Ernie Clement Just Revealed How Close Toronto Came To Losing Him

Ernie Clement's choice to play for the Blue Jays over the Yankees redefined his MLB career and transformed him into an All-Star.

Ernie Clement could have ended up in Yankees pinstripes. Instead, he bet on Toronto - and that choice helped turn a shaky start into an All-Star season with the Blue Jays.

In an interview with Sportsnet’s Shi Davidi, Clement said he had a chance to sign with New York, but Toronto was the better fit when he was trying to get his career back on track. The Rochester, N.Y. native grew up as a Yankees fan, so the pull was real. But the Blue Jays offered something the Yankees couldn’t match: a chance to stay close to home, with Toronto’s Triple-A affiliate in Buffalo giving him a familiar path forward.

Clement said that being close to home was what he needed at that point in his career.

The Yankees were also said to have offered more money, but Clement and his agent, Steve Skrinar, believed Toronto gave him a clearer route back to the majors. Looking back, that call changed everything.

Clement’s early MLB journey was rough. He was waived by both the Cleveland Guardians and the Athletics within six months, and Toronto was one of four teams interested in him during that stretch. Since joining the Blue Jays, though, he has gone from a bench utility piece to the everyday starter at second base.

Now the payoff is obvious. In four seasons with Toronto, Clement has become an American League All-Star.

Last postseason, he set an MLB record for the most hits in a single postseason with 30. He also represented the U.S. at the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

Clement is one of four Blue Jays headed to Tuesday’s MLB All-Star Game in Philadelphia. He’ll be joined by manager John Schneider, starting pitcher Dylan Cease, and closer Louis Varland.

In Other News...

Blue Jays Pitching Move Just Entered A Much Bigger Conversation

At the All-Star break, the 2026 AL Cy Young market has started to look like a real referendum on the Blue Jays pitching bet, with Dylan Cease right in the thick of it alongside Cam Schlittler. For Toronto, that is a meaningful development on its own. Cease arrived with expectations, and his first season in blue has given the club exactly the kind of front-line presence it hoped would stabilize the rotation and keep it in the conversation deep into the summer.

The numbers behind the buzz are strong enough to explain why the betting board has tightened around him, even with other names still hanging around the top of the race. Drew Rasmussen, Gavin Williams and Sonny Gray all have cases of their own, which is part of what makes this feel less like a one-man chase and more like a crowded second-half race. For the Blue Jays, the bigger question now is whether Cease can turn a strong first half into something that keeps him in the award picture all the way to the finish. [Read more 🡒]

Astros Fans Still Cant Believe How Yordan Alvarez Ended Up In Houston

All-Star Week has a way of turning baseball into a reminder that the sport rarely follows a straight line. For Toronto, the spotlight included a right-hander taking the ball for the American League, but the broader theme around the game was how many of the biggest names on the roster arrived at their current homes by way of detours, mistakes, or second chances. It is the kind of showcase that puts career arcs front and center, especially when a teams own newest centerpiece is part of that conversation.

The most striking example is still the one Houston fans cannot quite get over, because the path that brought Yordan Alvarez there was so unlikely it has become part of baseball lore. Elsewhere in the All-Star mix, players like Clement and Griffin were reminders that a stalled career can still be revived, whether through a change of scenery or a long route back to relevance. For Toronto, it all serves as a useful backdrop to the kind of pitching and roster-building the club is betting on now, even if one of the nights biggest stories was how thin the line can be between a forgotten transaction and a franchise-changing one. [Read more 🡒]