For Toronto Blue Jays fans, the word âsoonâ has been a cruel joke for decades.

Toronto Blue Jays right fielder George Springer | Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images
When the Blue Jays won their second straight World Series in 1993 â defeating the Philadelphia Phillies â nobody in the city imagined the wait would stretch into something almost unbelievable.
Thirty-two years without another championship appearance isnât the kind of drought you predict when a franchise is holding a trophy. Itâs the kind you only understand once itâs already happened.
And thatâs what makes 2026 feel so emotionally dangerous.
Because the Blue Jays were right there.

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images
This past season, Toronto came within armâs reach of capturing the third World Series title in franchise history.
It wasnât a clean run. It wasnât an easy road. It was seven games of tension, pressure, and survival â and in the end, the Los Angeles Dodgers did what the Dodgers have been doing lately: they finished the job.
LA secured their second consecutive championship and ninth overall, leaving Toronto with the kind of heartbreak that doesnât fade in the offseason.
The kind that sits in the back of every playerâs mind during winter workouts. The kind that turns a âgreat seasonâ into a silent wound.

And what made it sting even more is that almost nobody saw Toronto coming.
Few expected the Blue Jays to go that deep in the postseason. They werenât the trendy pick. They werenât the media favorite.
But they kept winning anyway, turning into the team everyone wanted to believe in â the underdog that refused to go away.
Then Game 7 happened.
And suddenly the story flipped from âmiracle runâ to âhow do you recover from this?â
Now the Blue Jays enter 2026 with a question that sounds simple but feels loaded:
Are they ready to go back â and finish it?
Toronto has made it clear theyâre not accepting a slow rebuild or a long reset. The front office has been aggressive, adding talent and reshaping the roster like a team that believes its window isnât coming â itâs already here.

The resources are there. The talent is there. The urgency is there.
But the title? Thatâs a different kind of fight.
Because hereâs the truth most fans donât want to hear in January: being close doesnât mean youâre next.
In fact, being close can be the most dangerous position in sports. It creates the illusion that the championship is inevitable, that the next season is simply âthe sequel where it finally happens.â But baseball doesnât reward emotion. It punishes assumptions.
And the Blue Jays are walking into a season where expectations might be heavier than the roster itself.
Yes, all signs point toward another postseason run â assuming the team avoids the kind of injury spiral that can wipe out even the best contenders.
Fans have watched other American League teams like the Houston Astros get hit by the injured list in ways that completely change the math. Toronto isnât immune to that reality.
Still, the feeling around this team is different.

Toronto doesnât look like a fluke. They look like the start of an era.
But even with that momentum, a World Series title in 2026 still feels like a reach â not because the Blue Jays arenât good enough to contend, but because the leagueâs top tier remains brutal.
Teams like the Dodgers are still operating on a level that makes âchampionship favoriteâ feel like a permanent label, not a seasonal prediction.
And that gap matters.
Toronto can be a great team in 2026 and still fall short. They can win 95 games and still run into the wrong matchup at the wrong time. They can do everything ârightâ and still lose because October is a coin flip disguised as a tournament.
Thatâs why the most realistic timeline for Toronto isnât the emotional one. Itâs the uncomfortable one.
A return to the World Series in 2026? Possible.
A championship in 2026? Not impossible â but not the safest bet either.
If fans want the honest projection, it might look more like this: 2026 is a season of growth, healing, and sharpening the edge. The heartbreak is still fresh.
The confidence is still being rebuilt. The team is still learning what it takes to survive a full year and finish the job in October.
The real target might be 2027.

Not because Toronto is far away â but because theyâre close enough that the final steps are the hardest.
And if the Blue Jays stay aggressive, stay healthy, and keep stacking postseason experience, it wouldnât be unreasonable to expect a World Series celebration within the next five years⊠maybe sooner.
Torontoâs winning era isnât coming.
Itâs already starting.
The only question is whether the Blue Jays are about to turn that era into a championship⊠or another chapter of âalmost.â âĄ
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