Max Scherzer Signs 1-Year Deal With Toronto Blue Jays
At 41 years old, most people are figuring out their 401 (k) and arguing with their kids about screen time. Max Scherzer is preparing for his 19th season in Major League Baseball.
The three-time Cy Young winner and eight-time All-Star has agreed to return to the Toronto Blue Jays on a one-year deal worth a $3 million base salary, with incentives that can push the total value to $10 million. For a guy who has earned close to $370 million over his career, this isn’t about the money. It never really was.
Why Scherzer Is Back In Toronto
This reunion didn’t happen overnight. According to Sportsnet’s Ben Nicholson-Smith, talks between Scherzer and the Blue Jays front office had been getting “more serious” in the weeks leading up to the deal. And when you consider what went down last October, it’s not hard to see why both sides wanted to make it work.
Scherzer gutted through 4.1 innings of one-run baseball in Game 7 of the World Series. At 41. In the biggest game of the Blue Jays’ recent history. He became the oldest pitcher ever to start a Game 7 and the first pitcher in MLB history to start a World Series game for four different teams.
After that night, Scherzer said something that felt genuinely human in a sport that sometimes forgets to be: “I’m 41 years old. I didn’t know I could love baseball this much. My love for the game is so strong because of their love for the game.”
What Scherzer Brings To a Crowded Blue Jays Rotation
Let’s be real about the regular-season numbers. In 85 innings last year, Scherzer posted a 5.19 ERA and an 82 ERA+. That’s not vintage “Mad Max.” Those are the stats of a pitcher who is managing his body through the grind of a long season, picking his spots, and saving something for when it matters. And when it mattered? He showed up with a 3.77 ERA in 14.1 postseason innings.
Toronto’s rotation heading into 2026 is deep, which is a good problem to have. Kevin Gausman and Dylan Cease anchor things at the top. Youngster Trey Yesavage is a name people are starting to pay attention to. Eric Lauer and Cody Ponce, who came over from Korea, round things out. José Berríos is also in the mix.
The complication is health. Bowden Francis is out for the season after Tommy John surgery, and Shane Bieber is dealing with forearm fatigue that will push his start date back. That’s where Scherzer steps in. Not as the guy who’s going to throw 200 innings, but as a safety net with a Hall of Fame résumé and a competitive fire that hasn’t dimmed one bit.
Blue Jays Manager John Schneider has raved about Scherzer’s preparation and competitiveness. That reputation follows him everywhere he goes. Detroit. Washington. LA. New York. Texas. Toronto. Every stop on the tour, the story is the same: this guy works harder than anyone and refuses to be anything less than ready.
Scherzer’s Legacy Only Gets Bigger From Here
Think about the career arc for a minute. Scherzer was a first-round pick out of Arizona in 2006. He debuted in 2008. He went 82-35 with the Tigers over five seasons, then signed with Washington, where he and Stephen Strasburg helped deliver a World Series title in 2019.
Now he’s heading into year 19, chasing something that clearly still drives him. He wants one more shot. One more run. One more chance to do something that will make people remember.
