DUNEDIN, Fla. â The Toronto Blue Jays arrived at camp expecting routine spring storylines: roster battles, mechanical tweaks, optimism about 2026. Instead, they found themselves thrust into baseballâs latest power vacuum.
When Tony Clark abruptly resigned as head of the Major League Baseball Players Association, the tremor rippled instantly through clubhouses across the sport. In Torontoâs case, it landed squarely at the feet of Daulton Varsho.
With Chris Bassitt now pitching for the Baltimore Orioles and no full-time union representative currently in place, the Blue Jays suddenly found themselves between voices at precisely the wrong moment. Varsho, previously an alternate rep dating back to his Arizona Diamondbacks days, was pulled into the center of the storm â absorbing the news Tuesday morning and preparing for an afternoon board call that would begin charting the clubâs immediate response.
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The timing could hardly be more volatile. Clarkâs resignation â first reported by ESPNâs Jeff Passan and Don Van Natta Jr., citing an internal investigation involving an inappropriate relationship with a union employee â comes with another Collective Bargaining Agreement set to expire Dec. 1. A lockout looms like a thundercloud on the horizon.
Inside the Blue Jaysâ clubhouse, leadership turnover is nothing new. In recent years, the team has been unusually well-armed on the labor front. Bassitt served on the unionâs influential executive subcommittee. Max Scherzer and Marcus Semien previously held subcommittee roles. Ross Stripling guided the team through the tense 2022 lockout. The institutional knowledge ran deep.
Now, suddenly, it doesnât.
âWeâll decide on a new full-time rep in the coming weeks,â Varsho said, emphasizing that he intends to stay involved. âEspecially when youâre a young player, you need to be a part of it to better understand whatâs going on behind closed doors.â
For Varsho, this isnât symbolic participation. Itâs education.

âItâs nice to understand both the business side of baseball and the playing side of baseball,â he explained. âWeâre going to try to get Trey into being trained as an alternate rep. Tylerâs going to be a big part of this. Davis will be involved. And obviously, you have the older guys. But itâs nice to get the younger generation to be like, âHey, we should start knowing this.â Itâll be good.â
Good might not be the word many around the sport would choose.
Commissioner Rob Manfred has spent the better part of the past year subtly â and at times overtly â signaling ownershipâs desire for a salary cap. The competitive imbalance narrative, amplified by the free-agent spending spree of the Los Angeles Dodgers, has only fueled that discussion. To ownership, itâs about cost certainty. To players, itâs about precedent â and power.
This negotiation, expected to be Manfredâs final CBA before his planned retirement in 2029, could define his legacy. A salary cap would represent a seismic shift in baseballâs economic model. The NHL achieved one after canceling its entire 2004â05 season. Baseball has its own scar tissue: the canceled 1994 World Series, a catastrophe that fractured trust for years.
The stakes, in other words, are generational.
And thatâs precisely why younger players like Davis Schneider are stepping forward. Approached by Varsho and George Springer before the 2024 season about serving as an alternate, Schneider now sees this moment as unavoidable.
âIf theyâre saying it, I canât really say no,â Schneider said. âBeing involved in the game, not just on the baseball side, but the business side, is important. Now, with everything thatâs going on, I feel like this will be a good time to get a little bit more into it. I donât want a lockout. I donât think anyone does. Hopefully weâll come to a good decision for both sides.â
Schneider observed closely how Bassitt and Scherzer handled union matters â stars who not only dominated on the field but commanded respect in labor rooms.
âThey were so good at it,â he said. âI want to eventually get to that level â looking after other players, not just yourself, trying to grow the game the right way.â
For Varsho, that philosophy runs in the family. His father, Gary Varsho, spent eight seasons in the majors and later coached. One lesson endured: players fight for one another â and for the next wave coming behind them.
During the 2022 lockout, Varsho admits he didnât fully grasp every nuance. Afterward, he sought out Arizonaâs player rep at the time, Nick Ahmed.
âI was like, âIâd like to know more,ââ Varsho recalled. âHe told me, âYou should start being alternate so you can get that information and then you can start having conversations with guys in the clubhouse.ââ
The business side didnât come naturally, Varsho admits. But maturity has replaced hesitation.
âBeing able to have mature conversations of like, âOK, why are we doing this?â or âWhat are we doing it for?â â you can have a better understanding of how to explain it to guys,â he said.
And explanation may soon be everything.
Between Clarkâs sudden departure and a looming labor showdown that could redefine the sportâs economic future, the Blue Jaysâ next generation of player representatives wonât have the luxury of easing into the role. They are inheriting a negotiation that could tilt baseballâs balance of power for decades.
Spring training is supposed to be about fresh starts. In Dunedin, it feels more like a prelude.
Because while batting practice echoes across the backfields, the real battle lines are already being drawn â not between pitcher and hitter, but between labor and ownership.
And this time, Torontoâs young voices wonât just be watching. Theyâll be in the room.