An examination of the Toronto Blue Jays' depth at each position
Photo credit: https://www.sportsnet.ca/mlb/
Today we examine the Toronto Blue Jays depth at each position going into the 2025 season.
With that in mind, let's take stock of this roster position by position, assessing where the
Blue Jays are deepest, and where the biggest organizational question marks exist:
Depth: Tyler Heineman, Christian Bethancourt, Ali Sanchez
Positional strength: Good. Kirk impacts the game on both sides of the ball.
Positional vulnerability: Very high. An injury to Kirk would be devastating.
Depth: Will Wagner, Anthony Santander, Joey Loperfido
Positional strength: Excellent. Guerrero Jr. is one of the game's elite hitters in his prime.
Positional vulnerability: Moderate. There's no clear option behind Guerrero Jr., but Wagner has been getting first-base reps this spring, and Santander and Loperfido have played the position in the majors before. If they had to, they could cobble things together.
«This is going to sound funny: we're trying to get him into some uncomfortable spots,» Schneider said of Wagner's work at first this spring. «The technical part, the fielding the ground ball and throwing, he's going to be fine, so trying to get him into those situations you can't really practice.»
Depth: Leo Jimenez, Will Wagner, Ernie Clement, Orelvis Martinez, Davis Schneider, Michael Stefanic
Positional strength: Good. Gimenez offers game-changing defence.
Positional vulnerability: Very low. The
Blue Jays have lots of fill-in options available if needed, so this isn't a position they need to stress about.
Depth: Addison Barger, Orelvis Martinez, Leo Jimenez, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Will Wagner, Michael Stefanic
Positional strength: Solid. Clement played excellent defence last year, and his elite bat-to-ball skills make up for a plate approach that can veer overly aggressive.
Positional vulnerability: Moderate to high. The
Blue Jays have big-league-ready options behind Clement, but there are questions about Barger (contact quality), Martinez (readiness) and Wagner (defence).
Using Guerrero Jr. here made more sense when first baseman Spencer Horwitz was also on the roster, so he's probably more of an emergency option for now.
Depth: Ernie Clement, Andres Gimenez, Leo Jimenez, Josh Kasevich
Positional strength: Excellent. What team wouldn't want a healthy Bichette for his age-27 season?
Positional vulnerability: Low. Behind Bichette, the
Blue Jays have two legitimately capable big-leaguers in Clement and Gimenez.
Depth: Nathan Lukes, Joey Loperfido, Jonatan Clase, Addison Barger, Davis Schneider, Steward Berroa, Alan Roden, Myles Straw
Positional strength: Very good.
Positional vulnerability: Moderate. Summer trades for Loperfido and Clase added upside to the Blue Jays' outfield ranks, though neither is a sure thing.
Roden is not on the 40-man roster yet, but he's intriguing.
Overall, there's some depth here - and ideally someone would step forward from this group.
Positional strength: Low. Like many teams, the
Blue Jays are choosing to rotate players such as Wagner through the DH spot while using it to give others a partial day off. In 25 big-league games last year, Wagner hit .305 with a 125 wRC+, production that has the 26-year-old positioned to get regular at-bats to start 2025.
Positional vulnerability: Low. Because anyone can DH, no team is especially vulnerable here, the
Blue Jays included.
Depth: Yariel Rodriguez, Ryan Yarbrough, Jake Bloss, Eric Lauer, Easton Lucas, Lazaro Estrada
Now injured: Alek Manoah, Adam Macko, Adam Kloffenstein
Positional strength: Moderate. Scherzer was a great addition, but he's 40 coming off a season in which be battled various injuries.
Meanwhile, Gausman's strikeout rate dropped and Francis benefitted from an exceptionally low batting average on balls in play, so there's some downside risk here counterbalancing impressive savvy and experience.
Positional vulnerability: High. While Rodriguez and Yarbrough have experience starting in the majors, the
Blue Jays are thin here since most teams need 10 starters in the course of the season.
By August, Alek Manoah will be back, and the
Blue Jays could trade for further help, but the challenge is getting through the first four months of the season at a time that the organization hasn't drafted and developed enough young pitching.
One candidate to provide the kind of depth they seek: Lazaro Estrada, a 25-year-old Cuban right-hander who pitched well in the Arizona Fall League late last year, thanks to a 95 m.p.h. fastball.
«An up-and-comer who's a little bit younger, but he's building off a good fall and winter,» Schneider said. «I think he's kind of the next guy in line.»
Depth: Brendon Little, Tommy Nance, Ryan Burr, Zach Pop, Josh Walker, Mason Fluharty, Jacob Barnes, Easton Lucas
Positional strength: Solid. Having added Hoffman, Garcia and Sandlin to the bullpen, the Blue Jays are in a far better spot than they were a year ago, when they had one of the worst relief corps in the sport.
Positional vulnerability: Moderate to high. A breakout from someone such as Fluharty, Barnes or Lucas would help considering the total volume arms required to get through 162 games.
Not counting position players, 31 pitchers took the mound for the
Blue Jays a year ago, so although the first six or eight names look good, they'll need many more.
The quality of their minor-league signings and upper-minors player development matters a ton here, as ever.
SOURCE: Sportsnet
Credit: Ben Nicholson-Smith
Previously on Blue Jays Central
POLL |
FEVRIER 27 | 86 ANSWERS An examination of the Toronto Blue Jays' depth at each position What position do you think the Toronto Blue Jays need to add more depth? |
Catcher | 39 | 45.3 % |
Pitching | 29 | 33.7 % |
Infield | 8 | 9.3 % |
Outfield | 10 | 11.6 % |
List of polls |
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18 hours ago | By Nelson Anderson Blue Jays' Max Scherzer remains focused and leads by example in Spring Training |