Here’s a forecast of possible roster moves for the Toronto Blue Jays as they build for the coming seasons after coming so close in the World Series — drawing on current contract situations, free-agent risks, and organizational needs.
🔍 Key contract/free-agent issues
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Several players on the roster will become free agents or have option years/opt-outs looming. For example: Bo Bichette is a free agent this off-season.
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Also, veterans such as Chris Bassitt and Max Scherzer are reaching the end of their contracts or are free agents.
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The Blue Jays already locked in core pieces (e.g., Vladimir Guerrero Jr.) for the long term.
🎯 Areas of focus / likely moves
Here are some of the strategic moves they’re likely to explore:
1. Decide on Bichette & middle infield continuity
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If Bichette departs, the Blue Jays will need to fill the shortstop role (or shift other players). One source suggests they could move Andrés Giménez to shortstop and look for a second-base/third base upgrade. If they re-sign Bichette, they’ll likely structure around him, Guerrero Jr., Giménez — which reduces flexibility elsewhere.
2. Strengthen and renew the rotation & bullpen
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With Bassitt and Scherzer potentially gone, the starting rotation depth looks thin. The club will likely either bring in free‐agents/trade arms or promote younger starters.
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The bullpen may also be ripe for upgrade; high-leverage arms and depth will matter more now that expectations are elevated.
3. Trade or sign to patch specific weaknesses
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They may pursue trade targets to fill rotation gaps (see a list of “early look” trade targets cited).
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On the free-agent market: despite large contracts on the books, they’ll likely target cost-efficient upgrades or players with favourable contract situations rather than mega-deals.
4. Balancing payroll, long-term commitments vs flexibility
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With big investments already (e.g., Guerrero Jr.’s long-term deal) the Blue Jays will need to balance re-signing key players with preserving financial flexibility.
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They may choose not to overspend on aging veterans or players whose value may decline, focusing instead on younger cost-controlled talent and internal development.
5. Internal pipeline / international/free-agent signings
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As a compliment to external signings/trades, the Blue Jays will likely lean more on their farm system and international signing pool. For example, they are linked to promising prospects abroad.
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Also, plugging gaps with younger players helps maintain depth over a full 162-game season and into playoffs.
📋 Possible specific moves
Here are some likely concrete scenarios the Blue Jays might pursue:
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Re-sign Bichette: Offer him a multi-year deal to preserve the infield core (Guerrero Jr. + Giménez + Bichette).
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Let Bichette walk / sign elsewhere: Then shift Giménez to SS, promote someone like Addison Barger or trade for a stop-gap bench/utility infielder.
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Sign or trade for a starting pitcher: Perhaps one of the mid-tier free-agents or a trade target to replace Bassitt/Scherzer if they depart.
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Add a cost-effective bullpen arm or swingman starter: Especially someone who can handle high-leverage innings.
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Extend younger pieces / secure internal options: Ensure that younger players or breakout candidates are locked in or rewarded so they don’t leave in arbitration or free agency.
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Use international signing pool / prospects: Add depth via the IFA market and the farm system to ensure future sustainability.
✅ Overall assessment
The Blue Jays are in a “win-now” window: they came very close to a championship, so the front office’s job is to capitalize on that momentum rather than wait. That means securing key players, filling the biggest roster holes (especially pitching and infield depth), and balancing long-term sustainability with immediate competitiveness.
If they execute well, they should remain serious contenders. If they mismanage any of the above — let core pieces walk, fail to upgrade pitching, or overspend without results — the window could shrink quickly.