Toronto Blue Jays reliever Braydon Fisher has been a trusted arm in their relief corps ever since making his MLB debut with the club last season. In 52 games played in 2025 with Toronto, Fisher posted a perfect 7-0 record with a tidy 2.70 ERA, 1.02 WHIP, with 62 strikeouts in just 50 innings of work. Not only did he flourish during his rookie campaign with the Blue Jays, he is now exceeding expectations and emerging as one of the Blue Jays’ main go-to guys in their bullpen alongside Louis Varland and Tyler Rogers this year.
But one thing that Blue Jays fans might not have realized was the fact that Fisher quietly had a very impressive streak going that carried over from last year into this season. However, that incredible streak came to an unfortunate end in the game against the Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday.
Blue Jays reliever sees his incredibly impressive streak end against the Milwaukee Brewers
Fisher came into the game in the seventh inning with the Blue Jays down 3-2 to the Brewers. He was looking to hold them at bay to give Toronto a chance to come back in the upcoming innings and appeared well on his way to doing his job as he registered outs from the first two Milwaukee hitters. However, Brewers designated hitter Gary Sánchez would homer off of Fisher on an 0-1 pitch to push Milwaukee’s lead to 4-2.
In doing so, Fisher allowed his FIRST ever earned run on the road for his MLB career, as per Mitch Bannon of The Athletic. Yes, you read that correctly, the 25-year-old right hander had gone 29 games and 32 total innings without yielding an earned run to start his Blue Jays career. Pitching away from home without the cheers and encouraging support from the crowds is already tough enough as it is. But to be able to dominate and hold opposing teams off the scoreboard at the same time for such an extended stretch is quite the astonishing feat in itself.
In a further note, that also happened to be the first earned run that Fisher has allowed all season as well. So far in 2026, he has compiled a stellar 0.96 ERA, 0.75 WHIP, along with just one walk and a whopping 12 strikeouts in just 9 1/3 total innings over seven relief appearances.
As Fisher aims to begin a new streak of any kind, look for the 25-year-old reliever to fully solidify his role as a key cog in the Jays’ bullpen going forward. That is, if he hasn’t done so already.
