TORONTO — There will soon be a new addition roaming the halls around Rogers Centre, and this time, it won’t be a midseason call-up or trade deadline acquisition. It will be something far more meaningful.
Brendon Little, relief pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays, and his wife Emily announced over the weekend that they are expecting their first child this August, delivering a wave of joy to a fanbase that has ridden every emotional high and crushing low alongside the young left-hander.
“Little family grows to 3 this August,” Emily Little wrote on Instagram, sharing the news with a simple caption that instantly captured hearts across Blue Jays Nation.
For a franchise still replaying the echoes of last October in its mind, the timing feels symbolic. Baseball, after all, has a way of intertwining life’s biggest moments with its most dramatic innings. And for Little, 29, this upcoming season will now carry more weight than ever — not just professionally, but personally.

The announcement comes shortly after the couple celebrated their three-year wedding anniversary, marking another milestone in what has already been a transformative stretch for the Little family. From navigating the grind of a 162-game schedule to enduring the unforgiving spotlight of postseason baseball, Brendon and Emily have grown together through the sport’s unique pressures.
On the field, 2025 was Little’s most demanding and, in many ways, most impressive season to date. He logged a career-high 68.1 innings, carving out a valuable role in Toronto’s bullpen. Often deployed in low-leverage spots, he quietly delivered consistency, finishing with a stellar 3.03 ERA and racking up 91 strikeouts. His fastball showed life. His slider generated swing-and-miss. For long stretches of the regular season, he was one of the club’s most dependable arms.
Yet in baseball, legacies are often defined by October.
Little’s postseason narrative took a painful turn during Game 5 of the American League Championship Series. With the Blue Jays clinging to a 2-1 lead, manager John Schneider made the call to the bullpen and handed the ball to his left-hander. The decision, bold in the moment, quickly spiraled. Cal Raleigh launched a home run. Moments later, Eugenio Suarez crushed a grand slam. In a matter of swings, momentum shifted, and the series tilted.
The criticism was swift. The questions relentless.
But to Toronto’s credit — and perhaps to Little’s resilience — the Blue Jays regrouped. Despite falling behind 3-2 in the series, they stormed back to win the next two games and punch their ticket to the World Series. It was redemption for the team, if not entirely for the pitcher at the center of that pivotal inning.
Then came the Fall Classic.
In Game 3 of the World Series, locked in an 18-inning marathon that tested the limits of every bullpen arm, Little found himself once again on the mound in a defining moment. This time, it was Freddie Freeman delivering the dagger — a walk-off home run that sent Toronto to a gut-wrenching defeat. Though the loss could hardly be pinned on one arm after nearly two full games of baseball, frustration among fans zeroed in on the reliever who surrendered the final blow.
For Little, it was a winter of reflection.
And now, a spring of renewal.
Becoming a father has a way of reframing everything. The ERA, the blown saves, the highlight reels — they all shrink slightly when compared to the magnitude of welcoming a child. Teammates often speak about how parenthood reshapes perspective, how the pressures of the mound feel different when a tiny life depends on you off it.
The Blue Jays clubhouse, by all accounts, has rallied behind Little. Baseball is a brotherhood, and celebrations of this kind resonate beyond stat sheets. There will be jokes about sleepless nights. There will be baby gifts in lockers. There will be a crib assembled somewhere in Toronto as the season unfolds.
And perhaps, just perhaps, there will be a little extra motivation.
Because for all the sting of October, Little’s regular-season body of work remains a foundation for optimism. Ninety-one strikeouts do not happen by accident. A 3.03 ERA is not a fluke. At 29, he remains in the heart of his prime, armed with experience forged under the brightest lights.
Now, as the Blue Jays gear up for another pursuit of a championship, they do so knowing one of their bullpen arms is entering the most meaningful chapter of his life. The next time he takes the mound at Rogers Centre, the stakes will feel familiar — but different.
This time, he won’t just be pitching for redemption. He’ll be pitching for something waiting at home.
There will soon be a new baby around the ballpark this season, a tiny presence amid the roar of 40,000 fans. And if the Blue Jays make another deep postseason run, perhaps that child will one day hear stories about how, in the year they were born, their father turned heartbreak into hope.
In baseball, every season is a new beginning.
For Brendon Little, that’s never been more true.