away from winning in the bottom of the 9th inning, 2–1,[14] but Otis Nixon singled in the tying run off the Blue Jays' closer Tom Henke. It was the first run the Toronto bullpen had given up in the series. The game was decided in the 11th inning, when Dave Winfield doubled down the left-field line, driving in two runs. The Braves would again come within one run in the bottom of the 11th, but Jays reliever Mike Timlin fielded Otis Nixon's bunt, throwing to Joe Carter at first base for the final out. The Blue Jays became the first team based outside of the United States to win the World Series. Pat Borders, the Jays' catcher, was the unlikely player who was named MVP after hitting .450 with one home run in the World Series. Oddly, Morris was acquired in large part for his reputation as a clutch postseason pitcher, but he went 0–3 in the playoffs. Morris, however, pitched well in the regular season, becoming the Blue Jays' first 20-game winner, with a record of 21–6 and an ERA of 4.04.

  • Team record 1992: 96 wins–66 losses, W%- 0.593
1993: Back-to-back champs
Fireworks at the SkyDome following the Blue Jays' victory in the 1993 World Series.

After the 1992 season, the Blue Jays let World Series hero Dave Winfield and longtime closer Tom Henke go, but signed two key free agents: designated hitter Paul Molitor from the Milwaukee Brewers and perennial playoff success Dave Stewart from the Oakland Athletics.

In 1993, the Blue Jays had seven All-Stars: outfielders Devon White and Joe Carter, infielders John Olerud and Roberto Alomar, designated hitter Molitor, plus starting pitcher Pat Hentgen, and closer Duane Ward. In August, the Jays acquired former nemesis Rickey Henderson from the Athletics. The Blue Jays cruised to a 95–67 record, seven games ahead of the New York Yankees, winning their third straight division title. The Jays beat the Chicago White Sox four games to two in the ALCS, and then the Philadelphia Phillies, four games to two, for their second straight World Series victory. The World Series featured several exciting games, including Game 4, played under a slight rain, in which the Blue Jays came back from a 14–9 deficit to win 15–14 and take a 3 games to 1 lead in the series. It remains the highest-scoring game in World Series history. Game 6 in Toronto saw the Blue Jays lead 5–1, but give up 5 runs in the 7th inning to trail 6–5. In the bottom of the 9th inning, Joe Carter hit a one-out, three-run walk-off home run to clinch the series off of Phillies closer Mitch Williams. Only the second World Series-winning walk-off home run in the history of Major League Baseball (following Bill Mazeroski's in Game 7 in 1960), Carter's hit differed from the first in that Toronto, while not facing elimination, was trailing in the bottom of the 9th. The home run is also memorable for late Blue Jays radio broadcaster Tom Cheek's call:

A swing, and a belt! Left field! Way back! Blue Jays win it! The Blue Jays are World Series champions as Joe Carter hits a three-run home run in the ninth inning and the Blue Jays have repeated as World Series champions! Touch 'em all, Joe, you'll never hit a bigger home run in your life!

— Tom Cheek

Molitor was named the World Series MVP after hitting .500 in the series. In the regular season, three Blue Jays—Olerud, Molitor and Alomar—finished 1–2–3 for the AL batting crown, led by Olerud's franchise record .363 average. It was the first time in 100 years that the top three hitters in the league were from the same team.[8][15]

  • Team record 1993: 95 wins–67 losses, W%- 0.586

1994 season

Expectations were high for the Blue Jays for the 1994 season, following back-to-back championships, but they slumped to a 55–60 record and a third-place finish (16 games back of the New York Yankees) before the players' strike. It was their first losing season since 1982. Joe Carter, Paul Molitor and John Olerud enjoyed good years at the plate, but the pitching fell off. Juan Guzmán slumped considerably from his first three years (40–11, 3.28 ERA), finishing 1994 at 12–11 with a 5.68 ERA. Three young players, Alex Gonzalez, Carlos Delgado and Shawn Green, did show much promise for the future. At the time of the strike, their fellow Canadian cousins, the Montreal Expos, had the best record in the majors, leading some to consider the possibility of a Canadian three-peat in 1994.

On October 31, 1994, Gillick, the longtime Blue Jays general manager, resigned and handed the reins of the team to assistant general manager and Toronto native Gord Ash,[8] who would lead the team in its most tumultuous era yet.

  • Team record 1994: 55 wins–60 losses, W%- 0.478, 16 games behind division leader

1995–2001: The Gord Ash era

1995–2000

Blue Jays pitcher Pat Hentgen won the Cy Young Award in 1996.

In their 1995 season, the Blue Jays showed they had lost their contending swagger of the past 12 years. Although they had most of the World Series teams cast, the Jays dropped dramatically to a dismal 56–88 record, placing last in the AL East, 30 games behind the Boston Red Sox. That year, team owner Labatt Breweries was bought by Belgian-based brewer Interbrew, making the Blue Jays the second major league team owned by interests outside of North America, after their expansion cousins, the Seattle Mariners (then owned by Japanese video game company Nintendo).

1996 was another mediocre year for the Jays, despite Pat Hentgen's Cy Young Award (20–10, 3.22 ERA). Ed Sprague had a career year, hitting 36 home runs and driving in 101 runs. And the team's 74 wins did put them in fourth place, improving over 1995's last-place finish.

The Blue Jays started their 1997 season with high hopes. Not only did they radically change their uniforms, the team signed former Boston Red Sox ace Roger Clemens to a $24.75 million contract. Clemens had one of the best pitching seasons ever, winning the pitcher's Triple Crown and leading the AL with a record of 21–7, a 2.05 ERA, and 292 strikeouts. This was not enough to lead the Jays to the postseason, however, as they finished last for the second time in three years with a record of 76–86. Cito Gaston, the longtime manager who led the team to four division titles and two World Series crowns, was fired five games before the end of the season. The season did provide a unique experience for its fans with the advent of Interleague play, when the Blue Jays faced their Canadian rival, the Montreal Expos, for the first official games between the two teams. Before the start of their 1998 season, the Jays acquired closer Randy Myers and slugger Jose Canseco. Gaston was replaced with former Blue Jay Tim Johnson, who was a relative unknown as a manager. Despite mediocre hitting, strong pitching led by Clemens' second straight pitching Triple Crown (20–6, 2.65 ERA, 271 strikeouts) sparked the Blue Jays to an 88–74 record—their first winning season since 1993. However, this was only good enough to finish a distant third, 26 games behind the New York Yankees, who posted one of the greatest records in all of baseball history at 114–48. The Jays were, however, in contention for the wildcard spot until the final week.

Before the 1999 season, the Blue Jays traded Clemens to the Yankees for starting pitcher David Wells, second baseman Homer Bush and relief pitcher Graeme Lloyd. They also fired manager Tim Johnson during spring training after he lied about several things (including killing people in the Vietnam War) to motivate his players. The Blue Jays had initially been willing to stand by Johnson. A blizzard of questions about his credibility during spring training, however, led Ash to fire him less than a month before opening day. Johnson was replaced with Jim Fregosi, who managed the Phillies when they lost to the Blue Jays in the 1993 World Series. The offence picked up somewhat in 1999, but the pitching suffered without Clemens, as the Blue Jays finished at 84–78, in third place. After the 1999 season, the Blue Jays' original mascot for 20 years, BJ Birdy, was replaced by a duo named Ace and Diamond.

On November 8, 1999, Toronto traded star outfielder Shawn Green to the Los Angeles Dodgers for left-handed relief pitcher Pedro Borbón and right-fielder Raúl Mondesí. Green had told the Jays that he would not be re-signing when his contract was up at the end of the year (he wished to play closer to his home in Southern California).

The 2000 season proved similar, as the Blue Jays had an 83–79 record, well out of the wild card race but only a slim 4+12 games behind the three-time defending World Series champion Yankees in the AL East, the first time since 1993 they had contended for the division. Carlos Delgado had a stellar year, hitting .344 with 41 home runs, 57 doubles, 137 RBI, 123 walks and 115 runs. In addition, six other players hit 20 or more home runs, an outstanding feat.

2000–2001

Bob File pitching for the Blue Jays at Fenway Park during the 2001 season.

On September 1, 2000, Rogers Communications Inc. purchased 80% of the baseball club for $160 million,[16] with Interbrew (later InBev) maintaining a 20% interest and the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce relinquishing its 10% share. Rogers eventually acquired the 20% owned by Interbrew and now has full ownership of the team.

The 2001 season marked the 25th anniversary of the franchise's inception. Buck Martinez, former catcher and broadcast announcer for the Blue Jays, took over as manager before the season began with a home game in Puerto Rico. The team had a disappointing season, falling back under .500 and finishing 80–82, with mediocre pitching and hitting. Delgado led the team again with 39 home runs and 102 RBI. After the season ended, the Jays fired Gord Ash, ending a seven-year tenure as general manager.

J. P. Ricciardi, then director of player development under Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane, was named Blue Jays' General Manager; he was expected to slash payroll immediately, stemming the tide of red ink. During the off-season, the team traded or let go of several popular players, including Alex Gonzalez, Paul Quantrill, Brad Fullmer and closer Billy Koch to let talented youngsters such as Eric Hinske and Felipe López get a chance to develop into major leaguers.

2002–2009: The J. P. Ricciardi and Roy Halladay era

2002 season

The Blue Jays started the 2002 season with slow progress in performance. Buck Martinez was fired about a third of the way through the season, with a 20–33 record. He was replaced by third base coach Carlos Tosca, an experienced minor league manager. They went 58–51 under Tosca to finish the season 78–84. Roy Halladay was relied on as the team's ace and rose to the challenge of being the team's top pitcher, finishing the season with a 19–7 record and 2.93 ERA. The hitters were led once again by Carlos Delgado. Promising young players were assigned to key roles; starting third baseman Eric Hinske won the Rookie of the Year Award at the season's conclusion, and 23-year-old centre fielder Vernon Wells had his first 100 RBI season.

  • Team record 2002: 78 wins–84 losses, W%- 0.481, 25.5 games behind division leader, third in division

2003 season

The 2003 season was a surprise to both team management and baseball analysts. After a poor April, the team had its most successful month ever in May. Carlos Delgado led the majors in RBI, followed closely by Wells. Despite their hitting successes, poor pitching continued to plague the team. Halladay was an exception, winning his first Cy Young Award, going 22–7, with a 3.25 ERA. In July, Shannon Stewart was traded to the Minnesota Twins for Bobby Kielty, another outfielder with a much lower batting average than Stewart's. Although the Jays finished in third place in their division, Delgado was second in the voting for the American League MVP Award. In the off-season, Kielty was traded to the Oakland Athletics for starter Ted Lilly.

  • Team record 2003: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 15 games behind division leader, third in division

2004 season

The 2004 season was a disappointing year for the Blue Jays right from the beginning. They started the season 0–8 at SkyDome and never started a lengthy winning streak. Much of that was due to injuries to All-Stars Carlos Delgado, Vernon Wells and Roy Halladay among others. Although the additions of starting pitchers Ted Lilly and Miguel Batista and reliever Justin Speier were relatively successful, veteran Pat Hentgen faltered throughout the season and retired on July 24. Rookies and minor league callups David Bush, Jason Frasor, Josh Towers and others filled the void in the rotation and the bullpen; however, inconsistent performances were evident. With the team struggling in last place and mired in a five-game losing streak, manager Carlos Tosca was fired on August 8, 2004, and was replaced by first base coach John Gibbons. Long-time first baseman Carlos Delgado became a free agent in the off-season. Nevertheless, prospects Russ Adams, Gabe Gross, and Alex Ríos provided excitement for the fans. Rookie pitchers David Bush, Gustavo Chacín and Jason Frasor also showed promise for the club's future. The Blue Jays' lone MLB All-Star Game representative was Lilly.

  • Team record 2004: 67 wins–94 losses, W%- 0.416, 33.5 games behind division leader, fifth in division

2005 season

After the 2004 season, FieldTurf replaced AstroTurf as the Rogers Centre's playing surface.

SkyDome was renamed Rogers Centre and was extensively renovated. The Blue Jays had a good start to the 2005 season. They led the AL East from early to mid-April and held their record around .500 until late August. The Jays were hit with the injury bug when third baseman Corey Koskie broke his finger, taking him out of the line-up, but the club was pleasantly surprised with the performance of rookie call-up Aaron Hill in his stead. On July 8, just prior to the All-Star break, Blue Jays ace Roy Halladay was struck on the shin by a line drive, resulting in a fractured leg. Though Halladay's injury was hoped to be minor, the recovery process was met with constant delays, and eventually, he was out for the rest of the season. Prior to his injury, the Blue Jays were in serious wild card contention, but soon fell out of the playoff race. The team received glimpses of the future from September call-ups Guillermo Quiróz, John-Ford Griffin, and Shaun Marcum. Marcum made himself noteworthy by posting an ERA of 0.00 over five relief appearances and eight innings in September. Josh Towers also stepped up, showing largely unseen potential by going 7–5 with a 2.91 ERA in the second half of the season.

  • Team record 2005: 80 wins–82 losses, W%- 0.494, 15 games behind division leader, third in division

2006 season

In 2006, the team experienced its most successful season in years. On July 2, Troy Glaus, Vernon Wells, Roy Halladay, B. J. Ryan, and Alex Ríos were picked to represent the Blue Jays at the All-Star Game.[17] It was the largest number of Blue Jay All-Stars selected for the game since 1993. The team played well in the critical month of September, going 18–10. This, combined with the slumping of the Boston Red Sox, enabled the Blue Jays to take sole possession of second place in the American League East by the end of the season. This marked the first time that the Jays had finished above third place in their division since their World Championship season of 1993, and with the most wins since the 1998 season. On December 18, the Blue Jays announced that they had re-signed centre fielder Wells to a seven-year contract worth $126 million, which came into effect after the 2007 season.

  • Team record 2006: 87 wins–75 losses, W%- 0.537, 10 games behind division leader, second in division

2007 season

Dustin McGowan pitching for the Blue Jays in the 2007 season.

The 2007 season was blighted by persistent injuries, with 12 Blue Jays landing on the disabled list. The most serious injury was that of B. J. Ryan, who was out for the entire season having had Tommy John surgery. Prior to the season, the team signed starting pitchers John Thomson, Tomo Ohka, and Víctor Zambrano; each of them was released before the end of the season. However, young starters Shaun Marcum and Dustin McGowan had break-out years, with 12 wins each. On June 24, McGowan pitched a complete game one-hitter. On June 28, Frank Thomas became the 21st major league player to hit 500 career home runs. Aaron Hill also had a break-out year, setting a team record for second baseman with 47 doubles.

  • Team record 2007: 83 wins–79 losses, W%- 0.512, 13 games behind division leader, third in division

2008 season

The Blue Jays' 2008 season featured a strong pitching staff, which led the major leagues with a 3.49 ERA. For much of the season, however, the team struggled to hit home runs and drive in runs. On May 24, starter Jesse Litsch set a team record, with 38 consecutive innings without giving up a walk. On June 20, following a five-game losing streak and with the Jays in last place in the AL East, management fired John Gibbons and several members of his coaching staff, and re-hired Cito Gaston. Meanwhile, Alex Ríos had 32 stolen bases, making him the first Blue Jay with 30 since 2001. On September 5, Roy Halladay earned his 129th career win, moving him into second spot on Toronto's all-time wins list. Halladay also came second in the voting for the Cy Young Award, after posting a 20–11 record and 2.78 ERA.

  • Team record 2008: 86 wins–76 losses, W%- 0.531, 11 games behind division leader, fourth in division

2009 season

Blue Jays pitcher Roy Halladay during the 2009 season.

The 2009 season saw the addition of two new patches on the Blue Jays' uniforms: on the right arm, a bright red maple leaf (part of the Canadian flag), and on the left arm, a small black band with "TED" written on it, in reference to the late team owner Ted Rogers, who died in the off-season.

On Opening Day at the Rogers Centre, the Blue Jays, led by Roy Halladay, beat the Detroit Tigers 12–5. Aaron Hill and Roy Halladay both had excellent years and represented the Blue Jays at the 2009 All-Star Game in St. Louis. The Jays started the season well, posting a 27–14 record; however, immediately afterwards, the Jays fell into a nine-game losing streak and was never able to recover for the remainder of the season. In mid-August, GM J. P. Ricciardi allowed the Chicago White Sox to claim Alex Ríos off waivers. With two games remaining in what was a disappointing season, Ricciardi was fired on October 3. He was replaced by assistant general manager Alex Anthopoulos.[18]

Despite a 75-win season, the Jays saw the strong return of Aaron Hill, who won the American League Comeback Player of the Year Award and the Silver Slugger for second base. Adam Lind, who also had a strong season, earned the Silver Slugger for designated hitter.

  • Team record 2009: 75 wins–87 losses, W%- 0.463, 28 games behind division leader, fourth in division

2010–2015: The Alex Anthopoulos and José Bautista era

2010 season

Kyle Drabek with the Blue Jays during the 2010 season. Drabek was acquired by the Jays in a multi-player trade involving Roy Halladay.

In the off-season, the Jays' ace Roy Halladay was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies for Kyle Drabek, Travis d'Arnaud, and Michael Taylor; Taylor was immediately traded to the Oakland Athletics for Brett Wallace. The team's significant free agent signings were that of catcher John Buck and shortstop Álex González.[19]

The 2010 season was a surprising 10-win improvement over the last season. It was a career year for José Bautista, who hit 54 home runs, breaking George Bell's franchise record of 47. In doing so, he became the 26th player to reach 50 home runs and the first since Alex Rodriguez and Prince Fielder achieved the feat in 2007. The Blue Jays also set a franchise record for the most home runs in a single season as they hit 257, 13 more than their previous record of 244 set by the 2000 Blue Jays. The Blue Jays tied the 1996 Baltimore Orioles for the third-most home runs by a team in a single season. Seven players (José Bautista, Vernon Wells, Aaron Hill, Adam Lind, Lyle Overbay, John Buck, and Edwin Encarnación) hit 20 home runs or more throughout the season, tying an MLB record previously set by four teams, including the 2000 Blue Jays.

On July 14, the Jays traded Álex González and two minor league prospects—left-handed pitcher Tim Collins and shortstop Tyler Pastornicky—to the Atlanta Braves for Jo-Jo Reyes and Yunel Escobar.

On August 7, catching prospect J. P. Arencibia made his major league debut. He went 4-for-5 with two home runs, including a home run hit on the first pitch he saw. The next day, starting pitcher Brandon Morrow came within one out of a no-hitter, finishing with 17 strikeouts in a complete-game one-hitter.

  • Team record 2010: 85 wins–77 losses, W%- 0.525, 11 games behind division leader, fourth in division

2011 season

Led by new manager John Farrell, the 2011 Blue Jays finished with a .500 record. After signing a five-year $64 million contract extension, José Bautista followed up his record-setting 2010 season with an arguably better season. He finished with a Major League-leading 43 home runs, along with 103 RBI, 132 walks, and a .302 average. Rookie J. P. Arencibia also had a successful year, setting a Blue Jays single-season record with 23 home runs by a catcher. In August, third base prospect Brett Lawrie made his Major League debut and hit .293 with 9 home runs, 4 triples, and 25 RBI, in just 43 games.

Starting pitcher and ace Ricky Romero led the team with 15 wins and a 2.92 ERA. He also became an All-Star for the first time in his career. The other starting pitchers were inconsistent, and Farrell used 12 different starters over the course of the season.[20] Jon Rauch and Frank Francisco, both acquired in the off-season, shared the closer role.[21] They both struggled through the first half of the season, though Francisco improved in the last two months of the season, and had six saves in September.

On July 31, the Blue Jays retired their first number, Roberto Alomar's #12, one week after Alomar became the first Hall of Famer to be inducted as a Blue Jay.[22]

  • Team record 2011: 81 wins–81 losses, W%- 0.500, 16 games behind division leader, fourth in division

2012 season

Jose Bautista warming up prior to a game against the Los Angeles Angels during the 2012 season.

The 2012 season was an injury-plagued year for the Blue Jays, having used 31 total pitchers, which set a franchise record.[23] In June, three starting pitchers (Brandon Morrow, Kyle Drabek, and Drew Hutchison) were lost to injury in a span of four days, two of whom required Tommy John surgery;[23] in addition, starters Dustin McGowan and Jesse Litsch missed the entire season due to injury. In the second half of the season, some key players in Toronto's line-up, including All-Star José Bautista, missed a significant amount of playing time due to injury, sending the team into a freefall and culminating in a 73–89 record. Despite the underachievements of Ricky Romero and Adam Lind, Casey Janssen established himself as a reliable closer (22 SV, 2.52 ERA) and Edwin Encarnación developed into one of the league's best power hitters (.280 average, 42 home runs, 110 RBI).

On April 5, 2012, the team opened on the road in Cleveland, where they beat the Indians 7–4 in 16 full innings, during this game they set the record of the longest opening-day game in the Major League history. The previous record of 15 innings had been set by the Washington Senators and Philadelphia Athletics on April 13, 1926, and tied by the Detroit Tigers and the Indians on April 19, 1960.[24]

On April 20, the Jays turned a triple play against the Kansas City Royals in a 4–3 win. It was the first triple play they turned since September 21, 1979.[25]

  • Team record 2012: 73 wins–89 losses, W%- 0.451, 22 games behind division leader, fourth in division

2013 season

John Gibbons arguing with umpire Mike DiMuro. He returned as the Blue Jays manager prior to the start of the 2013 season.

During the off-season, the Toronto Blue Jays traded Farrell to the Boston Red Sox per his wishes, and former manager John Gibbons returned to manage the Blue Jays. The Jays also made a blockbuster trade with the Miami Marlins, leading to a series of other blockbuster trades and signings, including with the New York Mets for National League Cy Young winner R. A. Dickey and free agents including Melky Cabrera. On June 8, the Blue Jays played the then-longest game in franchise history by innings, winning 4–3 in 18 innings against the visiting Texas Rangers, which would be broken one season later.[26] The Jays matched their franchise record of 11 consecutive wins in a 13–5 home win over the Baltimore Orioles on June 23.[27] However, the Jays had a losing season overall.

  • Team record 2013: 74 wins–88 losses, W%- 0.457, 23 games behind division leader, fifth in division, 17.5 games behind AL wild card cutoff, eighth in AL wild card

2014 season

Pitcher Roy Halladay signed a one-day contract with the Blue Jays before retiring from baseball, citing injuries. The Jays had a nine-game win streak from May 20 to 28, as well as wins in 18 of 21 between May 15 and June 6. On August 10, the Blue Jays played the longest game in franchise history by both time and innings, winning 6–5 in 19 innings and playing 6 hours, 37 minutes against the visiting Detroit Tigers.[28]

  • Team record 2014: 83 wins–79 losses, W%- .512, 13 games behind division leader, third in division, 5 games behind AL wild card cutoff, sixth in AL wild card

2015: Return to the playoffs, AL East champions

During the off-season, the Jays signed Toronto-born catcher Russell Martin[29] through free agency. The Jays acquired Marco Estrada,[30] Devon Travis,[31] All-Star third baseman Josh Donaldson,[32] and Michael Saunders[33] in trades. The Jays claimed Justin Smoak,[34] Andy Dirks,[35] and Chris Colabello off waivers.[36] However, Dirks, along with John Mayberry Jr., were eventually non–tendered; the Jays later signed Dirks to a minor league contract.[37] Melky Cabrera[38] and Brandon Morrow[39] left through free agency and Juan Francisco was claimed off waivers by the Boston Red Sox.[40]

The Blue Jays celebrate after clinching the American League East in 2015; they went as far as the ALCS, only to lose against the eventual World Series-winning Kansas City Royals.

The Jays later traded José Reyes and pitching prospects Miguel Castro, Jeff Hoffman, and Jesus Tinoco to the Colorado Rockies for All-Star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki and reliever LaTroy Hawkins. Two days later, they acquired All-Star pitcher David Price from the Detroit Tigers in exchange for pitching prospects Daniel Norris, Matt Boyd, and Jairo Labourt.

The Jays had two 11-game winning streaks during this season. On September 25, the Blue Jays clinched a playoff berth, ending the longest active playoff drought in North American professional sports (see List of Major League Baseball franchise postseason droughts).[41] They subsequently claimed the AL East division title on September 30, after defeating the Baltimore Orioles 15–2 in the first game of a doubleheader.[42]

The Blue Jays faced the Texas Rangers in the ALDS. After losing back-to-back home games, they won the next three games in a row to take the five-game series, advancing to the ALCS; a three-game comeback series victory had not been accomplished since 2012 by the San Francisco Giants.[43] During game five of the series in Toronto, Blue Jays' right fielder José Bautista executed what Andrew Keh of The New York Times described as possibly "the most ostentatious bat flip in MLB history" after hitting a go-ahead, three-run home run off Rangers relief pitcher Sam Dyson.[44] Bautista wrote an article about the bat flip published in November 2015 in The Players' Tribune.[45]

The Blue Jays then faced the Kansas City Royals in the ALCS, losing the series 4–2 in Kansas City; the Royals would eventually win the World Series.[46]

After the playoffs, Donaldson was named AL MVP, becoming the first Blue Jay to win the award since George Bell in 1987.

  • Team record 2015: 93 wins–69 losses, W%- .574

2016–present: The Ross Atkins era

2016: Wild Card winners

Upon the expiration of Paul Beeston's contract, Mark Shapiro replaced him as president of the Blue Jays. Alex Anthopoulos resigned two months after the hiring of Shapiro. Ross Atkins subsequently took his place.

On October 2, 2016, the Blue Jays clinched their first Wild Card berth with a Detroit Tigers loss to the Atlanta Braves. On October 4, 2016, the Blue Jays defeated the Baltimore Orioles in the American League Wild Card Game in extra innings, via a walk-off three-run home run by Edwin Encarnación in the bottom of the 11th inning. On October 9, 2016, the Blue Jays completed a sweep of the Texas Rangers in the American League Division Series to advance to the American League Championship Series for the second consecutive year. On October 19, 2016, the Blue Jays were eliminated from World Series contention with a 3–0 loss to the Cleveland Indians in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series.

  • Team record 2016: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- .549

2017 season

On November 11, 2016, it was announced that Toronto had signed designated hitter Kendrys Morales to a three-year, $33 million deal.[47] The contract became official on November 18.[48]

Roberto Osuna during the 2017 season

On December 5, 2016, Steve Pearce signed a two-year, $12.5 million contract with Toronto.[49] On January 5, 2017, Edwin Encarnación signed a three-year, $60 million contract with the Cleveland Indians.[50] On January 18, 2017, Bautista signed a one-year, $18 million contract with the Blue Jays. The contract includes a $17 million mutual option for the 2018 season, as well as a $20 million vesting option for 2019.[51] The following day, Michael Saunders signed with the Philadelphia Phillies. However, in late June, the Phillies released Saunders and the Jays signed him to a minor league contract.[52]

The Blue Jays wore special red-and-white uniforms at select games during the 2017 season to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Canada.[53]

  • Team record 2017: 76 wins–86 losses, W%- .469, 17 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 9 games behind AL wild card cutoff, eighth in AL wild card

2018 season

The Blue Jays declined their mutual option on José Bautista, allowing him to enter free agency. He then signed with the Atlanta Braves, later the New York Mets, and eventually with the Philadelphia Phillies.

The Blue Jays traded two prospects to the San Diego Padres for Yangervis Solarte. The Blue Jays also acquired Curtis Granderson and Seung-hwan Oh as free agents.

On June 22, Roberto Osuna was suspended for 75 games after being accused of sexual assault on May 8 and applied retroactively from the date of the incident.

In July, the Blue Jays traded Pearce to the Boston Red Sox for a prospect, Santiago Espinal. They also dealt three pitchers: J. A. Happ to the New York Yankees, Seung-hwan Oh to the Colorado Rockies, and Roberto Osuna to the Houston Astros.

In August, the Blue Jays traded Josh Donaldson to the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named later, later revealed to be a pitching prospect, Julian Merryweather. The Blue Jays also traded Curtis Granderson to the Milwaukee Brewers for a prospect.

On September 26, it was confirmed by the Blue Jays that manager John Gibbons would not return for the 2019 season.[54]

  • Team record 2018: 73 wins–89 losses, W%- .451, 35 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 24 games behind AL wild card cutoff, seventh in AL wild card

2019 season

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. during the 2019 season

On October 25, 2018, the Blue Jays announced that Charlie Montoyo had been hired as their new manager.[55]

Early in the season, the Blue Jays traded Kendrys Morales to the Oakland Athletics and Kevin Pillar to the San Francisco Giants.

During the season, the Blue Jays called up Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Cavan Biggio, and Bo Bichette for the first time. The three are second-generation Major League Baseball players with the first two also being sons of Hall of Famers Vladimir Guerrero Sr. and Craig Biggio, respectively; Bo Bichette is the son of Dante Bichette.

Nearing the trade deadline, the Blue Jays traded Marcus Stroman to the New York Mets and Aaron Sanchez to the Houston Astros.

  • Team record 2019: 67 wins–95 losses, W%- .414, 36 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 29 games behind AL wild card cutoff, ninth in AL wild card

2020 season: Temporarily in Buffalo

A Blue Jays home game at Sahlen Field in Buffalo, New York in July 2021

Over the 2019–20 off-season, the Blue Jays signed free agents Tanner Roark[56] and Hyun-jin Ryu.[57] The Blue Jays also signed Shun Yamaguchi from the Yomiuri Giants, the first player the Blue Jays successfully signed via the posting system.[58]

On January 18, 2020, the Toronto Blue Jays unveiled a new blue alternate uniform.[59]

On July 24, 2020, it was announced that the Toronto Blue Jays would play a majority of their home games in Buffalo, New York, at their Triple-A affiliate Buffalo Bisons ballpark, Sahlen Field, as the Canadian government disallowed the Blue Jays and their opponents from playing in Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic.[60]

The Blue Jays reached the Wild Card series of the postseason, only to be swept by the Tampa Bay Rays in two games. The Blue Jays scored only three runs total in the two games.

  • Team record 2020: 32 wins–28 losses, W%- .533

2021 season: Temporarily in Dunedin and Buffalo

On successive days in January 2021, the Blue Jays signed relief pitchers Kirby Yates[61] and Tyler Chatwood,[62] and outfielder George Springer.[63] The Blue Jays also signed infielder Marcus Semien.[64] However, Yates was out for the entire season to recover from Tommy John surgery.

The Toronto Blue Jays played their home games in TD Ballpark in Dunedin, Florida until June 1 when they moved back to Sahlen Field in Buffalo.[65] On July 16, the Blue Jays announced that they would finally return to Rogers Centre in Toronto on July 30 after the Canadian government allowed the Blue Jays and their opponents to play in Canada.[66]

2019 first-round draft pick and pitcher Alek Manoah was called up to the majors for the first time this season.

Despite having 91 wins in 2021, the Toronto Blue Jays were fourth in the American League East and one game back of the Wild Card cutoff, preventing them from reaching the postseason.

  • Team record 2021: 91 wins–71 losses, W%- .562, 9 games behind division leader, fourth in division, 1 game behind AL wild card cutoff, third in AL wild card.

2022 season: Full return to Toronto since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic

During the off-season, the Blue Jays signed Kevin Gausman, Yimi García, and Yusei Kikuchi as Robbie Ray, Marcus Semien, and Kirby Yates left for free agency. The off-season is mainly affected by a lockout that lasted from December 2021 to March 2022. After the lockout, the Blue Jays traded for infielder Matt Chapman from the Oakland Athletics, as well as traded Randal Grichuk for Raimel Tapia. On July 13, the team released Charlie Montoyo as the manager for the team. With his four seasons with Toronto (2019–2022), he had a win-loss record of 236–235 (.501), and made it to the playoffs once (2020 ALWC). The new interim manager is bench coach John Schneider. At the trade deadline, the Blue Jays traded for utility player Whit Merrifield from the Kansas City Royals. After the trade deadline, the Blue Jays claimed outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr. from waivers.

The Blue Jays clinched home advantage for the American League Wild Card Series and hosted the Seattle Mariners. However, the Mariners swept the Blue Jays in two games, overcoming an 8–1 deficit in game 2.

  • Team record 2022: 92 wins–70 losses, W%- .568

2023 season: Continued playoff failure

During the off-season, the Blue Jays traded outfielder Teoscar Hernández to the Seattle Mariners for relief pitcher Erik Swanson and pitching prospect Adam Macko. The Blue Jays hired Don Mattingly as the new bench coach. The Blue Jays later signed starting pitcher Chris Bassitt and outfielder Kevin Kiermaier and traded catcher Gabriel Moreno and outfielder Lourdes Gurriel Jr. to the Arizona Diamondbacks for outfielder and catcher Daulton Varsho.

The Blue Jays qualified for American League Wild Card Series and played against the Minnesota Twins in Target Field. The Twins swept the Blue Jays in two games. This marked the third time in four seasons that the Blue Jays qualified for postseason wildcard series and swept by their opponents each time.[67]

  • Team record 2022: 89 wins–73 losses, W%- .549

2024 season

During the off-season, the Blue Jays re-signed Kiermaier and signed utility player Isiah Kiner-Falefa, designated hitter Justin Turner, and pitcher Yariel Rodríguez. The Blue Jays also traded Santiago Espinal for a prospect.

Popularity

Valuation of the Blue Jays 1991–present (in US dollars)
  Financial World[68]    Forbes[69][70]    Bloomberg News[71][e]

In 1977, after just 50 home games, the Blue Jays set an MLB record for a first-year expansion team, with an overall attendance of 1,219,551 during those games.[72] By the end of the season, 1,701,152 fans had attended. After setting an attendance record in 1990, with 3,885,284 fans, in 1991, the Blue Jays became the first MLB team to attract over four million fans, with an attendance of 4,001,526, followed by 4,028,318 in 1992.[8] Each of those records were broken in 1993 by the expansion Colorado Rockies, although the Blue Jays' 1993 attendance of 4,057,947 stood as an AL record for 12 years until it was broken by the 2005 New York Yankees.[73]

Several Blue Jays became very popular in Toronto and across the major leagues, starting with Dave Stieb, whose seven All-Star selections is a franchise record. He is closely followed by Roy Halladay and José Bautista, who were selected six times each, and by Roberto Alomar and Joe Carter, who were selected five times each. Bautista set a major league record in 2011 (which only stood for just one year), with 7,454,753 All-Star votes.[74] In his first season with the Blue Jays in 2015, Josh Donaldson set a new major league record by receiving 14,090,188 All-Star votes.[75]

Culture

Ace and Junior exchange greetings before the game. Ace was the Blue Jays' second mascot, introduced in 2000. Junior is a mascot occasionally seen for Junior Jays day promotions.

"OK Blue Jays"

During the seventh-inning stretch of home games, before singing "Take Me Out to the Ball Game", Blue Jay fans sing and clap to the pop song "OK Blue Jays" by Keith Hampshire and The Bat Boys, which was released in 1983. The song was remixed in 2003, and since then, the new, shortened version is played at home games.

"Let's Go Blue Jays"

At home games, the "Let's Go Blue Jays" chant is played four times followed by Charge being played thrice.

Mascots

From 1979 to 1999, BJ Birdy served as the Blue Jays' sole mascot, played by Kevin Shanahan. In 2000, he was replaced by a duo named Ace and Diamond. After the 2003 season, Diamond was removed by the team, leaving Ace as the team's sole mascot. Since the 2010s, Ace has been accompanied by his younger brother, Junior. This usually happens on the Jr. Jay Saturday promotions until the end of the 2017 season. The promotions were moved to select Sundays since the 2018 season, since the Blue Jays can no longer hold early Saturday afternoon games to accommodate American national broadcasts on Fox, though Fox did occasionally broadcast Blue Jays games at the Rogers Centre.

Sunday Salute

Since 2012, every Sunday home game, the Blue Jays pay tribute to a member of the Canadian Armed Forces. During the third inning, the team presents the honoured member a personalized jersey.[76]

National anthems

Since 2005, "The Star-Spangled Banner" has been sung before "O Canada" at every home game. In some home games (including Canada Day home games and playoffs), "O Canada" is sung in English and French. When "O Canada" was sung during the Home Opener, Canada Day, and playoff games, a giant Canadian flag was carried by members of the Canadian Armed Forces. Sportsnet only airs the national anthems during the home opener, Canada Day, and playoff games. On June 29, 2019, "O Canada" was sung in Cree and English.[77] On September 30, 2021, the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, "O Canada" was sung in English, French, and Anishinaabemowin. On September 30, 2022, "O Canada" was sung in French, English, and Blackfoot. For Blue Jays road games, "O Canada" is sung before the "Star Spangled Banner" as all road games (since the Expos moved to Washington, DC) for the Blue Jays are in the United States.

Canada Day

The Blue Jays traditionally host an afternoon home game during Canada Day. During the game, the team wears red jerseys instead of blue jerseys. During the pre-game ceremony, a giant Canadian flag is carried by members of the Canadian Armed Forces while "O Canada" is sung in English and French by a member of the Royal Canadian Air Force Band. The game was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the game was held in Buffalo, New York, due to Canada–U.S. travel restrictions.

Jays Shop

Exterior entrance to one of two Jays Shop locations at Rogers Centre

The Blue Jays operate a store that sells primarily Blue Jays merchandise called the Jays Shop. This store has two locations at Rogers Centre, though until January 2023, there was an additional location in the Toronto Eaton Centre shopping mall.

Uniforms

1977–1988: Pullovers and powder blue

The Blue Jays wore pullover uniforms during their first decade of existence. The front of the home white uniforms contained the team name in a unique blue/white/blue split-letter style, with the team logo centred below. The road uniforms were powder blue, with the city name in front and the team logo centred below. Initially, the city name was rendered in bold blue letters, before gaining a white outline the following season. By 1979 it was replaced by the team name in split-lettered white/blue/white style. Player numerals also used the split-letter style, except on the road uniform during its first two seasons. Player names in blue were added to both uniforms for the 1980 season, but were dropped from the road uniform in 1981. Caps were blue with the Blue Jays logo on a white panel in front.[78]

In 2008, the Blue Jays' powder blue road uniform from this era was restored as an alternate home uniform worn every Friday until 2010.[79]

1989–1996: Championship blues

The Blue Jays adopted buttoned uniforms upon moving to Rogers Centre (then SkyDome) in 1989. Aside from the additions of buttons and belts, the only change affecting the home uniforms was the relocation of the team logo to the left chest. The road uniforms changed from powder blue to grey, while the city name and numerals in blue/white/blue split-letters was emblazoned and the logo moved to the left chest. Player names were also added to the road uniform. All-blue caps were worn with their road uniform while keeping the white-paneled blue caps at home. By 1993, the all-blue caps were worn universally, supplanting and eventually retiring the original cap design.[78]

In 1994 the Blue Jays began wearing blue alternate uniforms with the team name and numerals in white/blue/white split letters.[78]

1997–2003: Red, teal and blue

The Blue Jays updated their logo prior to the 1997 season, with a new bird design and enlarged red maple leaf at the back. The usage of red was greatly increased on the team's new uniforms. On the home uniforms, the letters and numerals were changed to blue/teal/blue split letters, while road uniform letters and numerals were changed to blue/red/blue split letters. On the alternate blue uniforms, split letters and numerals became red/blue/red. Red also appeared on the pant and sleeve stripes while the new logo occupied the left sleeve. Player names also took on the new block split-letter style. An updated all-blue cap was paired with the home and road uniforms, while a red-brimmed blue cap (with a modified logo without a baseball) was used with the blue alternates.[80]

In 1999 the Blue Jays unveiled an alternate sleeveless white uniform, featuring the same lettering style as the regular home uniform. However, the chest numerals were replaced with the primary logo. Blue undershirts were worn with this uniform.[80]

Before the 2001 season slight modifications were made with the uniforms, eliminating the tricolour stripes and adding a single colour piping along the chest and neck. While the home uniforms remained mostly intact, the road uniforms gained blue sleeves in a faux-vest design. On the alternate white uniform (now a faux-vest instead of a straight sleeveless design), the new "T-bird" logo replaced the primary "jay leaf" logo, which moved to the left sleeve. In 2003, the "T-bird" logo became the primary, taking over the previous logo's placement on the caps and sleeve, while the alternate white uniforms brought back chest numerals.[80]

2004–2011: The "Black-and-Graphite Jays"

Before the 2004 season, the Blue Jays adopted a new visual identity, going with a black, silver and graphite motif. The home and black alternates simply read "Jays" in front and in a 3D-oriented diagonal arrangement, with the bird connected to the letter "J". Letters and numerals were in graphite with light blue and silver trim. The road uniforms featured the city name in a similar letter style as the logo, with graphite letters and numerals trimmed in light blue and silver. In 2008, however, amid complaints of illegibility, the Blue Jays tweaked their road uniforms to include 3D-style block letters and numerals in light blue trimmed in black and white, along with chest numerals. The "J-bird" alternate was added to the left sleeve. A red maple leaf would be added on the right sleeve starting in 2009. The Blue Jays wore all-black caps with the "J-bird" logo for much of the uniforms' existence, save for the 2004 and 2005 seasons when they wore all-graphite caps at home, and in 2007 when an alternate all-black cap with the "T" from the previous road uniform was used.[81][82]

2012–present: Return to traditional look

Prior to the 2012 season, the Blue Jays unveiled new uniforms and a new logo. The logo is a modernized version of the original logo used from 1977 to 1996. The bird's head was also made sleeker than its 1977–1996 predecessor. The uniforms are similar to the ones used from 1989 to 1996, the team's most successful era. New serifed split-letters were also released.[83][84] In 2015, the Blue Jays began wearing a modernized version of the white-paneled blue caps they originally wore from 1977 to 1993 as an alternate.[85]

Before the 2020 season, the Blue Jays unveiled a modernized version of the powder blue uniforms, featuring navy/white/navy serifed split letters and numerals. These uniforms are paired with a powder-brimmed navy cap and an all-navy helmet.[86]

Canada Day uniforms

Since 1996, the Blue Jays wore predominantly red or red-accented uniforms every July 1, Canada Day. The uniforms were based on the team's alternate uniforms they wore at the time, but with red as the primary colour. On a few occasions, the Blue Jays added red trim to an existing white uniform (or in the case of the 2006 uniforms, their black alternates), and sometimes add the flag of Canada or a red maple leaf on the uniform.[87]

Rivalries

Montreal Expos

The Montreal Expos were the Blue Jays' geographic National League rival, being the other Canadian MLB team before it was relocated. From 1978 to 1986, the teams played an annual mid-season exhibition game, known as the Pearson Cup, named after former Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson. The teams began facing each other in the regular season in 1997, with the advent of interleague play. During the 2003 and 2004 seasons, the Expos' last two seasons before relocating to Washington, D.C., as the Nationals, the Pearson Cup was awarded after a pair of three-game sets.

Detroit Tigers

The Detroit Tigers are the Blue Jays' geographic and traditional rival, dating back to the 1980s, when the teams were AL East contenders. The Tigers moved to the AL Central in 1998, and the rivalry has died down as a result, with the teams facing each other only six to seven times per year since 2011.[88] Depending on traffic and border delays, Detroit is about a four-hour drive from Toronto. According to The Detroit News, a July 2017 three-game series at Comerica Park against the Blue Jays drew a season-best-to-date total attendance of 115,088.[89]

Seattle Mariners

Although the Seattle Mariners are not a divisional rival, many Blue Jays fans from Western Canada travel to Seattle when the Blue Jays play there as Seattle is geographically closer to Western Canada than Toronto is. Depending on traffic and border delays, Seattle is about a three-hour drive from Vancouver. The Seattle Times estimated that Blue Jays fans represented around 70 percent of the crowd in Safeco Field for a June 2017 weekend series.[90]

Broadcasting

Canadian regions subject to MLB blackout
  Toronto Blue Jays exclusively
  Shared with Seattle Mariners
  Shared with Minnesota Twins
  Shared with Boston Red Sox
Note: Toronto Blue Jays territory covers all of Canada

Radio

The Blue Jays' former radio play-by-play announcer, Tom Cheek, called every Toronto Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7, 1977, until June 3, 2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father—a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular-season games and 41 postseason games. Cheek later died on October 9, 2005, and the team commemorated him during their 2006 season by wearing a circular patch on the left sleeve of their home and road game jerseys. The patch was adorned with the letters 'TC', Cheek's initials, as well as a stylized microphone. Cheek is also honoured with a place in the Blue Jays' "Level of Excellence" in the upper level of the Rogers Centre; the number 4,306 is depicted beside his name. In 2008, Cheek received the third most votes by fans to be nominated for the Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasting excellence. Cheek finally received the Frick Award, posthumously, in 2013 after nine years on the ballot.[91]

Radio broadcasts of Blue Jays games are originated from Sportsnet 590 CJCL in Toronto which, like the Blue Jays, is owned by Rogers Communications. After Cheek's retirement in 2005, Jerry Howarth, who had been Cheek's broadcasting partner since 1982, took over as lead play-by-play announcer, with Mike Wilner as the secondary play-by-play announcer. During the 2007 to 2012 seasons, former Blue Jays catcher Alan Ashby was the colour commentator. Former Blue Jays pitcher Jack Morris served as the colour commentator during the 2013 season, after which he was replaced by former Montreal Expos catcher Joe Siddall since the 2014 season.

Former Blue Jays pitcher Dirk Hayhurst filled in for Morris for some games during the 2013 season.

Another former catcher for the Blue Jays, Gregg Zaun, has served as the occasional colour commentator from the 2011 season until the end of the 2017 season when he was terminated amid accusations of improper conduct from several female employees.[92]

Following Howarth's retirement in the 2017 season, Ben Wagner was hired as the primary radio play-by-play announcer, splitting said duties with Dan Shulman and Mike Wilner.

In November 2020, Mike Wilner was laid off by the team.[93] In February 2021, it was announced that "in an effort to minimize travel and closely adhere to team, league, and government protocols related to the pandemic", all radio broadcasts for the 2021 season will be a simulcast of the television broadcast. Wagner will assume an alternative role.[94][95] However, once the Blue Jays returned to Rogers Centre in late July 2021, dedicated radio broadcasts resumed.

The Blue Jays have the largest geographical home market in all of baseball, encompassing all of Canada. Despite this, the number of radio stations that broadcast games is actually quite small. Only 18 radio stations across the country aired at least some Blue Jays games during the 2021 season,[96] which is fewer affiliates than most MLB teams, which have more stations covering smaller geographic areas.

Television

All Blue Jays games are carried nationally on Sportsnet (which, like the Blue Jays, is owned by Rogers Communications). As of 2023, Dan Shulman serves as the lead play-by-play announcer, with Buck Martinez as the primary colour commentator; on select series, Toronto Raptors play-by-play announcer Matt Devlin calls the game in place of Shulman, and Joe Siddall works colour commentary in place of Martinez.[97] Prior to that, Martinez had been the primary play-by-play announcer alongside colour commentator Pat Tabler, with Shulman only calling games sporadically since 2016. In previous years, the colour analyst role rotated between Pat Tabler, Rance Mulliniks, Darrin Fletcher, and from 2011 to 2017, Gregg Zaun. Sportsnet became the team's primary carrier soon after it launched in the late 1990s, and became the team's exclusive broadcaster in 2010.[98] As of August 2010, Sportsnet One also broadcasts Blue Jays games (often in case of scheduling conflicts with the main Sportsnet channels). Rogers was, however, criticized by fans and critics due to Sportsnet One only being carried by Rogers Cable systems on launch.[99]

Sportsnet's broadcasts of the 2015 American League Division Series involving the Blue Jays were among the highest-rated telecasts in network history, with Game 4 drawing an audience of 4.38 million viewers.[100]

Jamie Campbell and Gregg Zaun providing Sportsnet coverage of a Toronto Blue Jays game in 2011

In September 2012, AMI-tv simulcast three Blue Jays games with described video provided by CJCL correspondent Sam Cosentino, which included explanations of on-screen graphics. Paul Beeston praised AMI's involvement, stating that "to our knowledge, we are the first sports organization to have our games provided through this revolutionary approach to accommodating the needs of the blind and low-vision community."[101]

On June 27, 2013, Rogers' over-the-air Toronto multicultural Omni Television station CJMT-DT simulcast a Blue Jays game, scheduled to be started by Taiwanese player Chien-Ming Wang, with commentary in Mandarin, marking the first ever Canadian MLB broadcast in the language.[102][103] In June 2018, Omni announced that it would air Sunday afternoon games in Tagalog, the most spoken language of the Philippines, through the remainder of the season.[104][105] Sportsnet and Omni announced a regular season of Sunday broadcasts in Tagalog for the 2019 season.[106]

TVA Sports has aired games in French since 2011, with Denis Casavant and François Paquet on play-by-play and Rodger Brulotte on colour. The channel currently has rights to 81 Blue Jay games per season, in a three-year deal signed in 2023.[107] Jacques Doucet, former Montreal Expos radio announcer, broadcast the Blue Jays on TVA Sports from 2011 until his retirement in 2022.[108][109]

The Sports Network (TSN), which (like the Jays) was owned by Labatt from 1984 to 1995, served as the primary cable television outlet for the Blue Jays prior to the launch of Sportsnet. TSN (and later, its sister channel TSN2) continued to carry approximately ten Jays games through the 2009 season until May 2010; most recently, Rod Black handled play-by-play while Tabler served as colour commentator on these telecasts. CBC has carried Blue Jays games intermittently throughout the team's history, most recently in 2007 and 2008; those broadcasts featured Jim Hughson as the play-by-play announcer, and former Blue Jays Rance Mulliniks and Jesse Barfield on colour commentary.[110] Games also aired on CTV (except in Montreal) from the team's inception until the late 1990s. The Blue Jays have not appeared over-the-air in Canada in English since 2008.

In 2008, Rogers Communications, owner of the Jays, was granted a license by the Canadian Radio-Television Commission (CRTC) for a "Baseball TV" specialty channel.[111] The channel would have been dedicated to coverage of baseball, combining content from the United States-based MLB Network with original Canadian content.[112] However, the channel was never launched, and Rogers sponsored an application to allow distribution of the U.S. MLB Network on Canadian providers instead.[113][114]

Due to the structure of Rogers' MLB broadcast contracts, Sportsnet is not permitted to use its domestic production for Blue Jays games if the team is in postseason play (as it is technically still considered a regional broadcaster), and instead carries the U.S. broadcast (such as Fox in 2015, and TBS in 2016). This is in contrast to the NBA's Toronto Raptors (via TSN and Sportsnet), as well as the NHL and MLS's Canadian-based teams (via Hockey Night in Canada on CBC and Sportsnet, and TSN respectively) who were allowed to produce their own broadcasts during postseason games. Buck Martinez has served as a colour commentator for post-season coverage ultimately simulcast by Sportsnet, however, having formerly worked Division Series games for TBS, and on the MLB International broadcast of the 2016 World Series.[115] In 2022, however, MLB allowed Sportsnet to carry its own production of Blue Jays postseason games.[116]

Roster

Active roster Inactive roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers
Starting rotation

Bullpen

Closer(s)


Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Designated hitters

Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders


Manager

Coaches



Minor league affiliations

The Toronto Blue Jays farm system consists of six minor league affiliates.[117]

Class Team League Location Ballpark Affiliated
Triple-A Buffalo Bisons International League Buffalo, New York Sahlen Field 2013
Double-A New Hampshire Fisher Cats Eastern League Manchester, New Hampshire Delta Dental Stadium 2003
High-A Vancouver Canadians Northwest League Vancouver, British Columbia Nat Bailey Stadium 2011
Single-A Dunedin Blue Jays Florida State League Dunedin, Florida TD Ballpark 1987
Rookie FCL Blue Jays Florida Complex League Englebert Complex Dunedin, Florida 2007
DSL Blue Jays Dominican Summer League Boca Chica, Santo Domingo Baseball City Complex 2009

Season by season record

Awards and other achievements

Award winners and league leaders

Franchise records

Statistic Single season record Career record
Player Record Season Player Record
Games played: Tony Fernández 163 1986 Tony Fernández 1,450
Plate appearances: Vernon Wells 735 2003 Carlos Delgado 6,018
At bats: Tony Fernández 687 1986 Vernon Wells 5,470
Batting average: John Olerud .363 1993 Roberto Alomar .307
On-base percentage: John Olerud .473 1993 John Olerud .395
Slugging percentage: Carlos Delgado .664 2000 Carlos Delgado .556
On-base plus slugging: Carlos Delgado 1.134 2000 Carlos Delgado .949
Runs scored: Shawn Green 134 1999 Carlos Delgado 889
Hits: Vernon Wells 215 2003 Tony Fernández 1,583
Total bases: Carlos Delgado 378 2000 Carlos Delgado 2,786
Doubles: Carlos Delgado 57 2000 Carlos Delgado 343
Triples: Tony Fernández 17 1990 Tony Fernández 72
Home runs: José Bautista 54 2010 Carlos Delgado 336
RBI Carlos Delgado 145 2003 Carlos Delgado 1,058
Walks: José Bautista 132 2011 Carlos Delgado 827
Stolen bases: Dave Collins 60 1984 Lloyd Moseby 255
Games played (pitcher): Mark Eichhorn 89 1987 Jason Frasor 505
Games started: Jim Clancy 40 1982 Dave Stieb 408
Wins: Roy Halladay 22 2003 Dave Stieb 175
Losses: Jerry Garvin
Phil Huffman
18 1977
1979
Jim Clancy 140
Winning percentage: Dennis Lamp 1.000 1985 Roger Clemens .759
Innings pitched: Dave Stieb 288.1 1982 Dave Stieb 2,873
ERA: Mark Eichhorn 1.72 1986 Tom Henke 2.48
Earned runs: Erik Hanson 129 1996 Dave Stieb 1,091
Strikeouts: Roger Clemens 292 1997 Dave Stieb 1,658
Complete Games: Dave Stieb 19 1982 Dave Stieb 102
Shutouts: Dave Stieb 5 1982 Dave Stieb 30
Saves: Duane Ward 45 1993 Tom Henke 217
[118][119]

No-hitters

Only one Blue Jays pitcher has thrown a no-hitter in franchise history. It was accomplished by Dave Stieb on September 2, 1990, after losing three no-hit bids with two outs in the ninth inning.[120]

No perfect games, a special subcategory of no-hitter, have been thrown in Blue Jays history. The franchise came closest on August 4, 1989, when Stieb gave up a double to Yankees' batter Roberto Kelly with two outs in the ninth and he scored by the next batter.[121]

# Date Pitcher Final score Base-
runners
Opponent Catcher Plate umpire Manager Notes Ref
1 September 2, 1990 Dave Stieb 3–0 4 Cleveland Indians Pat Borders Drew Coble Cito Gaston
  • First and only no-hitter in franchise history
  • First and only no-hitter on the road
  • First and only right-handed pitcher to throw a no-hitter in franchise history
[122]

Triple Crown champions

Roger Clemens won the pitching Triple Crown in 1997 and 1998.[123]

Baseball Hall of Famers

Ten former Blue Jays, one former manager, and one former general manager, have been elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Second baseman Roberto Alomar, elected to the Hall of Fame in 2011, is the first player to be inducted based primarily on service as a player for the Blue Jays.

Toronto Blue Jays Hall of Famers
Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
Toronto Blue Jays

Roberto Alomar
Bobby Cox

Pat Gillick
Roy Halladay
Rickey Henderson

Fred McGriff
Paul Molitor

Jack Morris
Phil Niekro
Scott Rolen

Frank Thomas
Dave Winfield

  • Players and managers listed in bold are depicted on their Hall of Fame plaques wearing a Blue Jays cap insignia.
  •  – Pat Gillick was elected as an Executive/Pioneer; accordingly he is not depicted on his plaque wearing a cap. The Hall of Fame recognizes the Blue Jays as his primary team.[124]
  • – Roy Halladay's plaque does not depict him with a cap insignia;[125] however, the Hall of Fame recognizes the Blue Jays as his primary team.[126]

Bobby Doerr, a second baseman with the Boston Red Sox, served as a hitting coach with the Blue Jays early in their history, 1977–1981, and was the first person associated with the franchise to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, in 1986.

Early Wynn, the Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher (1972) and career 300-game winner, was a radio broadcaster for the Blue Jays with Tom Cheek during their first few years, 1977–1981.

Ford C. Frick Award recipients

Toronto Blue Jays Ford C. Frick Award recipients
Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

Tom Cheek

Tony Kubek

  • Names in bold received the award based primarily on their work as broadcasters for the Blue Jays.

BBWAA Career Excellence Award recipients

Toronto Blue Jays BBWAA Career Excellence Award recipients
Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
Bob Elliott
Names in bold received the award based primarily on their work covering the Blue Jays.

Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame

Blue Jays in the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame
No. Inductee Position Tenure Notes
12 Roberto Alomar 2B 1991–1995
Gord Ash GM 1995–2001 Born in Toronto, attended York University
Paul Beeston Executive 1976–1997
2008–2015
Born in Welland, Ontario, attended University of Western Ontario
11 George Bell LF 1981, 1983–1990
29, 43 Joe Carter OF/1B 1991–1997
Tom Cheek Broadcaster 1977–2004
6, 21, 25 Carlos Delgado 1B 1993–2004
Jacques Doucet Broadcaster 2011–present Elected mainly for his broadcasting career with Montreal Expos, Born in Montreal
20, 22, 40 Rob Ducey OF 1987–1992, 2000 Born in Toronto, raised in Cambridge
1 Tony Fernández SS 1983–1990, 1993
1998–1999, 2001
35 Jeff Francis P 2015 Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, attended University of British Columbia
43 Cito Gaston Manager 1989–1997
2008–2010
Pat Gillick GM 1978–1994
32, 52 Roy Halladay P 1998–2009
Peter Hardy Executive 1976–1993 Born in Toronto, Ontario
50 Tom Henke P 1985–1992
41 Pat Hentgen P 1991–1999, 2004
47 Corey Koskie 3B 2005 Born in Anola, Manitoba, attended University of Manitoba
Tony Kubek Broadcaster 1977–1989
3 Bobby Mattick Manager 1980–1981
39 Dave McKay 2B/3B 1977–1979 Born in Vancouver, British Columbia
15 Lloyd Moseby CF 1980–1989
9 John Olerud 1B 1989–1996
48 Paul Quantrill P 1996–2001 Born in London, Ontario
Jim Ridley Scout 1976–2002 Born in Toronto
Gladwyn Scott Scout 1987–1993 Born in Hamiota, Manitoba
24 Matt Stairs OF/DH/1B 2007–2008 Born in St. John, New Brunswick, grew up in Fredericton, New Brunswick
Howard Starkman Executive 1976–2014 Born in Toronto
37 Dave Stieb P 1979–1992, 1998
31 Duane Ward P 1986–1995
12 Ernie Whitt C 1977–1978, 1980–1989

Retired numbers

Jackie Robinson's number was retired by every team in MLB on April 15, 1997.
32
Roy
Halladay

P
Retired
March 29, 2018
42
Jackie
Robinson

All MLB
Honored April 15, 1997

Soon after becoming the first person to be inducted in the Hall of Fame as a Blue Jay, on July 31, 2011, second baseman Roberto Alomar was the first person to have his number, #12, retired by the Blue Jays.[127] However, #12 was unretired due to controversies surrounding Alomar.[128] Jordan Hicks became the first Blue Jay since 2011 to wear this number.

On March 29, 2018, the Blue Jays retired #32 in honour of Roy Halladay, who died in an airplane crash on November 7, 2017, becoming the second number to be retired by the Blue Jays.[129]

Level of Excellence

In 1996, the Blue Jays instituted a "Level of Excellence" on the 500 level of the Rogers Centre, honouring "tremendous individual achievement."


Tony Fernández
SS, 3B: 1983–1990, 1993, 1998–1999, 2001

George Bell
LF: 1981–1990
JaysRetired25
Carlos Delgado
1B: 1993–2004

Joe Carter
RF, 1B: 1991–1997

Dave Stieb
P: 1979–1992, 1998

Cito Gaston
Manager: 1989–1997, 2008–2010

Tom Cheek
Broadcaster: 1977–2005

Paul Beeston
VP: 1976–1989; President: 1989–1997, 2008–2015

Roy Halladay
P: 1998–2009

Pat Gillick
GM: 1978–1994

José Bautista
RF, 3B: 2008–2017

Players' uniform numbers were listed—and in Tom Cheek's case, the number of consecutive games he called for the Blue Jays[130]—until the 2013 All-Star Break, even though, with the exception of Roberto Alomar and Roy Halladay these numbers have not been retired. During the 2013 All-Star Break, the Level of Excellence was redesigned for the addition of Carlos Delgado's name. The redesign removed all uniform numbers from the Level of Excellence aside from Roberto Alomar's retired #12, Roy Halladay's retired #32 and Tom Cheek's 4306 consecutive games called streak.[131] On April 30, 2021, the Blue Jays announced that they would remove Alomar from the Level of Excellence and take down his banner at Rogers Centre after he was banned from baseball for sexual harassment.[132][133]

On March 5, 2023, the Blue Jays announced that Jose Bautista would join the Level of Excellence on August 12, 2023, in a pre-game ceremony prior to their game that day versus the Chicago Cubs.[134]

Charity and partnerships

The Jays Care Foundation is the charitable arm of the Toronto Blue Jays baseball organization and conducts events to support local organizations and community members.[135] They also provide baseball education and life skill workshops to the youth of communities across Canada.[136][137][138]

Notes

  1. ^ Known as SkyDome from 1989 to 2005.
  2. ^ As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto, the Blue Jays played their home games during the 2020 Major League Baseball season and 2021 season (from June until July 30) at Sahlen Field in Buffalo, New York.[3]
  3. ^ As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto, the Blue Jays played their first 21 home games during the 2021 Major League Baseball season at TD Ballpark in Dunedin, Florida before returning to Sahlen Field in June 2021.
  4. ^ The Atlanta Braves are owned by Liberty Media.
  5. ^ Unlike the Forbes valuations, Bloomberg includes contributions from regional sports networks and related businesses in the total value.[71]

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Some text copied via the GFDL from BR Bullpen article on the 2009 Blue Jays

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by World Series champions
19921993
Succeeded by
Preceded by American League champions
19921993
Succeeded by