Toronto – Amidst preparations for the new season, the Toronto Blue Jays created an unexpected moment, quiet and unostentatious, yet enough to bring the entire baseball community to a standstill. In their familiar broadcasting booth at Rogers Centre, the team reserved an empty seat – no one was allowed to sit in it – as a way of honoring legend Buck Martinez, along with a simple but deeply emotional message:
“Come back whenever you want.”
It wasn’t just a seat. It was an invitation. A promise.
And perhaps, a way of saying that Buck Martinez never truly left.

For years, Buck Martinez’s voice had been an inseparable part of the Toronto Blue Jays. He not only narrated games, but also told stories, conveyed emotions, and connected millions of fans to the team.
So when the Blue Jays decided to leave an empty seat in the cabin – the place where he had sat, spoken, and lived through every game – they weren’t just keeping a physical spot.
They were keeping the memory.
According to insiders, this idea didn’t stem from a grand plan, but from a very genuine emotion. A member of the organization said:
“There are some friends you can’t replace. Buck was one of them. We’re not looking for a replacement, we’re just… leaving that seat for him.”
That statement quickly spread, and within hours, it had become one of the most touching moments the Blue Jays had ever created.
Buck Martinez was more than just a familiar voice on the airwaves. He was a part of Blue Jays history, a player, a coach, and then a broadcaster – a rare journey in baseball.
But what made him special wasn’t those roles.
But it was in the way he made the fans feel close. The way he talked about the game as if he were sitting right next to you. And the way he turned every moment into a memory.

Those who have been in the dugout in recent days have all said the same thing: that empty chair feels so different.
No one touched it. No one sat in it. And sometimes, just looking at it is enough to silence someone.
One staff member shared:
“You can feel his presence, even when he’s not there.”
As images of the empty chair spread, Blue Jays fans reacted in a way that was unsurprising – with emotion.
“This is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen in baseball.”
“He deserves all of this.”
“Buck will always be a part of us.”
No need for grand ceremonies, no need for lengthy speeches, just an empty chair said it all.
In modern sports, where things change rapidly and names come and go, the Blue Jays’ actions carry a different meaning.
They didn’t just honor a legend. They kept a person.
And in a world where everything is replaceable, that becomes more special than ever.
“Come back whenever you want.”
The message the Blue Jays sent to Buck Martinez wasn’t a farewell.
It was a promise to wait.
A message that the door is always open. That the chair is still there. And that, whenever he’s ready, he can return.
The story of the empty chair didn’t stop in Toronto. It quickly spread throughout MLB, becoming one of the most shared stories before the season.
Because it reminded everyone that, behind the numbers and achievements, baseball is still a human story.
Buck Martinez may not be sitting in that chair right now.
But in a way, he’s still there.
In every old commentary.
In every fan’s memory.
And in the very chair that no one wants to replace.
A new season will begin. Games will be played. New stories will be written.
But at Rogers Centre, there will always be one unchanging seat.
A seat reserved for a legend.
And perhaps, the most beautiful thing about this story isn’t the chair itself. It’s the promise behind it:
that some people never truly leave… and there’s always a place for them to return to.