Today, Buck Martinez officially announced his retirement from Sportsnet, ending a glorious career as the iconic voice of the Toronto Blue Jays. For many fans, this is more than just news of a commentator leaving the dugout. This is the moment an emotional era of Canadian baseball officially comes to an end.
“Thank you for giving me the honor of being with the Blue Jays and for being with you all this long,” Martinez shared — simple words, yet enough to bring tears to the eyes of millions of fans.

In the world of sports, there are voices that only narrate the game.
Buck Martinez, however, tells the story of life.
For decades on Sportsnet, his deep, calm, and profound voice became a familiar sound whenever the Blue Jays took to the court. For Toronto fans, turning on the TV to watch baseball also meant… listening to Buck Martinez.
He didn’t need excessive excitement to create a climax. A single, slow, well-timed remark was enough to immortalize the moment. Buck didn’t impose his emotions on the audience—he guided their own emotions, allowing viewers to love, grieve, and hope alongside the team.
Buck Martinez wasn’t an outsider telling Toronto’s story.
He was a part of that story.

For the last six years of his playing career (1981–1986), Martinez played for the Blue Jays, fighting as a catcher—a position demanding endurance, sacrifice, and a deeper understanding of the game than anyone else. Those years laid the foundation for him to become a unique commentator: understanding the players, the pressure, and the loneliness behind the spotlight.
Later, returning as manager of the Blue Jays for the 2001 and 2002 seasons, Martinez continued to serve Toronto—without flashiness or ostentation, but always with dedication. He’s not remembered for the number of wins, but for his kindness and respect for the game.
Few in MLB history can say they served the same team in three roles: player, coach, and commentator. Buck Martinez did it—and with all his heart.
When he returned to the commentary booth, the Blue Jays didn’t just have a former player talking about the game. They had someone who understood every angle of the dugout, every player’s gaze after a strikeout, every heavy silence in the clubhouse after a defeat.
That’s what made Buck the most trusted voice in Toronto.
There’s one chapter in Buck Martinez’s career that fans will never forget: his battle with cancer.
He left television to undergo treatment, then returned—not self-pitying, not boastful, not making himself the center of attention. He simply continued to talk about baseball, as if that were his way of thanking life.
And from that moment on, every comment from Buck took on a deeper meaning. Fans weren’t just listening to a game—they were listening to a man who had weathered the storm and still chose to love baseball to the very end.
In his farewell message, Buck Martinez dedicated his most heartfelt words to the Blue Jays fans—the people who had been with him through every high and low point.
“You gave me a reason to continue. Win or lose, you were always there. I never took that for granted,” he said.
It wasn’t the farewell of a celebrity.
It was a tribute from someone who considered his fans family.

Buck understood that without the blue and white stands, without the summer nights filled with cheers, his voice would never have become legendary.
Buck Martinez left Sportsnet in the way he lived his life: quietly, humbly, and with profound humanity. But from tomorrow, when the Blue Jays play, there will be something very different — the absence of the voice that once guided the emotions of an entire generation.
That void isn’t just in the commentary booth. It’s in the hearts of the fans.
Buck Martinez may retire.
But he will never leave the Blue Jays.
He lives on in the fans’ memories, in old highlights, in those summer evenings when families gathered around the screen just to “listen to Buck tell baseball stories.”
Not every legend needs titles.
There are legends remembered for making others love the game even more.
And Buck Martinez — as a player, a coach, and the voice of Toronto — did just that.
Thank you, Buck.
Thank you for all the memories.
And thank you for always being there with the Blue Jays fans.