Anaheim, CA – A dry “crack,” a few wobbly steps, and then it all crumbled. For Cody Ponce, the 2026 season didn’t end the normal way – it ended after just 2.1 innings, 47 shots, and a serious injury he understood from the very first moment.
But what silenced the Toronto Blue Jays wasn’t just the ACL injury that ended the season. It was how Ponce faced it.
“I’ll be the biggest supporter of this team,” he said – a simple statement, but one that carried the weight of a man who had lost everything… and still chose to get back up.
The injury occurred in a seemingly familiar situation – a pitching maneuver Ponce had performed “a thousand times” in his career. But this time, his right knee couldn’t take it.
He heard “snap, crackles, and pops” – sounds any athlete would understand as the end.
Just hours later, an MRI confirmed the worst: a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), meaning his first season with the Blue Jays… was officially over.
It all happened so fast.
A three-year, $30 million contract.
A chance to return to MLB after years away.
A place in the rotation.
Disappeared.

To many, Cody Ponce was just a new pitcher. But behind that was a long journey.
After struggling in MLB in 2021, he left the US, went to Japan, and then exploded onto the scene in KBO in 2025 to reclaim his chance.
The Blue Jays believed in him. They gave him a big contract. They put him on their long-term plans.
And then, in less than three innings, everything fell apart.
It wasn’t just an injury. It was a blow to the entire comeback journey he had built over many years.
What surprised the coaching staff and teammates most wasn’t the extent of the injury – but Ponce’s reaction.
On that fateful night, sitting in the head coach’s office, he repeated three words:
“Adapt. Make up. Overcome.”
There was no despair. No anger.
Only one decision: to keep going, albeit in a different way.
“For the first hour or two, I thought: this happened, so let’s just keep going,” he shared.
That wasn’t the reaction of a player who’d just lost a season.
It was the reaction of someone who’d been through worse.
When he couldn’t pitch, Ponce chose another way to contribute.
He texted his teammates after every game.
He watched every play.
He tried to “be present” even though he couldn’t play.
“Maybe this year, I should just be the biggest fan I can be,” he said.

It wasn’t consolation.
It was a choice.
In a team struggling with injuries and instability in rotation, that spirit became more valuable than ever.
Another perspective: when pain isn’t the worst thing.
There’s one detail that makes Ponce’s story even more profound.
In 2017, he lost his mother to brain cancer.
That experience changed the way he sees things.
“I’ve been through hell. This isn’t hell. It’s just a journey through fire,” he said.
The ACL injury – a tragedy for many – was just another test for him.
That explains why he was able to stand strong when everything fell apart.
Ponce is expected to need months to recover and will most likely only be able to return next spring.
During that time, he will train at the Dunedin player development facility, returning to Toronto occasionally when possible.
But more importantly, it’s about how he uses this time.
He requested a scouting report from the entire team.
He wants to relearn hitters.
He wants to become “more knowledgeable about the game” when he returns.
He’s not a player who’s waiting.
That’s a player preparing for a comeback.
In a long season, the Blue Jays can win or lose. Rotation can be consistent or inconsistent.
But Cody Ponce’s story offers something different.
It’s not about ERA.
Not about strikeout.
Not about winning.
It’s about how a person reacts when everything is taken away.
And sometimes, as Ponce himself has proven, the greatest victory…is not giving up, even when you’re no longer playing.