The Blue Jays keep searching for answers, and George Springer’s spot in the middle of the problem is getting harder to ignore.
At 35, Springer is no longer producing like the hitter who drew down-ballot MVP votes last season as a designated hitter. Toronto has been getting league-average-or-worse offense from him across the board, and that has helped drag down a lineup that is already floundering.
Through Sunday, Springer was sitting on a .216/.307/.366 line in 267 plate appearances. His 83 OPS+ and 91 wRC+ were both the lowest marks of his career.
The split that stands out most is against right-handers, where his OPS was just .629. Against lefties, though, he has remained far more effective, with a .791 OPS.
That gap points to the obvious move: Toronto needs to stop treating Springer like an everyday fixture and start using him in a platoon, especially against left-handed pitching. Keeping him in the leadoff spot against right-handers, as he has been, simply isn’t paying off.
A more selective role would also open the door for other pieces on the roster. One option is to use Yohendrick Piñango or the recently injured Jesús Sánchez at designated hitter, since both have hit well but have struggled badly in the outfield. That setup would allow Daulton Varsho, Nathan Lukes, and eventually Addison Barger to cover the grass against righties.
It could also create more room for Brandon Valenzuela, whose playing time has been squeezed since Alejandro Kirk came off the injured list. Valenzuela is a switch-hitter, so the platoon issue doesn’t apply to him, and he has been more productive than Springer. Getting him and Kirk into the same lineup more often would help.
Springer’s recent production only sharpens the concern. His numbers are eerily close to what he posted in 2024, when the conversation was already about how Toronto would manage the final two years of his contract.
Then 2025 happened. Even so, the current level of production is not unfamiliar territory for him.
What the Blue Jays cannot afford is to keep running him out there in the same role and hope the results change on their own. The team is close to the point of becoming sellers at the trade deadline, less than a year after its run to the World Series, and the priority now has to be winning games.
Springer still has value in the right situations. He has done enough against left-handers to stay in the lineup when the matchup calls for it, and he remains a useful bat off the bench in close games when an opposing manager goes to a lefty reliever.
But the bigger picture is unavoidable. His 2025 season and playoff heroics were excellent, yet this year has been a different story. The numbers say a role change is necessary, and the Blue Jays need to act like it.
In Other News...
Toronto Just Gave Bo Bichette A Tribute Jays Fans Will Feel
For a few days while the Mets are in Toronto, Bo Bichettes name is getting a very different kind of tribute than a standing ovation at Rogers Centre. Animl Steakhouse has rolled out The Bo Dog, a $126 hot dog built around a wagyu wiener and dressed up with truffle corn relish, butter-poached lobster and seared foie gras, turning a ballpark staple into a high-end nod to a former Blue Jays fan favorite.
The limited-run item is available from June 29 to July 1, which gives Toronto fans a short window to take part in the tribute while Bichette is back in town with his new club. There is also a charitable angle attached to the novelty: all proceeds from sales of The Bo Dog will be donated to Bichettes charity that supports children with disabilities, giving the stunt a little more purpose than just a headline-grabbing menu item. [Read more 🡒]
Blue Jays May Be Headed For A Deadline Call Fans Dread
Torontos front office is in the kind of midseason spot no contender wants to occupy, with the standings leaving the Blue Jays weighing whether to stay the course or start thinking ahead. Kevin Gausman sits at the center of that conversation. He is the sort of veteran starter who usually draws attention in July because of his track record and his expiring contract, making him the kind of arm rival clubs check on fast if they believe he might become available.
Nothing has been decided yet, and that matters because Toronto still has time to change the equation. If the Blue Jays can steady themselves and push back into the playoff picture, Gausman would be much easier to keep in place. If the slide continues, though, the deadline could force a choice the organization would rather avoid, with one of its most trusted starters suddenly becoming part of a much bigger long-term discussion. [Read more 🡒]
Blue Jays Keep Falling Into A Hole They Can't Afford
The Blue Jays keep digging early holes, and it has become one of the most costly habits in a stretch that already feels too familiar. Toronto has allowed a run in the first inning in seven straight games and has been outscored 14-1 in those frames, a jarring trend for a team that has spent much of the year trying to survive long enough to let its lineup and bullpen settle things down later.
There is still a counterargument for the Jays, because they have found ways to rally often enough to stay afloat, with 20 come-from-behind wins tied for ninth in the majors. But recent series results have put more pressure on every sluggish start, and with another tough test ahead, Toronto cannot keep leaning on recovery mode forever if it wants to stop turning routine nights into uphill climbs. [Read more 🡒]
