Dave Stieb once stood alone on the mound, carving his name into baseball immortality with a no-hitter in 1990, a moment so pristine and unforgiving that it felt like the universe finally owed him something back. More than three decades later, the pain he is fighting is no longer measured in lost games or cruel bounces of fate, but in nerves that burn, throb, and refuse to let him forget what his body is enduring every single day.
The legendary Toronto Blue Jays pitcher is now living with Type 2 diabetes, a condition that has triggered persistent nerve pain and quietly reshaped his daily life. Yet, in a revelation that has sent a wave of emotion through the baseball world, Stieb continues to show up — to team events, to fan gatherings, to the franchise that defined his career — carrying his pain with the same stubborn resolve that once made him one of the most feared pitchers in the American League.
“Pain like this is nothing compared to the losses we suffered back then,” Stieb said recently, his voice calm but weighted with memory. “I still want to see the Blue Jays win one more championship before I go.”

It is a quote that lands heavy, not because it sounds like a farewell, but because it feels like a confession from a man who has already made peace with how fragile everything is.
For years, Dave Stieb was baseball’s cruel paradox. Dominant, relentless, statistically elite — and yet heartbreakingly unrewarded. In the 1980s, no pitcher lost more no-hitters late than Stieb, watching perfection slip away inning by inning, year by year. Those scars never fully faded. Even now, as his body fights a different kind of opponent, Stieb measures pain not by physical suffering, but by emotional memory.
Type 2 diabetes is not a glamorous diagnosis, and Stieb has not tried to dramatize it. Those close to him say the nerve pain can be relentless, flaring without warning, making simple movement uncomfortable, sometimes exhausting. It is the kind of battle that does not come with cheers or scoreboards. And yet, Stieb refuses to retreat from the public eye.
He still attends Blue Jays events. He still shakes hands, signs autographs, tells stories. To fans, he looks like the same stoic competitor. To those who know the truth, every appearance is an act of defiance.
The irony is impossible to ignore. Dave Stieb spent his career fighting for a championship that arrived just after his prime, when Toronto finally broke through in 1992 and 1993. He was part of the journey, part of the foundation, but not the one lifting the trophy at the end. That unfinished feeling has never left him.

Now, as the Blue Jays chase relevance again in a league that has grown faster, richer, and more ruthless, Stieb watches not as a critic, but as a believer. He does not speak about legacy or Hall of Fame debates. He speaks about winning. About closure. About seeing the uniform he bled for reach the summit one more time.
Those who hear his words sense something deeper than fandom. There is urgency in them. Not panic, not fear — urgency.
Baseball has always been a cruel companion to Dave Stieb. It taught him patience through near-misses, resilience through disappointment, and humility through moments when greatness went unrewarded. Diabetes, by comparison, is simply another opponent. One he cannot overpower with a fastball, but one he can meet with the same stubborn refusal to disappear.
Fans across Toronto have responded with an outpouring of emotion, sharing clips of his no-hitter, retelling stories of the ace who never flinched, the pitcher who deserved more. Younger fans, who never saw him dominate in real time, are discovering that Stieb’s greatest quality was never just talent — it was endurance.
And perhaps that is why his words hit so hard.

“I want to see the Blue Jays win one more time before I go.”
It is not a demand. It is not a prediction. It is a hope, spoken by a man who understands better than most how rare, fragile, and fleeting victory truly is.
Dave Stieb is still here. Still watching. Still showing up. Still fighting pain with perspective, and time with memory. And as long as he keeps walking into Blue Jays events with that familiar fire in his eyes, one truth remains undeniable: legends do not fade quietly — they endure, even when it hurts.