After a disastrous start to the offseason, the Toronto Blue Jays find themselves on a bit of a roll lately. Jeff Hoffman should be a quality addition to the bullpen, assuming his health holds up, and the Blue Jays finally got a bat in Anthony Santander to check a big item off their to-do list. This week brought yet another big name signing in the form of Max Scherzer.
It probably isn't fair to expect Scherzer to return to the form that he showed from 2013-2022 where he posted a 2.78 ERA and won three Cy Young awards, given that he will turn 41 this coming July. However, he still has major upside, impressive stuff, and valuable experience.
His willingness to join the Blue Jays shows that Toronto can indeed convince players that they could make some noise in 2025 and beyond.
It also probably didn't hurt that the Blue Jays were willing to give Scherzer just a little bit more cash than his long-time rival and contemporary Justin Verlander got from the Giants earlier this offseason. Given the history of the two parties, that feels somewhat purposeful.
15.5 mil, you say? https://t.co/Z1FVSmUIAV pic.twitter.com/D0vryq9CC8
— Céspedes Family BBQ (@CespedesBBQ) January 30, 2025
Max Scherzer getting a little bit more cash than Justin Verlander from the Blue Jays is kind of perfect
Scherzer and Verlander are inexorably connected at this point, as they are, along with Clayton Kershaw, the absolute best pitchers of their generation. Both pitchers account for many of the best pitching seasons from the last 15 years or so, and will be first ballot Hall of Famers once they become eligible. One cannot talk about the elite pitchers of the 2000s and 2010s without mentioning their names in tandem.
Both Verlander and Scherzer also find themselves in very similar spots in their career right now. Scherzer dealt with lingering injury issues for most of the 2024 season, and Verlander experienced much of the same, as a neck injury limited him to just 17 starts last season.
If you think it is a coincidence that Scherzer got just a little bit more than Verlander, you are fooling yourself. A competitor through and through, it would not be shocking whatsoever if Scherzer was asking to beat Verlander's guarantee in one last bit of gamesmanship between the two. Once upon a time, earnings came between the two of them in Detroit, which Scherzer reflected on when the pair of pitchers recently reunited on the Mets. This time around, in an independent negotiation, Scherzer made sure that wouldn't happen again.
For the Blue Jays, this little competition matters not. What they need from Scherzer is quality innings and a steady voice in their clubhouse. If he can do that, it won't matter one bit how Scherzer does compared to Verlander (except maybe to Scherzer himself).