The baseball world just witnessed an emotional moment as legendary pitcher Max Scherzer officially returned to the Toronto Blue Jays. But what moved Toronto fans wasn’t just the return of “Mad Max.”
It was his emotional statement:
“If I have to end my career, I want my last pitch to be in a Toronto jersey.”
A simple statement, but enough to send the entire city of Toronto into a frenzy.
At 41, Scherzer no longer needs to prove anything to baseball. He has won 3 Cy Young titles, over 3,400 strikeouts in his career, and is almost certain to enter the Hall of Fame in the future.
However, when the 2026 season begins, Scherzer’s name will still appear on the Blue Jays roster. The Canadian team re-signed him to a one-year contract worth approximately $3 million, with numerous innings-based bonuses.

For many players his age, this might just be a final, honorable season.
But for Scherzer, it was a completely different story.
He didn’t return to say goodbye. He returned to fight one more time.
Just months before, Scherzer had stood on the mound in Game 7 of the 2025 World Series, becoming the oldest pitcher ever to pitch in a Fall Classic winner-take-all.
The Blue Jays narrowly lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers, but for Scherzer, that game left him with a feeling of incompleteness.
After the game, he said something that silenced the press conference:
“I can’t imagine that was my last pitch.”
That very feeling of “unfinished business” drew him back to Toronto.
According to several internal sources, Scherzer received several other options during the offseason. Ultimately, however, he chose Toronto.
The reason wasn’t just about his professional skills.
Scherzer once shared that he felt a special connection with the Blue Jays, calling it one of the most cohesive locker rooms he’d ever experienced.

He said:
“In my career, I’ve been on many great teams. But the feeling at Toronto… is special. We play for each other.”
That’s why he was willing to stay, even when many believed he was very close to retirement.
Scherzer’s return immediately sparked debate.
Some skeptics suggested it was just a “retirement contract.” But many fans saw something different: the never-ending fighting spirit of the Mad Max.
Because anyone who has ever watched Scherzer pitch knows one thing:
He doesn’t know how to play half-heartedly.
On the mound, his distinctive two-colored eyes always burn with fierce determination – the very thing that made Scherzer one of MLB’s most fearsome pitchers for nearly two decades.
In his first interview after signing his new contract, Scherzer said something that Blue Jays fans will never forget.
“At this age, you start thinking more about where you want to end your journey.”
He paused for a moment.
Then continued:
“And for me, if that day comes… I want it to happen in Toronto.”
Not New York. Not Washington. Not Detroit – where he once shone.
But Toronto.
No one knows if the 2026 season will be the final chapter in Max Scherzer’s career.
But one thing is certain: he’s still preparing for the new season with the same spirit as when he was 25. Scherzer has even declared he wants to be ready for Opening Day and is accelerating his spring training.
For many players, baseball is a profession. For Scherzer, it’s his whole life.
One day, the stadium lights will go out, the stands will fall silent, and Max Scherzer will throw his final pitch.
No one knows when that day will come.
But if things unfold as he says, that moment will happen in Toronto.
On the familiar mound. In the Blue Jays’ colors. In front of the fans who have believed in him until the very end.
And when that happens, fans will probably realize they’ve just witnessed the final chapter of one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history.