The Blue Jays have been spending to the hilt to secure top talent as the ballclub aims to mount another deep playoff run this year after narrowly missing a World Series title last fall.
And while Toronto has already signed some of the most in-demand free agents in Major League Baseball (MLB), the reigning American League champs may not be done just yet.
“We’ll always be open to making our organization and team better, if there’s a way to do that,” general manager Ross Atkins said Monday, the day the Blue Jays formally introduced Japanese star Kazuma Okamoto to Toronto.
Okamoto, a three-time home-run champ in Japan, signed a four-year, $60-million US deal with the Blue Jays — a commitment accounting for only a portion of the more than $300 million in fresh contracts Toronto has added this off-season.
WATCH | More deals to come for Toronto?:
Blue Jays continue signing spree with Okamoto and may not be done
The Toronto Blue Jays officially introduced their latest signing, Kazuma Okamoto, from the Yomiuri Giants in Nippon Professional Baseball. Okamoto is the team’s latest acquisition as the Jays hope to return to the World Series — and rumours suggest they’re not done spending.
But even with the Blue Jays’ big spending, the road to a potential World Series return remains tough as a lot can happen during the long and gruelling MLB season.
“Spending doesn’t guarantee you anything,” Arash Madani, a national sports broadcaster and former Blue Jays sideline reporter, said in an interview.
“It all has to come together — health, chemistry, timing,” Madani said, noting these must endure for 162 games of a regular season before the playoffs even begin.
That said, Madani added, a willingness to spend to contend at least puts a team like the Blue Jays in an advantageous position to compete.
Signing after signing
The Game 7 World Series loss in early November — an 11-inning nail-biter that the defending champion Dodgers took 5-4 — was tough for Toronto. But in the off-season, Canada’s only MLB team has aggressively moved to bring in additional talent.
First came the welcome news that starting pitcher Shane Bieber, who joined the Blue Jays this past summer in a deadline trade, opted to return to the Blue Jays on a one-year, $16-million deal.
WATCH | A clear choice for pitcher Dylan Cease:
Dylan Cease says decision to join AL champion Blue Jays was ‘inevitable’
At a news conference on Tuesday, the Blue Jays’ newest starting pitcher Dylan Cease spoke about why he signed with Toronto. The right-hander inked a seven-year deal worth $210 million US, the largest free-agent contract in team history.
A few weeks later, the Blue Jays signed starting pitcher Dylan Cease to a seven-year, $210-million deal.
Cody Ponce, the reigning MVP of South Korea’s KBO league, was next to get on board, signing a three-year contract worth $30 million.
The Blue Jays then bolstered their bullpen with the signing of Tyler Rogers, a workhorse reliever who’s pitched in more than 400 games since 2020. His $37-million deal runs three years.
Kazuma Okamoto has spent his professional baseball career to date in his home country of Japan. But he’s coming to the MLB for the upcoming season, after signing a four-year, $60-million US deal with the Blue Jays. (Nick Turchiaro/Imagn Images/Reuters)
The $337 million in future salary commitments to Cease, Ponce, Rogers and Okamoto are collectively a higher figure than the team’s 2025 final payroll of $286.1 million.
But the Blue Jays’ recent playoff run has raised expectations for a fanbase that saw its ballclub take back-to-back World Series titles, the last in 1993.
Team owner Rogers Communications Inc. is likewise eager to keep on rolling, given the dividends the post-season provided to Rogers’ broadcast properties and the company’s bottom line.
Madani said that wave of success has seemingly “opened the eyes of management to see what all of this can be.”
What about Bo?
With spring training in Florida looming next month, it remains unclear what uniform shortstop Bo Bichette will be wearing.
Infielder Bo Bichette throws to first base during Game 7 of the 2025 World Series between the Blue Jays and L.A. The Dodgers won in extra innings, claiming a repeat MLB championship and ending the Blue Jays’ dreams of winning its third World Series. (John E. Sokolowski/Imagn Images/Reuters)
The homegrown Blue Jays star led the team in hits, runs batted in and batting average despite a knee injury that put him out of commission in early September before he returned to the lineup for the World Series. But nearly three weeks after post-season play ended, he turned down a qualifying offer from Toronto and became a free agent.
He’s not yet aligned with a major-league team for the 2026 season.
With all of the Blue Jays’ recent additions, the team appears to have a glut of proven major-leaguers ready to take the field — something Atkins confirms will weigh on future decisions.
The Blue Jays have recently signed contracts with incoming free agents that collectively total well north of $300 million US in salary in the years to come. But Toronto general manager Ross Atkins says the ballclub is ‘always be open to making our organization and team better, if there’s a way to do that.’ (Cole Burston/Getty Images)
“Additions at this point will start to cut away at playing time from players that we feel are very good major-league pieces,” the general manager said Monday. “So, we have to factor that in.”
Some observers are skeptical Bichette will be back. Madani is unsure, but philosophical about the changes that happen each off-season.
“You can’t sign everyone,” he said.
“It’s not your fantasy baseball team,” Madani added, and there are only so many at-bats and roster spots to go around.
Not the only big spenders
Toronto isn’t the only team going all out when it comes to spending.
A home run by Miguel Rojas in the ninth inning of Game 7 of the World Series tied the game between the Dodgers and Blue Jays. (Nick Turchiaro/Imagn Images/Reuters)
Take the Dodgers, back-to-back World Series champions.
The powerhouse franchise owes more than $1 billion in deferred salary to some of its players and was hit with a $169.4-million luxury tax bill for the 2025 season — yet these obligations haven’t stopped L.A. from adding more payroll for the years ahead.
In December, the Dodgers reached a three-year, $69-million agreement with Edwin Díaz, the top closer available in free agency, to address perceived weaknesses in the team’s bullpen.
The team also re-upped with Miguel Rojas — the veteran infielder who hit the game-tying home run in Game 7 of the World Series — on a $5.5-million, one-year contract.
The Dodgers’ free-spending ways have certainly been beneficial to the ballclub in recent years: L.A. has won three World Series titles in the past six years and has not had a losing season since 2010.
Madani points out that the Dodgers began their 2025 playoff run with a wild-card series against the Cincinnati Reds, a match that made headlines for the teams’ lopsided payrolls. But it was L.A. that prevailed.
High-payroll Mets met by no playoffs
Meanwhile, the New York Mets are an example of the other side of the coin of unfettered spending: The franchise dropped more than $340 million last year and failed to make the post-season.
Reliever Edwin Díaz played for the New York Mets in 2025, but will head to L.A. to play for the Dodgers in 2026. The Mets were among the highest-spending MLB teams in 2025, but failed to make the playoffs. (Brad Penner/Imagn Images/Reuters)
The New York Yankees fared slightly better — making the playoffs, but getting knocked out of the post-season by the Blue Jays. The Bronx Bombers had the third highest payroll in the MLB last year, yet haven’t won the World Series since 2009.
Other MLB teams are also flashing the cash to get players to sign on the dotted line.
The Philadelphia Phillies secured a five-year, $150-million deal to retain power hitter Kyle Schwarber’s services, while the last-in-their-division Baltimore Orioles dangled a $155-million, five-year deal to land free agent Pete Alonso, who had played for the Mets.
The Seattle Mariners, eliminated by Toronto from the post-season in 2025 , agreed to terms on a five-year, $92.5-million contract with Canada’s Josh Naylor.