Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Blue Jays option Clase to triple-A, Nimmala to minor-league camp

As Opening Day of the 2026 MLB season nears, the Toronto Blue Jays continue to tinker with their roster.

The team announced a series of moves on Monday, which included optioning outfielder Jonatan Clase to triple-A Buffalo.

The 23-year-old — acquired by the Blue Jays from the Seattle Mariners in 2024 — made 112 plate appearances for Toronto last season, slashing .210/.288/.300 for 21 hits, nine RBI and two home runs.

Clase, a native of the Dominican Republic, has had 23 at-bats for the Blue Jays during 2026 spring training, posting a .261 batting average for six hits, four RBI and two stolen bases.

Among the other moves made by Toronto was the team assigning infielder Arjun Nimmala to minor-league camp.

The 20-year-old was selected 20th overall by the Blue Jays in 2023 and has since split most of his time between the Florida Complex League and single-A with the Vancouver Canadians.

Nimmala, the No. 77 prospect on MLB’s top 100 prospect rankings, had 473 at-bats with Vancouver last year and slashed .224/.313/.381 for 106 hits, 61 RBI, 31 homers and 17 stolen bases.

He’s also played in 14 spring training games for the Blue Jays in 2026, batting .261 for six hits, three RBI and two stolen bases.

The Blue Jays open their 2026 regular season on March 27, kicking off a three-game set against the Athletics in Toronto.



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AP source: Jets agree to trade quarterback Justin Fields to Chiefs

NEW YORK — The New York Jets have agreed to a trade that will send quarterback Justin Fields to the Kansas City Chiefs, a person familiar with the deal told The Associated Press on Monday.

The Jets will receive a sixth-round draft pick in 2027 for Fields and pick up $7 million of his guaranteed $10 million salary for this upcoming season, the person told the AP on condition of anonymity because the teams didn’t announce the trade.

The deal, first reported by ESPN, is pending a physical.

The 27-year-old Fields signed a two-year, $40 million deal — with $30 million guaranteed — with New York last March and was the starter for most of the season until he was benched in favour of Tyrod Taylor in Week 12 in November. He didn’t play another game for the Jets, ending the season by being placed on injured reserve in late December with a knee injury.

Fields went 2-7 as the Jets’ starter with seven touchdowns and only one interception for 1,259 yards. He threw for fewer than 55 yards in four games, including a season-low 27 in a loss to Buffalo in Week 2.

The Chiefs were searching for a veteran backup quarterback capable of filling in if two-time MVP Patrick Mahomes, who is rehabbing after tearing knee ligaments late in the season, is not ready for the start of the season.

With the Jets’ trade for Geno Smith last week, it appeared Fields’ days with the team were numbered, whether by being released or traded. New York held onto Fields through the start of free agency and general manager Darren Mougey found a taker in Kansas City.

Fields was the No. 11 overall pick by Chicago in the 2021 draft and the Bears moved on after three seasons and traded him to Pittsburgh in 2024. With Russell Wilson dealing with a calf injury, Fields opened the season as the Steelers’ starter and had five touchdown passes and five TD runs with just one interception while leading the Steelers to a 4-2 start.

But with Wilson healthy again, Pittsburgh turned back to the veteran and Fields was sent to the bench.

After he was signed by the Jets last offseason to replace the released Aaron Rodgers, Fields insisted he was confident he could be a productive NFL starter. But it didn’t happen in New York.

After the Jets started 0-7 during what would be a 3-14 first season under Aaron Glenn, owner Woody Johnson blamed poor quarterback play by Fields as a primary reason for the team’s struggles.

“The defence is pretty good. If we can just complete a pass, it would look good,” Johnson said at the NFL’s fall owners meetings last October. “We’ve got to complete some passes. You’ve got to convince them that you can do something. Otherwise it’s hard to have a game that you can win.”

For his career, Fields is 16-37 as a starter and has thrown for 9,039 yards and 52 touchdowns with 32 interceptions. He has also run for 2,892 yards and 23 scores.



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MLB test of robot umpires for checked swing calls moving up to triple-A

MIAMI — Major League Baseball’s experiment of a robot umpire technology system allowing challenges to checked swing calls is moving up from Class A to triple-A.

MLB will also test moving second base slightly to position it entirely within the infield, which would reduce by nine inches the distance between first and second, and between second and third, according to a memorandum sent to teams last week.

It will try out reducing permissible disengagements by pitchers from two to one per plate appearance and stricter limits on batter timeouts and resetting the pitch clock for issues with PitchCom, the electronic signalling device that has been used since 2023.

There will also be a test allowing starting pitchers to re-enter games in the lowest level of the minor leagues. It’s not expected this test will lead to MLB implementation, but it’s being considered for the minors to improve development and player health by allowing more flexible workload management.

MLB’s Automated Ball-Strike Challenge System, the so-called robot umpire, launches when the season starts March 25 following tests that started in the minors in 2019. A batter, catcher or pitcher can appeal a ball/strike call by the human umpire under a system in which each team has two challenges and keeps its challenge if successful. Additional challenges become available to teams in extra innings.

An experiment began last May 20 in the Class A Florida State League allowing challenges to checked swing calls, and the test was extended to the Arizona Fall League.

Starting on May 5, the checked swing test will take expand to the Triple-A Pacific Coast League in additional to the FSL.

“The batter, pitcher or catcher may also appeal the umpire’s decision regarding whether the batter swung at a pitch,” according to the memo from MLB vice president of on-field strategy Joe Martinez to general managers and other club executives. “A swing will be considered to have occurred if the maximum angle between the bat head and the bat handle exceeds 45 degrees.”

Martinez said the strikeout rate was cut by 3 per cent during last year’s testing.

In addition, umpires at games in the triple-A International League will be instructed to apply the 45-degree threshold for determining swings. The Official Baseball Rules do not specify a standard for checked swings, stating only: “A strike is a legal pitch when so called by the umpire, which is struck at by the batter and is missed.”

Since the 1970s, catchers have been allowed to ask the plate umpire to appeal non-strike calls on checked swings to the first- and third-base umpires, but no appeals have been permitted when a strike has been called on a checked swing.

Starting pitchers will be allowed to re-enter a game after being removed at the Arizona Complex League, Florida Complex League and Dominican Summer League. A removed starting pitcher is eligible to return if he threw at least 25 pitches during the inning he was removed, can return only at the start of an inning and may re-enter only once.

MLB enlarged bases 18-inch squares from 15 in 2023, a change the led to more stolen bases because of a decreased distance of 4 1/2 inches between first and second, and second and third.

Second base has been centred on the exact spot of second, but the experiment in the International League will place it “entirely within the perimeter of the infield diamond during the second half” of the season.

Citing an increase in the average time of a nine-inning game from two hours, 36 minutes in 2024 to 2:38 last year and a decrease in stolen-base attempt success rate from 80.2 per cent in 2023 to 77.8 per cent last year, MLB will experiment with changes to pitch clock rules.

Teams at Triple-A will be assessed a mound visit if play is stopped for a PitchCom problem, and if a team is out of visits an automatic ball will be charged.

At all levels, the clock will not stop when a catcher leaves the catcher’s box to give defensive signals, and players other than the pitcher and coaches must leave the mound before the clock on mound visits runs out. A violation would result in an automatic ball.

At High A, batters will not be allowed to request time if the bases are empty and in Class A no timeouts will be allowed. Exceptions will be allowed for brush backs, possible injuries or equipment problems.

Allowed disengagements by pitchers from the rubber will be lowered from two to one at Double-A.



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Blue Jays option Clase to triple-A, Nimmala to minor-league camp

As Opening Day of the 2026 MLB season nears, the Toronto Blue Jays continue to tinker with their roster. The team announced a series of mo...