The Blue Jays are staring at a deadline decision that would have sounded out of bounds not long ago: Kevin Gausman might be available.
Toronto entered the season expecting to contend, and Gausman has been one of the club’s most important starters for years. That’s what makes the idea so jarring. Moving him would not just be a roster shuffle; it would be a clear sign the Blue Jays are no longer trying to patch things together for 2026.
And yet, if the slide continues, the logic gets harder to ignore. Gausman fits the kind of pitcher contenders often chase in July: a veteran arm on an expiring deal, not a long-term project, not a controllable ace, but someone who can step into a rotation and help right away. That sort of profile tends to draw attention when the market opens up.
Toronto does have some room before anything becomes urgent. If the Blue Jays can climb back into the playoff mix, keeping Gausman would make plenty of sense. They still need innings, and dealing him too soon would send a rough message to both the clubhouse and a fanbase that expected more.
But if the standings don’t change, the decision can’t be made on sentiment. Gausman’s appeal is tied to timing, and a contender looking for stability on the mound may not care that he isn’t at his peak anymore.
He still brings postseason experience, strikeout ability, and a history of handling meaningful innings. That can matter in October.
For Toronto, the return wouldn’t have to transform the organization overnight. It would need to move the team toward being younger, cheaper, and better set up for 2027.
The Blue Jays believed this season could be something bigger. If that keeps slipping away, trading Gausman could go from unthinkable to obvious.
It wouldn’t be exciting. It would be an admission.
The Blue Jays don’t have to make that call today. They may have to make it soon.
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 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 🡒]
