He hasnât thrown a pitch in the majors since 2021.
Yet John Schneider didnât hesitate.
Not a tryout.
Not a bullpen experiment.
Not âweâll see how camp unfolds.â
A starter.

And that declaration might be one of the boldest â and smartest â moves of Torontoâs offseason.
John Schneiderâs Clear Message on Cody Ponce Signals a Calculated Gamble That Could Reshape the Blue Jaysâ Rotation
DUNEDIN â Spring training is usually filled with cautious language. Managers hedge. Roles are âfluid.â Competitions are âopen.â
Not this time.

When asked about Cody Ponceâs role for 2026, Blue Jays manager John Schneider delivered a direct answer via Sportsnetâs Ben Nicholson-Smith:
âThe expectation is pitching as a starting pitcher in the rotation. Thatâs why we sought him out. Thatâs why he sought us out.â
Thatâs not experimentation.
Thatâs intent.
And it reveals exactly how Toronto views the 30-year-old right-hander â not as depth, but as design.

From MLB Absence to Overseas Dominance
Ponce hasnât pitched in Major League Baseball since 2021.
For many players, that gap signals decline.
For Ponce, it became transformation.

Last season in Korea, he authored one of the most dominant campaigns in professional baseball:
- 29 starts
- 17â1 record
- 180.2 innings pitched
- 252 strikeouts
- Just 41 walks
- ERA under 2.00
Those arenât âsolid comebackâ numbers.
Theyâre statement numbers.

Toronto didnât offer him a three-year deal out of nostalgia. They offered it because they believe what he did overseas translates â not partially, but meaningfully â back to MLB.
And Schneider isnât hedging that belief.
Why This Move Is Bigger Than It Looks
Ponce wonât be handed ace duties. Thatâs not the plan.
But in a 162-game season, championships are often shaped by the back of the rotation â not the front.
A dependable No. 5 starter who limits damage, eats innings, and prevents bullpen strain can quietly swing an entire division race.

If Ponce becomes even 75% of what he was last season in Korea, the Blue Jays may have found one of the most valuable arms in baseball relative to cost and expectations.
And thatâs where the gamble turns into strategy.
The Rotation Blueprint for 2026
Toronto didnât stop with Ponce.
They added Dylan Cease â a high-upside strikeout machine capable of dominating any lineup when locked in.
Meanwhile, Kevin Gausman remains the workhorse, making 30+ starts in each of his seasons with the Blue Jays and posting a 3.59 ERA last year. With 2026 being a contract year for Gausman, motivation wonât be lacking.
JosĂ© BerrĂos brings consistency, even after a 4.17 ERA campaign across 30 starts in 2025.
Trey Yesavage adds youth and intrigue.
If projections hold, the likely alignment looks like this:
- Kevin Gausman
- Dylan Cease
- Trey Yesavage
- JosĂ© BerrĂos
- Cody Ponce
On paper, thatâs depth few teams can match.
But the most fascinating piece may be Ponce at the bottom.
Because if your fifth starter can miss bats at an elite rate and limit walks like he did overseas, the ceiling rises dramatically.
Why Schneiderâs Early Declaration Matters
By naming Ponce a starter now, Schneider eliminates uncertainty.
Thereâs no audition. No hybrid role. No âearn it in Aprilâ narrative.
That clarity does two things:
- It gives Ponce full mental ownership of the role.
- It signals clubhouse confidence.
For a pitcher returning to MLB after four years away, that vote of confidence can be decisive.
The transition wonât be effortless. MLB hitters adjust faster. Lineups are deeper. Margins are thinner.
But Toronto isnât asking Ponce to be perfect.
Theyâre asking him to be reliable.
And if he delivers, he may become one of the most surprising stories of the 2026 season.
A Rotation Built for October?
If Gausman anchors.
If Cease finds his peak form.
If BerrĂos stabilizes.
If Yesavage progresses.
And if Ponce translates even most of his Korean dominanceâŠ
The Blue Jays wonât just be competitive.
Theyâll be dangerous.
Because the difference between a good rotation and a great one often isnât the ace.
Itâs the fifth starter who refuses to be weak.
John Schneider has already made his bet.
Now, all eyes turn to Cody Ponce â the man tasked with proving this wasnât optimism.
It was foresight.
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