He said it calmly. Clearly. Without hesitation.
But inside the Blue Jaysâ clubhouse, Eric Lauerâs words landed like a warning shot.

As Eric Lauer Declares âStarter Is Whatâs Best for Me,â Blue Jays Face Rotation Tension That Could Reshape 2026
TORONTO â The Blue Jays thought they entered Spring Training with clarity.
After pushing the 2025 season all the way to a dramatic Game 7 of the World Series, most of Torontoâs roster questions seemed settled. The core is intact. The expectations are sky-high.

But one issue is quietly brewing â and it could define the tone of the entire pitching staff.
Eric Lauer doesnât want to float between roles anymore.
âBeing able to lock in mentally and physically as a starter is whatâs best for me,â Lauer said after starting Torontoâs Grapefruit League opener. âItâs what I normally do. Itâs how I normally prepare.â
That wasnât just preference.
It was positioning.

A Breakthrough Season â With Frustration Attached
Lauer, 30, delivered arguably the best season of his MLB career in 2025. In his first year with Toronto after pitching in Korea in 2024, he posted a career-best 3.18 ERA across 28 appearances (15 starts).
When injuries hit the rotation last summer â Max Scherzer sidelined, Bowden Francis unavailable â Lauer stabilized everything.
From June 11 to August 27, he made 13 starts. The Blue Jays went 11-2 in those games. He allowed two or fewer runs in 10 of them. He went 6-1.

Utility man Ernie Clement even called him the clubâs âunsung MVP.â
And then?
When Scherzer returned and trade deadline acquisition Shane Bieber was ready, Lauer was sent back to the bullpen.
Again.

âThe whole bouncing back and forth thing last year kind of hurt me,â Lauer admitted. âNot physically, but in my standing.â
That standing became financial.
Arbitration Fallout Still Lingers
Despite his success, Lauer lost his arbitration case this winter. The Blue Jays filed at $4.4 million. Lauer filed at $5.75 million.
He believes the bullpen finish cost him.
Long relievers donât get paid like starters.

âThe fact I ended the year in the bullpen was probably what lost me my case,â he said bluntly.
Now, with free agency looming after 2026, the stakes are clear. Role equals value. Value equals leverage.
And leverage determines the next contract.
The Rotation Math Is Brutal
On paper, the Blue Jaysâ rotation is crowded:
- Kevin Gausman
- Trey Yesavage (2025 breakout star)
- JosĂ© BerrĂos
- Dylan Cease (free-agent addition)
- Cody Ponce (free-agent addition)
Shane Bieber is expected back after early-season forearm fatigue. Rumors of a potential Scherzer reunion continue to swirl.
That leaves Lauer fighting uphill.
Manager John Schneider has taken a diplomatic tone.
âHeâs going into this saying he wants to be one of the starters,â Schneider said. âWeâre all ready to pivot, but this will be a normal starterâs spring for him.â
Translation: Stay ready. Stay flexible.
But flexibility doesnât always align with future earning power.
A Quiet Crossroads for Toronto
This isnât just about one pitcherâs preference.
Itâs about identity.
The Blue Jays are built to contend now. Depth is a luxury. Having a pitcher who can start or dominate in long relief is valuable â especially over 162 games where injuries are inevitable.
Schneider acknowledged that.
âTo have that option is great,â he said. âItâs really beneficial.â
But beneficial for the team may not mean optimal for Lauer.
And tension like this doesnât disappear â it simmers.
The Bigger Picture
Itâs rare for a rotation to survive an entire season untouched. Someone always gets hurt. Someone always struggles. That reality favors Lauerâs patience.
âThe way the game has evolved, itâs good to have as many starters as you possibly can built up,â he said. âYou never know whatâs going to happen.â
Heâs right.
But the Blue Jays now face a delicate decision:
- Commit to Lauer as a starter and risk reshuffling a high-priced rotation.
- Keep him as elite depth and risk dissatisfaction in a contract year.
For a team chasing a championship, internal harmony matters. So does maximizing assets.
Eric Lauer has made his stance clear.
Now the Blue Jays must decide whether to reward performance â or protect structure.
Because this isnât just a Spring Training storyline.
Itâs a decision that could reshape Torontoâs 2026 rotation â and possibly its future payroll picture.
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