The Chris Bassitt era in Toronto has officially come to an end — and it ended with a message that hit Blue Jays fans right in the chest.
Just one day after reports surfaced that the 36-year-old right-hander had agreed to a one-year deal with the division-rival Baltimore Orioles, Bassitt broke his silence. The veteran starter took to social media Thursday morning to reflect on three seasons in Toronto that reshaped his career and left an imprint on the clubhouse.
“From having our youngest son there to getting to a World Series and everything in between,” Bassitt wrote on X. “It was filled with love and friendships that my family will cherish for the rest of our lives. We gave you everything we had. Yall gave us so much more. Thank yall for literally everything.”
Four sentences. One emotional farewell. And a line — “We gave you everything we had” — that instantly became the defining quote of his departure.

Bassitt arrived in Toronto as a stabilizing force, a veteran presence expected to anchor a rotation hungry for October credibility. Over three seasons, he delivered exactly that: innings, toughness, and an edge that helped transform the Blue Jays from hopeful contender to American League powerhouse. While his 2025 regular-season numbers — a 3.96 ERA across 170.1 innings with 166 strikeouts and 56 walks — may not scream dominance, they tell only part of the story.
Because Bassitt was built for October.
When the pressure peaked and the spotlight intensified, he embraced it. During Toronto’s run to the World Series in 2025, Bassitt shifted roles seamlessly, coming out of the bullpen in both the ALCS and the Fall Classic. In 8.2 postseason innings, he posted a microscopic 1.04 ERA with 10 strikeouts, delivering high-leverage outs that preserved leads and steadied nerves. It wasn’t glamorous work. It was gritty, selfless, and essential.
That willingness to adapt — to do whatever the team needed — became the hallmark of his tenure.

Inside the clubhouse, Bassitt was more than a stat line. Teammates leaned on his candor and competitiveness. Coaches trusted his preparation. Younger arms studied his routines. He was a bridge between eras — a veteran who demanded accountability but understood the emotional grind of a 162-game season. For a franchise chasing its first championship in decades, his presence mattered.
And now, he’s gone. Not just gone — but headed to Baltimore.
The decision to sign with a division rival only heightens the drama. The Orioles, coming off a disappointing 75-87 season that saw them finish last in a brutally competitive American League East, are aggressively retooling. They acquired Shane Baz via trade, re-signed Zach Eflin, and will roll into 2026 with a rotation that also includes Kyle Bradish, Trevor Rogers, and Dean Kremer. Bassitt’s addition injects experience into a staff looking to rediscover its edge after back-to-back playoff appearances in 2023 and 2024.
For Baltimore, this is a calculated move — a short-term deal with a battle-tested arm who knows how to navigate October chaos. For Toronto, it’s a symbolic shift. The Blue Jays are evolving, recalibrating their roster after falling just short of a championship. Letting Bassitt walk signals confidence in the next wave, but it also closes a chapter defined by resilience and near-glory.
Fans, understandably, are conflicted. Gratitude blends with frustration. Appreciation mixes with the sting of seeing a respected veteran suit up against them 13 times a year. But Bassitt’s message leaves little room for bitterness. It was not a farewell laced with regret or veiled criticism. It was sincere, reflective, and proud.

“We gave you everything we had.”
In professional sports, those words carry weight. They suggest no shortcuts taken, no effort withheld, no resentment lingering. They frame his three years in Toronto not as unfinished business, but as a mission pursued with full commitment.
The question now becomes what his departure means for both sides. Can the Blue Jays sustain their championship window without one of their emotional tone-setters? Can the Orioles, armed with a refreshed rotation and renewed urgency, vault back into contention with Bassitt serving as veteran compass?
What is certain is this: when Bassitt steps onto the mound at Rogers Centre wearing Baltimore orange, it will not feel like just another divisional matchup. It will feel like a reunion wrapped in rivalry, respect colliding with competition.
The Chris Bassitt era in Toronto may be over. But its impact — the innings, the October fire, the belief that this team could stand toe-to-toe with anyone — lingers.
And now, the American League East just got even more personal.