DONE DEA: Following the release of Zach Pop, Blue Jays make roster addition landing Boston Red Sox pitcher Brennan Bernardino to a four years lucrative contract and traded reliever Nick Robertson to the Houston Astros for pitching prospect Edinson Batista due to…

Blue Jays Make Roster Move After Trade With Astros
Veteran reliever and Canada native Zach Pop’s time in the Great White North has officially ended. The Toronto Blue Jays released Pop, a mainstay in their bullpen the last few seasons, on Wednesday. Toronto designated the 28-year-old last week when finalizing its Opening Day roster. Pop’s release came after Toronto traded reliever Nick Robertson to the Houston Astros for pitching prospect Edinson Batista. Pop totaled a 4.89 ERA and -1.2 bWAR across 90 games with the Blue Jays over the last three seasons. Toronto acquired him and Anthony Bass from the Miami Marlins in an August 2022 trade. The Blue Jays cut Bass in June 2023 amid a slow start and a controversial Instagram post. Pop, to his credit, stuck around slightly longer. At first, it looked like the Blue Jays found a hidden gem when Pop posted a 1.89 ERA in 17 games to close out 2022. However, reality soon set in. Pop pitched to a 6.59 ERA over 15 outings in 2023 and spent most of the season’s final months in Triple-A. Pop recorded a 5.59 ERA and -1.4 bWAR in 48.1 innings last year.
Pop doesn’t turn 29 until September, and he’s young enough to still catch on somewhere as minor-league depth. However, it might be some time before the 2017 seventh-round pick throws off a big-league mound again. Selfishly, we hope the Blue Jays bring Pop back on a minor-league deal at some point. It’s always fun seeing a Canadian player suiting up for the Blue Jays.
Nationals swept by Blue Jays on rookie’s gem in debut
TORONTO — Easton Lucas allowed one hit over five scoreless innings in his first major league start, and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Washington Nationals 4-2 on Wednesday to complete a three-game sweep.
It was hardly baseball weather with snow falling outside Rogers Centre, which had the roof closed for the afternoon game.
Lucas (1-0) struck out three and walked two in a composed 74-pitch outing.
Filling in for the injured Max Scherzer, the 6-foot-4 left-hander was making his 15th appearance in the majors. The 28-year-old from California appeared in two games for the Jays last season. He made 12 other appearances in 2024, split between Oakland and Detroit.
Nationals left-hander MacKenzie Gore (0-1), who struck out a career-high 13 in six scoreless innings in Washington’s season opener against Philadelphia, gave up three runs on nine hits in six innings with five strikeouts.
Andres Gimenez singled home Anthony Santander for a 1-0 Jays lead in the first. Santander had doubled for his 700th career hit.
Toronto added runs in the fourth, fifth and sixth.
CJ Abrams homered off Jays reliever Brendon Little to open the sixth. Little, Chad Green, Yimi Garcia and Jeff Hoffman then retired 11 of the next 12 batters. Hoffman allowed a run in the ninth while picking up his third save.
Toronto designated hitter George Springer opened the fourth with his first homer of the season, a 368-foot drive into the Jays’ bullpen.
After hitting 12 singles and nothing else Tuesday, Toronto had five extra-base hits Wednesday and out-hit Washington, 10-5. The Nationals scored seven runs over the three games in Toronto.
Washington hosts Arizona in a three-game series beginning Friday.
Toronto begins its first trip of the season, with 10 games in 10 days starting Friday when Kevin Gausman (1-0, 3.00 ERA) takes the mound against the New York Mets.