“Every Night Was a Battle”: Arlene Martinez Reveals the Sleepless Nights Before Buck’s Retirement Decision
The public moment felt calm, almost gentle. Buck Martinez, one of the most familiar voices in Toronto Blue Jays history, announced his retirement with the steady composure fans had come to expect. But behind that composed farewell was a private storm that few ever saw. Now, for the first time, Arlene Martinez is opening up about the nights that led to the decision Buck never truly wanted to make.
“Every night was a battle,” Arlene said, her words cutting sharply against the narrative that retirement was inevitable. Long after the lights went out, long after the world assumed the decision was clear, Buck would lie awake, staring at the ceiling, trapped between two unbearable questions: If I leave now, am I leaving the game too early—or staying too long?

This was not a story about declining health forcing an exit. It was not about losing his voice, his preparation, or his love for the booth. According to Arlene, the most painful part of the decision was that Buck still loved baseball just as fiercely as he always had. That love, paradoxically, became the very thing that made staying—and leaving—equally devastating.
For decades, Buck Martinez was more than a broadcaster in Toronto. He was a constant. A presence that carried fans through rebuilds, playoff runs, heartbreaks, and hope. His voice became part of the rhythm of summer nights, a familiar companion that made the game feel personal. Walking away from that was not a professional choice. It was an emotional reckoning.
Arlene described nights where Buck would replay moments in his head—games called, innings narrated, crowds roaring through his headset. He worried about the day when passion might quietly turn into routine, when love for the game could be overshadowed by obligation. That fear haunted him just as much as the fear of leaving something he still cherished.
“He never wanted to be the guy who stayed one year too long,” Arlene said. “But he also never wanted to be the guy who walked away while his heart was still fully in it.”
That tension followed him everywhere. During the day, Buck carried himself with professionalism, rarely revealing the weight of what he was wrestling with. At night, the silence made it impossible to ignore. The decision wasn’t announced suddenly. It was fought for, argued against, delayed, and questioned over countless sleepless hours.
Those close to Buck noticed the change. Friends say he spoke less about the future and more about memories—small moments, forgotten games, shared laughs in the booth. It was as if he was already beginning to say goodbye in pieces, even while hoping he wouldn’t have to say it at all.

What makes this revelation so striking is how deeply it contradicts the assumption that retirement is always a relief. For Buck Martinez, it was a loss. A necessary one, perhaps, but still a loss. Not because he was pushed out, but because he chose to step away before something sacred to him could be diminished.
Arlene made it clear that the final decision came not from pressure, but from love—love for the game, love for the fans, and love for the standard Buck set for himself. He wanted to leave while he could still give everything, not when he was forced to admit he could not.
When the microphone was finally turned off, there was no celebration behind closed doors. There was quiet. Reflection. And, according to Arlene, a deep emotional release that came only after months of internal conflict.
“He didn’t feel relief right away,” she said. “He felt empty. And then grateful. And then sad all over again.”
For Blue Jays fans, Buck Martinez’s retirement marked the end of an era. For Buck himself, it marked the end of a nightly ritual, a lifelong connection that had shaped his identity. The booth was never just a workplace—it was home.

Arlene’s revelation adds a new layer to that goodbye. It reframes the moment not as a clean transition, but as a deeply human struggle between knowing when to let go and knowing when holding on might cost you something you can never get back.
In the end, Buck Martinez didn’t walk away because he stopped loving baseball. He walked away because he loved it too much to risk losing what made it meaningful. And for months before the announcement, that truth kept him awake, night after night, fighting a battle no one else could see.
It was never just a retirement. It was a farewell wrestled from the heart.