Examining the areas the Blue Jays lack depth
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There are a few areas that the Toronto Blue Jays are lacking some depth. Some due to injury, Some just du to a lack of MLB ready talent.
Injuries are rarely predictable. Beyond the controllable variables like a club's medical staff and strength programs, there are large elements of hope and luck involved. Depth will be tested, it's just a matter of where.
These are the positions where Toronto still needs to improve its depth, either internally or externally:
Regardless, Toronto will need a backup catcher to play a meaningful number of games.
The days of the tandem between Kirk and Danny Jansen are gone, leaving Tyler Heineman as the lone catcher remaining on the 40-man roster and Christian Bethancourt as his main (off-roster) competition.
The
Blue Jays have no catchers ranked in their Top 30 prospects, leaving high-Minors options like Phil Clarke and Ali Sanchez as the next wave.
This feels like a position that could be addressed again as rosters are cut down and the waiver wire begins to churn.
They've also built out their depth with some intriguing options, but «depth» doesn't always mean replacing the 26th spot on the roster or the eighth spot in the bullpen.
After
Swanson returned from Triple-A in July last season, he posted a 2.55 ERA with 27 strikeouts over 24 2/3 innings.
Most importantly, his splitter was fooling hitters again, plummeting beneath bats at the last second.
Swanson is projected to be a major piece of this bullpen -- and still easily could be -- but if he or any of the back-end arms miss time, Toronto will need relievers with upside to step in, not just relievers who can eat innings.
This is where relievers like Josh Walker, Brendon Little or non-roster invitee Jacob Barnes come in.
Looking further out, No. 22 prospect Ryan Jennings has some enticing bullpen upside if the Blue Jays keep him shortened up.
With any of these names, though, you'd be hoping for the absolute highest-end outcome. That's why trades or free agency -- with someone like David Robertson still, surprisingly, available -- seems more attractive.
The X-factor in all of this? Yariel Rodr�guez. If Toronto feels comfortable shortening up Rodr�guez as a one- to two-inning reliever, he at the very least possesses the upside to succeed in high-leverage situations and knows the role well from his time in Japan.
This position looks different for the Blue Jays in 2025. A year ago, they brought in Daniel Vogelbach and Joey Votto, and that was on top of Spencer Horwitz. With Horwitz gone and no veterans brought in this season, it's Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and who?
Will Wagner is likely next in line and Anthony Santander could slide over to first in a pinch, but this isn't a matter of depth for a potential injury.
Instead, it's a matter of having a bench bat that can maximize a lineup like Horwitz did at times last year.
This is why Vladdy isn't expected to see much time at third base in 2025.
There's not another first baseman on the roster whose presence helps Toronto crush a lefty starter, for example.
This is also a matter of trends. Beyond Horwitz, Vogelbach and Votto, the Blue Jays have brought in Justin Turner,
Brandon Belt and others, all while Guerrero has been the primary first baseman. As rosters churn leading up to Opening Day, this is another spot to keep an eye on.
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9 HOURS AGO | 27 ANSWERS Examining the areas the Blue Jays lack depth Which area (s) do you think the Blue Jays need to improve their depth? |
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