The Toronto Blue Jays knew losing Bo Bichette would hurt.
What they may not have fully processed yet is where that pain will show upāand how loudly it could echo if things donāt go according to plan.
Bichetteās exit to the New York Mets closed one chapter of Toronto baseball and quietly opened another, far less comfortable one.

Because while the Blue Jays reshaped their roster aggressively this offseason, they did not replace Bichetteās bat at shortstop.
They reassigned its weight.
That weight now sits squarely on the shoulders of AndrƩs GimƩnez.
From a defensive standpoint, this transition makes sense. GimƩnez is everything modern front offices dream of with the glove. Range. Instincts. Fluidity.

Plays other shortstops donāt even attempt. On defense alone, he could have taken over the position regardless of Bichetteās future.
But baseball is rarely that simple.
Bichette didnāt just occupy shortstop. He occupied innings. Moments. Rallies. He was the hitter pitchers feared when traffic built on the bases.

His bat covered flaws elsewhere in the lineup and gave Toronto margin for error.
That margin is gone.
GimĆ©nezās 2025 offensive lineā.210/.285/.313 with seven home runsādoesnāt scream disaster on its own. But context matters.
A 70 wRC+ at a premium offensive position suddenly feels much heavier when itās replacing a middle-of-the-order presence.

This isnāt about asking GimĆ©nez to become Bichette. That would be unfair and unrealistic.
But the uncomfortable truth is that Toronto no longer has the luxury of treating his bat as secondary.
MLB.comās Thomas Harrigan framed it bluntly: Bichetteās departure didnāt change who GimĆ©nez isāit changed how important his offense must become.

Even with the arrival of Kazuma Okamoto to help stabilize the lineup, the Blue Jays canāt afford another offensive black hole in key spots.
And thatās where the pressure quietly intensifies.
Torontoās offseason was bold. Expensive. Intentional. This is a team built to contend now. Which means patience is thinner, even for players whose value doesnāt always show up in box scores.
GimĆ©nez doesnāt need to post career-best numbers. He doesnāt need to chase 30 homers or suddenly reinvent himself. But he does need to make pitchers pay occasionally.

A few more balls squared up. A few more at-bats extended. A few more hits when the lineup turns over.
Because in Octoberāor even in a tight division raceāthose marginal gains decide seasons.
The uncomfortable part? GimĆ©nez didnāt ask for this role. It was handed to him by circumstance. By market dynamics.
By a front office choosing not to replace Bichette directly, but redistribute his absence across the roster.
Defense will keep GimĆ©nez in the lineup. Thatās not in question.
What is in question is how forgiving the environment around him will be if the bat doesnāt respond.
Toronto fans are smart. They understand defensive value. They appreciate nuance. But they also know what they lost. And every quiet night at the plate will be comparedānot always fairlyāto what used to be there.
This is the hidden cost of roster evolution.
Not every loss shows up immediately. Some linger, waiting for the wrong moment to be noticed.
For AndrĆ©s GimĆ©nez, 2026 isnāt about proving he belongs at shortstop. That argument is already won.
Itās about whether he can give the Blue Jays just enough offense to keep Bichetteās absence from becoming a nightly reminder.
Because if he canāt, the question wonāt be about his glove.
It will be about whether Toronto misjudged how much silence a lineup can survive.
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