Bruce Dowbiggin
Under Pressure: Boo Jays Become Blue Jays. Now What?

Today’s computers have impressive ability to measure even the most minute computations. But not even the most accurate calculators could not measure the time between a Toronto Blue Jay fan realizing that maybe, just maybe, their team was a contender and the wholesale complaining about how they are blowing the chance of a lifetime to win a third World Series.
It’s true that sometime in late June/ early July the Blue Jays— with key regulars on the injured list— went on a wholly unexpected tear. They won 19 of 24 games, ending with taking three games from MLB’s best team, the Tigers, in Detroit. They didn’t just beat opponents, they pounded them.
At the end of that burst they led the AL East and seemed to have a postseason berth sewn up. Which naturally sent Jays Nation in search of a comfy blanket as the season draws to a close. It’s difficult to assimilate the whiplash effect made by this totally unforeseen burst. Here was our outlook for Toronto back in March:
“While it’s true that the sun can’t shine on the same team every day, Jays fans believe it would be nice if the great orb would find their club as it did back in the 1992/93 World Series days. Instead of the reflected glory of past stars winning for other teams. Patience is thin. And time is ticking.
While the Jays dithered, the price for players like Guerrero and Bichette soared. Using Juan Soto’s Mets $765 M deal as a yardstick Guerrero turned down a Jays offer of just under $600 M, saying he was done talking during the season. If Shapiro/ Atkins had anticipated the market Guerrero would have cost a lot less in 2023-24.
Shortstop Bichette— a gifted player who battled injuries in 2024—is likewise up for a new deal. He has started strong in 2025 and would command a handsome return in a trade. He says the Jays are waiting to see what happens with Guerrero first. Having sold the pair for years to their loyal fans, having to trade them will be a massive PR blow. And while Jays’ national audience can be an advantage, having a whole country pissed with you is devastating.”

Since that was written the Jays did give Guerrero a 14-year, $500 million deal, locking up their star for his baseball life. If that was supposed to inspire the team it was a loser. By May 8 they were 16-20. Newcomer slugger Anthony Santander wasn’t hitting his weight, injuries were wracking the team and manager John Schneider seemed day-to-day.
They then hovered near .500 till the start of June. Even the Jays’ paid broadcast team was having a tough time putting a happy face on ever catching the Yankees for first. In desperation Schneider began giving at-bats to prospects like Addison Barger and Jonatan Clase. Journeymen like Nathan Lukes, Ernie Clement and Davis Schneider also thrived in platoon situations.
Another journeyman Eric Lauer solidified the fourth starter spot while Max Scherzer convalesced. In the bullpen unheralded lefties Brendan Little and Mason Fluharty gave Schneider valuable late-game innings. Catcher Alejandro Kirk, handed a new contract, gave the pitching staff a reliable asset.
In short, the patch job is not only holding it’s made the team stronger. As of this writing the Jays have a 91.9 percent chance of making the postseason, five percent of winning the World Series. Which would create euphoria elsewhere.
Not in Toronto. All this prosperity suddenly created a whirlwind of doubt as Toronto GM Ross Atkins went into the trade-deadline crunch last week. There were big names reportedly on the market as a half-dozen teams scrambled to add reinforcements for the stretch. Eugenio Suarez, Alex Corea, Mason Miller, Jhoan Duran, Ryan Helsley and David Bendar were the baubles of the market.
The Jays got none of them— in part because they don’t have a deep farm system to use for trade bait. They picked up useful bullpen arms in Seranthony Dominguez and Tommy Nance. They rolled the dice on former Cy Young winner Shane Bieber who hasn’t pitched in two seasons. And they picked up versatile Ty France.

But not the big names. Meanwhile the Yankees. Mariners and Astros were overhauling their rosters in anticipation of the AL postseason. Seattle grabbed Suarez, Josh Naylor and Caleb Ferguson. New York recruited three new arms for its bullpen while the Astros obtained superstar SS Corea along with Jesus Sanchez and Ramon Urias.
To further rattle the troops the Jays just lost two of three at home to the KC Royals, the first series lost since losing two of three to the mediocre Chicago White Sox in mid-June. They lead the Yankees by three games with 49 games left, hardly a comfortable margin considering that only a handful of Jays have any postseason experience.
So expect plenty of angst the rest of the way. Because that’s the way it’s done in Toronto’s Panic Park.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.
Bruce Dowbiggin
Why Only Christians Are Singled Out For Censure In Carney’s Canada

“Slowly at first. Then all of a sudden.”— Ernest Hemingway’s oft-used phrase describing going broke.
With the election of Mark Carney and the decaying Trudeau Liberal gang, Canada’s descent into irrelevance has slid from gradual to picking up speed at an alarming pace. The persistent claims of “steady as she goes” from the administration’s paid scribblers has trouble matching with the reality of a nation unmoored by Justin Trudeau drifting from its berth in the harbour.
The symbols are everywhere— from the collapsing real-estate economy in Canada’s major cities to Carney’s fumbling attempts at a new free-trade agreement with Donald Trump’s America. But if you’re looking for a stand-alone sign of how far traditional Canada is in the rear-view mirror this past week’s censorship of an America Christian singer will do.
Sean Feucht is a leader in the pop-music vanguard of Christian music, a huge segment of the entertainment market. He’s been around a while, but only lately has he achieved name recognition in Canada where being fashionable tops being correct. (Indeed his critics insist that his current controversy is designed to give him more publicity.)
In the insatiable Woke appetite for demonizing anyone they see as Trumpian, Feucht has become a major whipping boy. He describes himself as “Lover of Jesus, Husband, father, recording artist, author, founder of “Let Us Worship” – “Hold The Line” – “Light A Candle” & “Burn 24-7”. Sounds pretty benign.
But for Canada’s secular urban cultists American Baptist culture=Trump=Hitler. Quebec, in particular, gets instant derangement at the threat of Trump dismantling the national dream of a French-speaking nation state— a dream only sustained by Canada’s increasingly unworkable constitution. America would turn it in to Louisiana with poutine. In large part this religious panic is because a large swath of Quebec’s French population was traumatized by its break with the “oppressive” Catholic Church in the 1970s. Too many babies, too little autonomy. This schism has underpinned its social/ legal outlook ever since.
There is little chance of Quebec society accepting Christian religion again until this cohort dies. (Even then it will face the spectre of a large Muslim fact installing its religion in law.) In Quebec, Christian religion— unless it is KD Lang singing Hallelujah— is so toxic that they’d rather be playing Alu Akbar in Place des Armes.
The anti-Christian bias— here’s a sample of Feucht’s “incendiary” songs— is only slightly less toxic in the rest of Canada. Encouraged by CBC’s pithy description of Feucht as a MAGA singer, his public appearance was cancelled in Halifax. CBC, which uses MAGA as a catchall for the 77 million of voted for Trump last year, described him as “a religious singer from the U.S. who has expressed anti-diversity, anti-2SLGBTQ+ and anti-women’s rights views on his platforms.” Translation: He hasn’t condemned Trump to the fires of hell. Ergo, guilty!
In short other hotbeds of DEI across the nation cancelled Feucht, too. That included Montreal where a puffed-up spokesthingy for mayor Valerie Plante intoned, “ “Freedom of expression is one of our fundamental values, but hateful and discriminatory speech is not accepted in Montreal and, as in other Canadian cities, the show will not be tolerated.” Fundamental values= things we decide are true.
So Feucht instead took his act— his songs include There Is A Name, Worthy Of It All and Our God Reigns— to a church where Montreal police stormed the doors and an antifa goon threw a smoke bomb at the singer (no charges as yet). The city instead proclaimed that it would fine all involved for flouting their curated world view.

No one in authority seemed at all bothered that freedom of religion is a cornerstone of Canada’s constitution. Freedom of religion is why Canadian cities are clogged each weekend by Muslim agitators praying in intersections or outside of Christian churches. Only Christians seem unprotected by this rule. The serenity of the Boomer Left must be observed.
Feucht met the media after the ruckus to condemn the treatment, and a CBC-Radio Canada journalist said the quiet part out loud on why Montreal’s elites wanted him shut down.“It’s because you don’t have a permit,” the gormless reporter told Feucht.
“I don’t think you need a permit to worship in a church,” Feucht responded. Indeed you don’t. Either Montreal’s mayor has no idea of the laws governing her society or she feels, like CBC, that there are different categories of citizenship now.
It was a similar mindset that moved police across Canada to arrest ministers who kept Christian churches open during the manufactured panic surrounding Covid-19. It was why Carney’s handlers successfully branded hapless Pierre Poilievere— who’s closer to Pete Buttigieg than Donald Trump— as a mini-version of POTUS 45/ 47.
The same people calling Trump an autocrat or a dictator are blissfully innocent when they shut down speech to protect their precious values. The fact that the scolds closing down Feucht escaped any legal recriminations for this suppression of Christian culture means they will be encouraged to double down on censorship— even as they permit ever-more expressions of Muslim outreach.
Carney’s stated goal of closer ties to atheist EU disinformation is a further indication that Christians are just a bug on the windshield of autocratic Canada. (Ironically the attention given to Feucht has exposed his music and his message to far more than would have known him otherwise.) It’s a further irony that for all the many sins of Christianity in its 2000 years of existence— and they are voluminous— the Canadian censors are actually making the Pope and others religious figures into figures of sympathy, the “little guy” in a battle with ruthless state control.
Not that Valerie Plante and her ilk will notice. Across the nation far-left big-city mayors— elected by vote splitting in many cases— are now protected by anti-hate speech laws that translate criticism into hate. The people who called cops “pigs” in the past generation are now content to use cops to suppress their perceived enemies.
And the band plays on.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.
Bruce Dowbiggin
WJC 2018 Scandal: Why Did The Crown Ever Send This Case To A Trial?

What we have here is failure to communicate— Strother Martin as The Captain Cool Hand Luke.
The best failure to communicate states that there are three sides to every story. Our side. Your side. And the facts. With its lurid sexual allegations and hockey background, the sexual assault trial of the World Junior Hockey gold medalists of 2018 was a field day for narratives in the media and the courtroom. The facts, meanwhile, were stowed away beneath the surface of social media.
The alleged victim, known as EM, was championed by feminist leaders as symbolizing all women trapped by the patriarchy, ignored by the police and cast aside by the courts. Outside diligent reporters such as Katie Strang of The Athletic and Rick Westhead of TSN, the media universe simply assumed guilt in the five players, because. hockey… Social media liberally smeared them as rapists, symbols of women’s degradation.
The five players on trial, meanwhile, were young, privileged fools, yes. But they had been unfairly branded as criminals by Hockey Canada which rushed to condemn them in a quick civil settlement of EM’s charges. HC never consulted them about their side of the story before surrendering the cash. This drive-by panic eventually would cost the five their NHL careers. Meanwhile, the 20 or so players on the 2018 Team Canada gold medal winners graduated into the NHL, with no one in the public knowing who was under suspicion? Who was innocent?
And then there are the facts. The most prominent was the 2018 decision of the London, Ont., police not to press charges after their investigation of the incident at a local bar and then hotel. With a single witness– who only came forward at the urging of her mother, made a puzzling video from the incident itself and the contradictory evidence from the five players and others on the team— they knew it would not stand the scrutiny of a public trail with skilled defence lawyers.
Especially with a jury drawn from the hockey-mad city of London. So they passed on laying charges. It was suggested that a civil suit might be the best way to get some measure of justice. Which was what happened in 2022. Hockey Canada executives, spooked by the prospect of bad publicity, used a secret slush fund to pay EM a reported $3 million. The players were hung out to dry. And there it was supposed to rest.
Until the fastidious Strang/ Westwood duo revealed the presence of the slush fund, partially drawn from the registration fees of young players across the country. Hearings were quickly held on Parliament Hill excoriating the HC brass. This was followed by the resignations of said HC executives. There were promises of reform, withdrawal of sponsors and a blanket condemnation of the male hockey culture in Canada by people who thrive on such things.
In this favourable media cycle, the Crown suddenly decided to try its luck in court against the quintet. The political pressure for a conviction was tremendous as supporters of the Liberal government as well as its NDP partners demanded guilty charges. Social media demanded retribution. In this atmosphere a trial date for late 2024 was set.
Anyone who recalls the infamous 2016 sexual assault trial of former CBC host Jian Ghomeshi could have told you that it was going to be a reach to get convictions. In the Ghomeshi case the “traumatized” witnesses against him were revealed to have later contacted him for more meetings, promising more intimacy. Plus the witnesses conspired between themselves on their testimony. Ghomeshi was acquitted but never forgiven, his CBC career crushed.

In London, the Crown had to make the case of an intoxicated young woman who’d voluntarily gone to the hotel for sex with a player, who’d never been restrained or bound from leaving and who’d done videos saying she’d voluntarily spent the night in group sex with the players. The details were lurid, even if some teammates’ memories of the night were conveniently hazy on the stand.
There was hope among feminists that a jury might look past the shaky evidence and sympathize with EM. But that hope collapsed when the judge, citing complaints of harassment of jurors by defence counsel, declared a mistrial and took over the case herself.

In the end, Justice Maria Carroccia found EM not “credible or reliable” enough to send the players to jail. While scolding their behaviour she declared the young men not guilty. It was a courageous decision, knowing it would prompt backlash. The Globe&Mail led the charge, declaring “After the Hockey Canada verdict Advocates fear survivors will fall silent”.
Jesse Rodger, executive director of a local London sexual-assault centre: “Unfortunately, I think what this does is reconfirm that the legal system is perhaps not the safest place to find justice. I think it may deter people from coming forward.”
Supporters of EM outside the courtroom used words like “gutting”, “devastated” and “insulting” upon hearing the decision. In a society where The Handmaids Tale indoctrinates women into a culture of victimization there were willing ears for the purported messages against hockey players.
But as Joanna Baron wrote, “a criminal trial is not a symposium on sexual morality or trauma psychology. It is a process bound by the high threshold of the presumption of innocence. Today’s verdict reaffirms that principle.” And justifies the earlier decision not to seek a criminal trial
Predictably there are calls for reforms in the hockey culture. But how? As we saw in cases from Graham James to Dave Frost the bonding of teams often excludes females beyond mothers and sisters. Scoring with girls and women is almost as valued as scoring on the ice. (Make no mistake they have plenty of compliant partners in this.) Similarly, in a climate where immature young men make millions they are going to attract ever more young women eager to punch a lottery ticket for life, whatever the price.
In that context the players will act according to their privilege. They’ve heard about the sexual spoils of stardom and are eager to collect. EM’s motives seem unclear beyond a wild night out with some famous hockey players. Why she stayed, why she offered sex to so many players and why she complied with the video are unknowable.
Had her mother not intervened it would have been a private story among those in the room that night. The civil suit would have given her some compensation and privacy. It’s too late for that now. The London police read the room properly. And hockey has a costly own-goal.
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.
-
Business1 day ago
Privatizing Canada Post Is The Only Solution Left
-
Fraser Institute1 day ago
Alberta sets pace on new housing construction—rest of Canada should catch up
-
Health1 day ago
MAHA: RFK Jr. bans mercury in U.S. vaccines
-
International1 day ago
Chinese Couple Renting American Women’s Wombs Exposes Dark Side Of Surrogacy Industry
-
Business1 day ago
Exodus of young people suggests Ontario is an increasingly less-desirable place to live
-
Economy13 hours ago
Conservatives finally enter the climate fight armed with science
-
Alberta2 hours ago
Federal climate plan could trigger Alberta recession