They came one win short of gloryā¦
Now the Blue Jays are refusing to let it slip away again.

The Toronto Blue Jays didnāt just extend contracts.
They drew a line in the sand.
Just months after a heartbreaking World Series defeat, the organization has made a bold and unmistakable declaration: this era is not endingāitās just beginning.
In a decisive move, Toronto has locked in both manager John Schneider and general manager Ross Atkins to long-term deals, securing the leadership core that brought them to the brink of championship history.

Two extensions.
One message:
Weāre not starting over.
Weāre finishing the job.
John Schneider, the calm but relentless presence in the dugout, will now remain at the helm through 2028 after signing a two-year extension. Meanwhile, Ross Atkinsāthe architect behind the rosterās constructionāhas committed his future through 2031 with a five-year deal.
This isnāt coincidence.
Itās commitment.
Because what this duo built in 2025 changed everything.

That season wasnāt just successfulāit was transformative. A 94-win campaign. An AL East title. And a World Series that went the distanceāseven games of pressure, intensity, and near triumph against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
They didnāt win.
But they proved they could.
And that might be even more dangerous.
Since taking over in 2022, Schneider has reshaped the clubhouse into something unshakableāresilient, focused, and unified. A 303-257 record speaks to consistency, but the real story is culture.
This is a team that believes.
And under Atkins, that belief has been backed by aggressive, calculated action.
This offseason wasnāt quiet.

It was strategic.
Because even after losing Bo Bichette to the New York Metsāa move that shook the fanbaseāthe Blue Jays didnāt retreat.
They responded.
And they responded loudly.
A seven-year, $210 million investment in Dylan Cease.
A $37 million deal to secure elite reliever Tyler Rogers.
A three-year addition of Cody Ponce for rotation depth.
And a global statementāsigning Japanese star Kazuma Okamoto.

But one move stood above the rest.
Max Scherzer.
A future Hall of Famer. A competitor defined by intensity. A veteran who doesnāt join teams unless he believes they can win.
Toronto didnāt just add talent.
They added edge.
And then came the biggest commitment of all:
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
Fourteen years. $500 million.
A deal that doesnāt just secure a playerāit defines a franchise.

Even after a statistically modest season by his standards, the Blue Jays made one thing clear:
Theyāre betting on who he can be.
Not what he just was.
Thatās confidence.
And now, with Schneider and Atkins locked in, that confidence has structure.
But hereās the truth no one inside Toronto is avoiding:
This isnāt about what theyāve built.
Itās about what they havenāt finished.
Because coming close changes everything.
It raises expectations.
It removes excuses.
It turns hope into pressure.
And right now, projections suggest an 85-win seasonāsolid, but not dominant. Likely competitive, but not guaranteed.
In another era, that might be enough.
Not anymore.
Not after 2025.
Not after Game 7.
Because this team isnāt chasing a playoff spot.
Theyāre chasing redemption.
Every move this offseasonāfrom leadership extensions to roster upgradesāpoints toward one thing:
They believe their window is still wide open.
And theyāre not wasting it.
Opening Day is approaching fast. A fresh start. A new schedule. A clean slate.
But inside that clubhouse?
Nothing is forgotten.
The loss.
The missed opportunity.
The moment that slipped away.
Itās still there.
Fuel.
Driving everything.
Now backed by leadership that isnāt going anywhere.
Stability in a league built on change.
Confidence in a sport defined by uncertainty.
And a team that knows exactly how close it came.
The Blue Jays have already proven they can compete.
Now, the only question left is the one that defines everything:
Can they finish?
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