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Blue Jays, Dylan Cease agree to 7-year, $210M contract

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  • stevenash
    Moderator
    • 01-17-11
    • 66451

    #1
    Blue Jays, Dylan Cease agree to 7-year, $210M contract

    By Dennis Lin and Mitch Bannon
    Nov. 26, 2025
    Updated 9:31 pm EST

    -The Athletic


    Looking to build off a World Series appearance, the Toronto Blue Jays are signing Dylan Cease to the largest pitching contract in franchise history. Cease, a durable right-hander coming off a down season by his standards, inked a seven-year, $210 million contract Wednesday, league sources told The Athletic.

    Cease’s deal will include deferrals, which are expected to bring the present-value AAV to around $26 million a year, a league source told The Athletic. That post-deferral calculation is the number used in luxury-tax calculations.

    With Max Scherzer and Chris Bassitt coming off the books, the Jays entered the winter looking to add a top starter. Cease, arguably, was the top arm on the market. All offseason, agents have described the Jays as aggressive, and this signing proves that early aggression.

    Cease, who owns a 28.6 percent career strikeout rate since his 2019 debut, underwhelmed in his walk year with the San Diego Padres but still maintained some of the peripheral numbers of a frontline pitcher. Besides a 4.55 ERA, he struck out more than 200 batters for a fifth consecutive season and finished third in the majors with a 29.8 percent strikeout rate, behind Detroit’s Tarik Skubal and Boston’s Garrett Crochet.

    His up-and-down performance came amid persistent trade rumors.

    Acquired from the Chicago White Sox in March 2024, Cease spent much of last offseason and the following summer as a prime candidate to be moved. The Padres seriously explored that possibility at multiple junctures — in July, the Houston Astros showed particular interest — before San Diego ultimately opted to retain him.

    That decision paid a brief dividend in October. Cease threw 3 2/3 scoreless innings in a wild-card-round elimination game against the Chicago Cubs, the organization that originally drafted him. The Padres’ season ended the next day, with little expectation that Cease would pitch for them again. After making $13.75 million in arbitration in 2025, the Scott Boras client declined a $22.025 million qualifying offer from San Diego and entered free agency as one of baseball’s top available starters.

    Sometimes described as a right-handed version of two-time Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell, the walk-prone Cease remains capable of frustrating and exhilarating, often in the same outing. He threw the Padres’ second no-hitter in franchise history, against the Washington Nationals on July 25, 2024, capping a three-start stretch in which he went at least six innings and allowed no more than one hit.

    A little more than two months later, he submitted a pair of postseason clunkers in a tightly contested National League Division Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers. In 2025, a familiar lack of command made it difficult for Cease to harness his high-octane, largely two-pitch repertoire.

    He also continued to demonstrate rare durability. More than a decade removed from Tommy John surgery, Cease has missed only one big-league start, when he was a late scratch at the end of his rookie season.

    That durability is exactly what the Jays have prioritized in pitching acquistions in recent years, signing dependable starters like Jos
  • stevenash
    Moderator
    • 01-17-11
    • 66451

    #2
    As a KC Royals fan, I hated Cease when he was with the White Sox as their staff ace, when he was dominating the AL hitters, striking them out at an ungodly 12:9 ratio,

    These days, as our pal JP points out, Cease has become very inconsistent.
    I still like him, a little more than Jake does nowadays. He can still get hitters out, except now he'll piss you off by walking a couple of hitters before eventually closing out an inning.
    Comment
    • SomeDayinBuffalo
      SBR MVP
      • 08-12-11
      • 1532

      #3
      Big contract coming of last year. I can see it working out for the Jays. I think he will be better with the Jays this next year. He can gt back to where he was with the White Sox.
      Comment
      • JAKEPEAVY21
        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
        • 03-11-11
        • 29559

        #4
        Originally posted by SomeDayinBuffalo
        Big contract coming of last year. I can see it working out for the Jays. I think he will be better with the Jays this next year. He can gt back to where he was with the White Sox.
        What exactly did he do last year? You will come to realize what he is in time...a 2 pitch pitcher that is highly inconsistent with his results and control. The one thing I will say is that he is durable and will give you innings.

        I'm surprised he got this many years and over $200 million. I do not think this contract will look good after awhile nor age well but what do I know?
        Comment
        • SomeDayinBuffalo
          SBR MVP
          • 08-12-11
          • 1532

          #5
          Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21

          What exactly did he do last year? You will come to realize what he is in time...a 2 pitch pitcher that is highly inconsistent with his results and control. The one thing I will say is that he is durable and will give you innings.

          I'm surprised he got this many years and over $200 million. I do not think this contract will look good after awhile nor age well but what do I know?
          I'm not saying the money isn't crazy. It's just what it is. He has been living out of a suitcase. He can put some roots in now. The Jays have great pitching. He can just fall some where in the starting five. Also you have to get extra to live in the GTA. No different than NY/CHI/LA, you can make that up by bringing in other income. The real reason you would want to play for the Jays is your living in one of the best places to play for the MLB. Live in a big city buy you don't have to deal with not as much presser.
          Comment
          • JAKEPEAVY21
            BARRELED IN @ SBR!
            • 03-11-11
            • 29559

            #6
            Originally posted by SomeDayinBuffalo

            I'm not saying the money isn't crazy. It's just what it is. He has been living out of a suitcase. He can put some roots in now. The Jays have great pitching. He can just fall some where in the starting five. Also you have to get extra to live in the GTA. No different than NY/CHI/LA, you can make that up by bringing in other income. The real reason you would want to play for the Jays is your living in one of the best places to play for the MLB. Live in a big city buy you don't have to deal with not as much presser.
            He has been with 2 teams in like 6 years, that is hardly living out of a suitcase. The Padres had a very good pitching staff as well as a very good pitching coach but that did not help Cease much. He is an underachiever. I guess you are a blue jays homer since you are a Bills fan and trying to justify the deal which is fine. I think the contract will be looked at as a bad one as time goes on....we shall see.
            Comment
            • Jeep_Life 42
              SBR MVP
              • 09-28-15
              • 1391

              #7
              Yankees continue to sit on their hands
              Comment
              • SomeDayinBuffalo
                SBR MVP
                • 08-12-11
                • 1532

                #8
                Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21

                He has been with 2 teams in like 6 years, that is hardly living out of a suitcase. The Padres had a very good pitching staff as well as a very good pitching coach but that did not help Cease much. He is an underachiever. I guess you are a blue jays homer since you are a Bills fan and trying to justify the deal which is fine. I think the contract will be looked at as a bad one as time goes on....we shall see.
                I would not say I'm a homer. I just know more than other teams. The Jays farm system is here in Buffalo. So i hear more day to day stuff. My true team is the White Sox. With how ownership is I try and not follow closely as I once I did. Living where I do I watch more Mets and the Yanks games. More Mets game. They have the best crew.
                Comment
                • stevenash
                  Moderator
                  • 01-17-11
                  • 66451

                  #9
                  Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21

                  You will come to realize what he is in time...a 2 pitch pitcher
                  That's spot on.

                  In this day and age, a starting pitcher needs at least three different pitches to go beyond five innings, or else hitters will ding you the third time around.

                  Look at some of the current Hall of Fame pitchers, guys like Mike Mussina and Greg Maddux, who had six different pitches.

                  Some pitchers are best served as a long reliever, or starter converted closer (like Eck, or Smoltz)

                  The greatest reliever in history had just one pitch, the cutter, and he threw it for 20 years.
                  It's just like Mariano Rivera was saying to the batter, "You know what's coming, and you still can't hit it."
                  Rivera was also a converted starter.

                  Dylan Cease's best role (IMO) would be as a spot starter/long reliever, where a pitcher with two good pitches can excel as a five-and-fly guy. I think he's living off that amazing 2022 season.



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