Friday, 2 January 2026

Analyzing Blue Jays’ extension candidates for 2026

The Toronto Blue Jays have been active in free agency during the first months of the off-season, but the club has been quiet on other fronts, with Opening Day 83 days away.

As the Blue Jays look to set them up for success in 2026 and beyond, the free-agent market won’t be their only port of call, though. That means exploring upgrades via trade, but also looking internally. Contract extensions — outside of mega deals like the one Vladimir Guerrero Jr. received in 2025 — tend not to generate as much excitement as finding big-name help from elsewhere, but they can be just as important for a team’s success.

When the Blue Jays extended Alejandro Kirk last year, for instance, that move didn’t exhilarate a fanbase waiting on a resolution with Vladdy, but the team has to be delighted to have Kirk behind the plate through 2030.

There hasn’t been much talk of extensions in Blue Jays land yet this off-season, with the team in the running for impact players like Kyle Tucker and Bo Bichette, but there are some intriguing candidates to stick around in Toronto for the long haul.

Early-career candidates

Trey Yesavage: Sizeable contracts for players in their early 20s rarely go to pitchers with teams wanting to see an aptitude for carrying a full starter’s workload before making a massive investment. That may be especially true for a Blue Jays franchise that has put a clear premium on starters who take the ball every five days.

If Yesavage has a stellar 2026 that includes a solid innings total, maybe the gears start turning on an extension, but the young starter still has plenty to prove at the MLB level. He could earn a bigger deal by adding some heft to his resume, and there’s not much incentivizing the Blue Jays to jump early.

The way Toronto is operating now, it will be able to afford a Yesavage extension if he becomes a star player. Figuring out how to fit that into their budget is a problem they’d be delighted to have, and it’s worth risking that possibility to get more certainty.

Addison Barger: From his excellent bat speed to his rocket arm to his stellar playoff production, there are several reasons to want to be in the Barger business.

At the same time, Barger won’t even reach arbitration until 2028, and he doesn’t have the same prospect pedigree as many of the players who get massive early-career extensions. In most cases, those who cash in are blue-chip prospects who tore up the minors at a young age and excelled in small samples at the big-league level.

Barger has a 95 wRC+ in 727 MLB plate appearances and was seen as more of an intriguing prospect than a sure thing on the way up. His excellent 2025 should give the Blue Jays confidence that he’ll be a significant part of the team’s lineup in the years to come, but there isn’t much urgency to talk extension yet.

Just like with Yesavage, the club can afford to see more and get a clearer internal evaluation before making the leap.

Unlikely candidates on expiring contracts

Shane Bieber: Bieber could wind up with the Blue Jays beyond 2026, but there are some questions about how healthy he is right now, which makes for a bad negotiating environment.

He also didn’t pitch much in 2025, and he’ll be a tough pitcher to project until his Tommy John surgery is further behind him.

Eric Lauer: Lauer exceeded all reasonable expectations by a significant margin in 2025, but some skepticism is warranted considering it was his first strong MLB campaign since 2022.

Buying high on a player who’s slated for a long relief role seems like a dicey bit of business. Lauer could also be resistant to signing with a team that’s shown reluctance to use him as a starter when other options arise, and may want a chance to position himself as a back-of-the-rotation candidate in free agency following the 2026 season.

Myles Straw: Veteran bench players like Straw are rarely seen as extension candidates, and the Blue Jays have an $8-million option on him for 2027 if they are desperate to keep him around. That option is unlikely to get picked up, but a reunion is possible depending on how 2026 goes.

However things play out, the team won’t be in a hurry to lock Straw up before the season starts.

Yimi García: As good as García has been for the Blue Jays at times, he’s dealt with injuries in each of the past two seasons, and 2027 would be his age-36 campaign. Getting a strong 2026 out of the right-hander is Toronto’s priority.

Late-career stars on expiring contracts

George Springer: Evaluating the case for a Springer extension requires dabbling in some unknowns.

How long does Springer want to play?

How clunky is the fit with Springer and Anthony Santander together over a full season? Does Santander bounce back enough for that to be an important consideration?

How close is Springer’s 2026 to his 2025?

Does Springer have a vision of wanting to retire with a specific team or in a specific area?

Extending Springer deep into his 30s isn’t a ludicrous idea considering his elite 2025 production, but it probably makes sense for all parties to see how 2026 plays out.

Kevin Gausman: Gausman’s first contract has been an unequivocal success, and doubling down is worth contemplating for the Blue Jays.

The veteran starter’s bounce-back 2025 didn’t take him to his 2022-23 levels, but it indicated that he hadn’t entered a full decline phase just yet. The Blue Jays have some medium-term rotation uncertainty, and Gausman could easily have some good years left.

It’s possible the team could have reservations about a pitcher entering his age-35 season after throwing 223.2 total innings, including the playoffs. It might pay to see him looking healthy and strong early in 2026 before starting any negotiations.

Teams have been willing to pay pitchers who are a bit long in the tooth recently, and a comparable to watch for Gausman might be Yu Darvish, who signed an extension covering his age 36-40 seasons before 2023.

Gausman’s last two seasons look awfully similar to the two Darvish produced before his six-year, $108-million deal began:

Pitcher

Ages

IP

ERA

FIP

fWAR

Gausman 

33-34

374

3.71

3.59

7.1

Darvish

34-35

361

3.61

3.58

7.0

The arbitration years candidate

Ernie Clement: Clement is the sweet spot for a contract extension in terms of proximity to free agency because he’s arbitration-eligible for three more seasons.

A contract with the infielder could be a win-win that allows him to get financial security and a significant upgrade on his near-term income while the team buys out a couple of years of free agency.

Clement would hit free agency entering his age-33 season, minimizing his ability to land a big payday and possibly taking the sting out of forgoing the open market.

That all sounds intuitive, but the type of player Clement is complicates the situation.

Impressive playoff run aside, the infielder tends to produce slightly below-average offensive results while excelling with the glove. That’s a fine profile for an everyday player, but the defensive aging curve tends to be pretty steep beyond 30, and the majority of Clement’s value comes from his fielding. The Blue Jays already have him under team control through his age-32 season, and may not see much need to lock in seasons where his glove could decline and undermine his overall impact.

The most interesting candidate

Daulton Varsho: Of all of the players on this list, Varsho makes the most sense for an extension.

He plays a premium position extremely well, won’t turn 30 until midway through 2026 and brings a left-handed power element that is rare in the Blue Jays organization. There isn’t an internal heir apparent in centre field, and Varsho is essential to the team’s defensive identity.

Since the beginning of the 2023 season, the Blue Jays rank first in the majors with 227 runs saved, and 23.1 per cent of that number provided by Varsho. Statcast’s Fielding Run Value has Toronto second (+109), with Varsho delivering 29.4 per cent of that total.

The 29-year-old’s bat is also easier to believe in than ever. In just 71 games last season, he hit as many home runs (20) as he had in two seasons with the Blue Jays where he played at least 136 games each. Despite playing less than half of 2025, he had nearly as many total barrels (28) as he managed in his 158-game 2023 campaign (29).

Varsho saw his average bat speed rise to 75.6 mph — significantly higher than it was in 2024 (73.7 mph) or 2024 (74.6 mph), had a higher percentage of his plate appearances result in extra-base hits (12.9 per cent) than Aaron Judge (12.5 per cent), and produced the hardest-hit ball of his career (113.9 mph):


All that information sounds like a good argument for Varsho to get to free agency and cash in. He has a rare skill set, and if he can show his 2025 offensive strides are the real deal, he’s just one season away from a huge payday.

That possibility is tantalizing and nearly within reach, but it’s far from a sure thing. If Varsho doesn’t stay healthy in 2026, he’ll enter free agency with a significant durability red flag. If his offensive production falls back to earth, the 2025 power surge could be labelled a small-sample-size blip.

Any slippage in sprint speed could have teams wondering how long he’ll remain a game-changer in centre field. He already ranked 40th at the position by that metric in 2025. His jumps, instincts, and catching ability made him shine, but it’s something for teams to chew on as he gets into his 30s. The same broad worries about buying the back half of a defensive star’s career that apply to Clement are also relevant to Varsho to some degree.

There are pretty good arguments for the Blue Jays to lock Varsho up as soon as possible, or let another team be the one to pay him handsomely into his 30s. Varsho could also want to capitalize on his offensive progress and avoid 2026’s possible pitfalls, or bet on himself.

At this moment, each side could make the case that this is a good time to get a deal done, and both would be risking a significant misstep by putting pen to paper.



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Thursday, 1 January 2026

Canadian Olympic players, home



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Avalanche’s Toews says he won’t go to Olympics if his baby isn’t born



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Saints wide receiver Chris Olave ruled out vs. Falcons with blood clot

New Orleans Saints wide receiver Chris Olave will be out on Sunday against the Atlanta Falcons after doctors detected a blood clot in his lung, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported on Thursday.

Olave has no prior history with blood clots and is expected to be sidelined for a month before beginning his off-season program, Schefter added.

Nick Underhill of New Orleans Football was first to report the news. Underhill added that the blood clot was caught before anything bad happened and that Olave was discharged from the hospital Tuesday.

The 25-year-old wideout finished the year with 100 receptions, 1,163 yards and nine touchdowns, all career highs.

The Falcons-Saints game on Sunday has a bearing on the NFL Playoff race, as an Atlanta win clinches the NFC South division for the Carolina Panthers, as they are positioned to win a three-way head-to-head tiebreaker between the division rivals.



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Wednesday, 31 December 2025

How the Raptors’ young core have earned Rajaković’s trust late in games



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Ottawa Senators storylines to watch in 2026

OTTAWA — 2025 was a banner year for the Ottawa Senators, transitioning from years of misery and despair to long-awaited playoff wins. But they still carry plenty of anguish heading into the new year.

So, what does 2026 have in store for the Senators?

Well, because we can’t see into the future, here’s a look at what we think will be the 10 most enticing storylines for the Senators in 2026.

1. Playoffs or bust! And the dominoes that fall

The Senators are walking the Eastern Conference tightrope, sitting only four points out of a playoff spot, with Moneypuck.com giving them a 42 per cent chance of climbing back into the post-season. Making the playoffs is the expectation, and the correlated presumption is that general manager Steve Staios will add to his roster at the deadline, not subtract. They aren’t in “all-in” territory, but with Brady Tkachuk having a maximum of three playoff runs left on his contract, the time is now.

If the Senators make it — and if they make enough noise — it could mean that by next fall, we hear “Cup” whispered around the national capital region. If the Senators don’t make it, do heads roll? Does management preach patience yet again, or are fans looking at yet another retool? Choose your Senators’ adventure.

2. Will the Senators get enough saves to become an elite team?

Every single analytic would tell you the Senators are an elite team, from Corsi to expected goals and even the eye test. The Senators consistently outshoot, out-chance and out-possess teams, a hard thing to do in the NHL. But they are last in team save percentage.

It’s not all on the goalies, but no team can go far in the playoffs without solid goaltending. Whether it’s Linus Ullmark — who’s take a personal leave of absence — Leevi Merilainen or one of their AHL emergency call-ups, the Senators can’t have the second-best goaltender on most nights, which has been the situation of late. The issue might make or break this era of Senators hockey, despite all its talent and promise.

3. Will the Senators get their first-round pick back?

As of this, the last day of 2025, the Senators are in line for the 10th-overall pick in the 2026 draft. But that draft selection would vanish like the memory of the Joonas Korpisalo era in Ottawa.

The Senators organization still believes there is a chance it can reclaim the draft pick it lost as punishment for the botched Evgenii Dadonov trade in 2021. In 2014, the New Jersey Devils were supposed to lose their pick because they tried to circumvent the salary cap to sign Ilya Kovalchuk, but that punishment was converted to getting the last selection in the first round, at pick 30. The stakes in a year with a strong draft class are significant for the club’s future.

4. Brady Tkachuk’s future in Ottawa

The narrative surrounding Tkachuk’s future in Ottawa will hinge on the outcome of this season and the start of next season. At the end of 2026, Tkachuk will be 18 months away from free agency. If the sense is that Tkachuk wants to re-up in the nation’s capital, it could lead to Staios becoming ultra-aggressive. While if Tkachuk is non-committal about his future in Ottawa, the Senators would be in quite a predicament.

A decision would have to be made as to whether to trade their captain for an immense Quinn Hughes-esque package or the Senators could try to go all-in to win a Cup in 2027 and 2028, the final years of Tkachuk’s deal.

More than the possible return, contextually, there are parallels with the Hughes situation in Vancouver: another star American captain in a Canadian city, and Tkachuk’s desire to stay will likely hinge on whether the team is in a contention window. The volume around Tkachuk is about to be ratcheted up.

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5. Will Tim Stutzle become that superstar?

Tim Stutzle is playing the best hockey of his career, and on a 10-game point streak. He’s on pace for 40 goals and 88 points while playing sublime 200-foot hockey, and he’s only 23 years old. Since the 2024-25 season, Stutzle is fifth in wins above replacement, according to Evolving Hockey, behind only Leon Draisaitl, Thomas Harley, Connor McDavid and David Pastrnak. If Stutzle maintains his elite play, it changes the whole dynamic of how good the Senators can be — now and until his contract ends, in 2031.

6. Jake Sanderson cements himself as a top-five defenceman in the world.

In less than a year, Sanderson went from an underexposed elite talent to an integral part of the Senators’ and Team USA’s backend. Sanderson is a defensive stalwart who has blossomed into a great power-play quarterback and offensive gem. He’s on pace to set career highs in every statistical offensive category, while leading the best defensive pairing in the NHL alongside Artem Zub, according to Moneypuck. Every year, Sanderson has gotten better — why would it be different in 2026?

7. Will the Senators add a top-six forward or a top-four right-shot defenceman?

The theme whenever the trade deadline looms in Ottawa is what should Staios prioritize: Adding a top-six forward or a top-four defenceman? In an ideal world, both. But without many picks or prospects this year, it’s up to Staios to pull a rabbit out of his hat.

Right now, the team is ninth in goals for and eighth in five-on-five goals per game. The problem isn’t scoring, but who should be paired with Thomas Chabot? With Nick Jensen regressing and Jordan Spence better for third-pairing minutes, the Senators should focus on adding another right-shot defenceman. That decision will be front of mind come the deadline and into the 2026 off-season.

8. Can Shane Pinto prove he’s an elite goal scorer?

Pinto is on a 35-goal pace this season and he already has two 20-goal seasons over his career. His shooting percentage is the highest of his career at 17 per cent, but only one per cent more than last season. In 2026, we will find out if Pinto is that elite sniper or if he’s just on a roll. His 30-plus goal touch on the third line could elevate the Senators to another tier.

9. Can Dylan Cozens become a force as a second-line centre?

The Buffalo Sabres are flying high with Josh Norris, and the Senators are not with Dylan Cozens. The final word on last season’s trade between division rivals won’t be known for some time, but Cozens has been good this season, not great. Sixteen of Cozens’ 29 points have come on the power play — he simply hasn’t produced enough offence at five-on-five. With both Stutzle and Pinto elevating, Cozens’ play is suddenly an X-factor for Ottawa’s success in 2026.

10. Will Carter Yakemchuk become an everyday NHLer?

Zeev Buium, Zayne Parekh and Sam Dickinson have all played in the NHL. Yakemchuk has not. Yet Yakemchuk was selected above the other three in 2024. He has produced points in the AHL and was leading in rookie defenceman scoring before a recent injury.

Nevertheless, his defence and his skating are works in progress. The Senators have a huge hole on the right side of their defence, and Yakemchuk was drafted to fill it. At the moment, the Senators could surely use a skilled, rugged right-shot defenceman like him. His progress in 2026 could lead to major dividends for the Senators, or some major what-ifs. 



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Tuesday, 30 December 2025

Changing women’s hockey alters Canada’s Olympic prep

The United States heaved on the rope in 2025 in its women’s hockey tug of war with Canada.

Their rivalry is constant, but the stakes rise in the year preceding the Winter Olympics. 

Canada won one of eight meetings against its nemesis in 2025. 

The U.S. beat Canada twice in April’s world championship, including a 4-3 overtime win in the final. The Americans swept the four-game Rivalry Series in November and December by a combined score of 24-7. 

The two countries split the conclusion of last season’s Rivalry Series before the U.S. won six straight. They’ve met in every Olympic final but one in 2006, when Sweden upset the U.S. in the semifinal.

Canadian forward Brianne Jenner, an Olympic veteran of three tense finals against the U.S., says she and her teammates remain confident they’ll have a team that can defend the gold medal in February’s Olympic Winter Games in Milan and Cortina, Italy.

“We trust each other, love each other, believe in each other,” Jenner stated.

Canada’s captain Marie-Philip Poulin, who was voted the International Ice Hockey Federation’s female player of the year in 2025, was also undaunted.

“We know there’s work to be done,” Poulin said. 

The Professional Women’s Hockey League, starting its third season in November, completely changed how both countries prepare for the Olympics.

Canada’s reliance on its team game, previously forged through six months of training and playing 20 to 30 games together, was no longer possible. 

“It’s just the new changing landscape of women’s hockey, and we get to be a bit of the guinea pig here for the first go-round with the PWHL and the national team,” said Canada’s head coach Troy Ryan. “Even in a COVID year in 2022, we probably had more games as a group.”

Of the 30 women invited to Canada’s three two-week camps in September, October and November before the PWHL’s regular season began, and also played in the Rivalry Series, all but two were PWHL players. 

The United States carries 21 PWHL players in its pool of 30, and nine from the NCAA.

Bodies of work with the national team in games and camps, plus players’ individual performances in the PWHL, determine Canada’s 23-player Olympic roster of three goalies and 20 skaters to be announced next week.

Canada’s general manager, Gina Kingsbury, reserved the right to select outside her pool of 30 if a player gets hot in the PWHL.

“Every game is watched by several coaches, and there are reports due to make sure that we’re documenting what we’re seeing on a daily basis with our athletes,” Kingsbury said. “We will use the PWHL play as a big indicator of who we bring to Milan and who we don’t.”

The women’s management team is comprised of Kingsbury, Ryan, senior manager of player development and scouting, Cherie Piper, assistant coaches Kori Cheverie, Caroline Ouellette and Britni Smith, and goaltending consultant Brad Kirkwood.

Women’s world championship rosters expanded from 23 to 25 players in 2025 to match the men’s, but it was too late in the quadrennial for the IIHF to apply to the International Olympic Committee for additional women in Milan.

Given how hard the women compete against each other in the PWHL, which breaks Jan. 28 for the Olympic Games, the spectre of injury is ever-present.

Kingsbury is also the GM, and Ryan is the head coach of the PWHL’s Toronto Sceptres.

While injury was a hazard when the women centralized in Calgary in the months leading up to previous Winter Games, Kingsbury is holding her breath more this time.

“I just felt like we maybe had more control and maybe it’s an illusion that I had,” she said with a laugh. “I do feel less control in this league because there’s maybe more games, more opportunities for something to happen, but that’s just something that every team is dealing with, not just Canada.

“That’s definitely the thing that keeps us up at night.”

Canada can change its roster up until its first game of the Olympic tournament, Feb. 4 against Finland.

“If there are injuries post-selection date, at least the players that get added will be players that have been with our group the entire time through,” Ryan said.

Players left off the Olympic team will be on notice that their status could change in the event of injury, Kingsbury said.

“That message will be delivered to everyone,” she said. “Be prepared. You may come to the Games last minute.”



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Analyzing Blue Jays’ extension candidates for 2026

The Toronto Blue Jays have been active in free agency during the first months of the off-season, but the club has been quiet on other front...