The shock of losing Anthony Santander to shoulder surgery â a setback expected to sideline him for most of the 2026 season â sent a jolt through the Toronto Blue Jays front office. For a team with postseason ambitions and a lineup built around balance and power, the sudden absence of Santanderâs bat created urgency. The response came swiftly. But if you ask general manager Ross Atkins, it may not be the final answer.
Toronto moved quickly to acquire 28-year-old slugger JesĂșs SĂĄnchez in a one-for-one trade with the Houston Astros, sending Joey Loperfido the other way. SĂĄnchez arrives with a reputation for punishing right-handed pitching and brings left-handed thump to an outfield that suddenly needed it. On paper, it was a clean, decisive counterpunch.

But Atkinsâ message from spring camp carried more intrigue than finality.
âWeâre open to thinking about different ways of structuring the 40-man, the 26-man and beyond,â Atkins said. âWe feel very good about the starting point right now, and excited about the add today.â
Translation? The Blue Jays arenât done.
The timing of the move speaks volumes. Santanderâs injury left Toronto staring at an outfield configuration featuring Daulton Varsho in center and Addison Barger in right, with Nathan Lukes and Myles Straw competing for meaningful roles. While Varshoâs defense remains elite and Bargerâs bat continues to intrigue, the lineup lacked the reliable punch Santander provided. SĂĄnchez addresses that deficiency immediately, particularly against righties, but his arrival has created a different challenge: congestion.
Toronto now finds itself with a surplus of left-handed-hitting outfielders. SĂĄnchez joins Varsho, Barger and Lukes on that side of the plate. Straw, known more for his glove than his bat, stands as the lone right-handed option in the group. If George Springer is trending toward primarily designated hitter duties, the roster math grows even more complicated.

And thatâs where Atkinsâ flexibility comes into play.
One potential path forward is leveraging the outfield depth to reinforce another area of need. The infield, for example, could use a versatile defender capable of moving around the diamond. Davis Schneider projects as the primary backup infielder entering camp, but his major-league experience is concentrated at second base. Leo Jiménez offers shortstop experience on the 40-man roster, yet depth beyond that remains thin. In a division where flexibility often determines survival through a 162-game grind, another multi-positional infielder could prove invaluable.
The bullpen presents another opportunity. Toronto replaced Seranthony DomĂnguez with Tyler Rogers and received encouraging news on Yimi GarcĂa, but the leverage picture remains fragile. Thereâs a noticeable shortage of late-inning left-handed arms, with Brendon Little and Eric Lauer currently the only southpaws in the projected relief corps â and Lauer may be needed in the rotation if Shane Bieberâs injury lingers. Acquiring another high-leverage lefty would not only stabilize the bullpen but also balance a staff that could be tested early.
Then thereâs the possibility of another outfielder-for-outfielder swap. SĂĄnchez thrives against right-handed pitching. Pairing him with a right-handed hitter who feasts on lefties could create a potent platoon dynamic. Given the current lefty-heavy alignment, that kind of complementary addition might be the most seamless solution.
What makes this moment fascinating is how dramatically the narrative has shifted in a matter of days. When the Santander news broke, anxiety rippled through the fanbase. Losing a cornerstone bat before Opening Day felt destabilizing. Now, thanks to Atkinsâ decisive action, Toronto suddenly possesses trade capital and options rather than desperation. Thatâs a position of strength.
The Blue Jaysâ front office has been criticized in the past for caution. This time, they struck quickly â and publicly left the door open for more. The message to the clubhouse and the fanbase is unmistakable: the organization refuses to let one injury define its trajectory.
Spring training is often a season of optimism and hypotheticals. But Atkinsâ comments carried a tone of calculation rather than hopefulness. He spoke not as an executive scrambling to patch holes, but as one actively reshaping the roster with intention.
Whether the next domino falls in the infield, bullpen or outfield remains to be seen. What is clear is that Torontoâs offseason story did not end with the SĂĄnchez trade. If anything, it may have just begun.
For a team navigating adversity while eyeing October, standing still is not an option. And if Ross Atkinsâ words are any indication, the Blue Jays are far from finished writing their 2026 blueprint.