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Best Ever Blue Jays Players

Best Ever Blue Jays Players

The Toronto Blue Jays are Canada’s baseball team.

Toronto has been building a winning culture in the Great White North since the first Blue Jays game was played in the snow.

Generations of Jays players have inspired Canadian kids across the country to take to the diamond. Some have become Big Leaguers themselves, such as Toronto-area kids Joey Votto and Jordan Romano.

After some tough early years, Toronto managed back-to-back World Series Championship victories in 1992 and 1993, cementing the team in Canadian hearts forever.

Fast forward 30 years, and the Jays have one of the most exciting young teams in the Major Leagues. They came close to adding to their pennants at the 2025 World Series, suffering a heartbreaking 4-3 series defeat to the Dodgers.

To honour the great history of the Toronto Blue Jays, we’re looking at five best ever Blue Jays players.

Roberto Alomar  

It’s hard to find a player that exemplifies the Toronto Blue Jays better than Roberto Alomar. He had to feature on our list of the best ever Blue Jays players.

He is arguably the best second baseman of all time, batting .300 average, 210 homeruns and 1,134 RBIs. Don’t forget his 474 stolen bases over 16 seasons. Oh, and he won 10 Gold Gloves in the process.

The Jays acquired Alomar following the 1990 season with Joe Carter, for Fred McGriff and Tony Fernandez.

But his post-season performances in 1992 and 1993 are what makes Alomar stand apart the most. He hit .388 with a .944 OPS, and added 10 stolen bases and 8 runs scored over 12 games. Alomar was a pillar of consistency for the Jays and was the key player in their back-to-back championships.

There’s no question that Alomar and the Jays are synonymous. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2011, and was the first player depicted as a Toronto Blue Jay on a Hall of Fame plaque.

Dave Stieb  

Stieb is arguably the Toronto Blue Jays’ best ever pitcher, and a serious contender in the best ever Blue Jays players bracket.

  1. He was selected in the fifth round of the 1978 draft and played all but one of his 16 MLB seasons in Toronto
  2. Stieb missed out on three no-hitters with two outs in the bottom of the ninth
  3. He accomplished a no-hitter the Cleveland Indians, which was the first, and remains the only no-hitter thrown by a Blue Jays pitcher
  4. Stieb had a 176-137 record with Toronto, with a 3.44 ERA in 433 games.
  5. He leads Toronto in nearly every statistical pitching category with 175 wins, 2,873 innings pitched, 1,658 strikeouts, 408 starts, 30 shutouts and 103 complete games.

Despite being one of the best pitchers of his generation, Stieb never won a Cy Young and received only one look on a Hall of Fame ballot.

Roy Halladay

The only pitcher that’s in the same conversation for top spot in Blue Jays franchise history is Roy ‘Doc’ Halladay. Halladay was the 17th pick overall in the 1995 draft and was the best pitcher in baseball through the 2000s.

He came onto the scene in 1998 and nearly had the franchise’s second no-hitter as a 21-year-old, but surrendered a two-out homerun in the bottom of the ninth versus the Detroit Tigers.

The next couple of seasons saw Halladay go back to the minors and reinvent himself. It was clear that Halladay would be the Ace of the Jays’ rotation for years to come.

2002 and 2003 were Halladay’s best seasons with the Blue Jays. He righty won the 2003 AL Cy Young Award and was named 2003’s Pitcher of the Year. He led the league in wins with 22, complete games with 9, and pitched an insane 266 innings in 2003.

Halladay never made the playoffs as a member of the Toronto Blue Jays and was eventually traded to the Philadelphia Phillies ahead of the 2010 season. There, Halladay won another Cy Young award and pitched in two postseasons, including throwing a no-hitter in his first playoff game.

Sadly, Halladay died in 2017 following a plane crash. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2018 with a career 203-105 record and a 3.38 ERA in 416 games.

Carlos Delgado 

There have been few players as consistent in the batter’s box as Blue Jays first baseman Carlos Delgado.

The Jays signed the 16-year-old and was first in most offensive categories for the franchise.

Delgado worked to establish himself as the Jays’ everyday first baseman and became one of the MLB’s most feared sluggers. He hit 30 or more homeruns in eight straight seasons with the Jays. And over 100 RBIs in six straight seasons.

  1. He went on to play for the Florida Marlins
  2. He had a long 2006 postseason with the New York Mets
  3. Delgado had over 6,000 plate appearances, which is a Toronto franchise record
  4. He has the franchise record for homeruns (336), RBIs (1058), and total bases (2786).

Jose Bautista

Another big-time slugger that can’t be overlooked in Jays’ history is Jose Bautista. Bautista famously kicked around several teams in the early part of his career until landing with the Jays in 2008. His first season with Toronto was nothing special, but in 2010, Bautista caught lightning in a bottle. He cranked out 54 homeruns seemingly out of nowhere and set a franchise record for single-season dingers. Bautista led the Majors in homeruns in two straight seasons and had several more very productive seasons in Toronto.

His offensive prowess led Toronto to their first playoff appearance in 22 years in 2015. And there is the iconic moment in Jays’ history with Bautista’s bat flip versus the Texas Rangers.