TORONTO — Fourth time, finally, was the charm.
After years of heartbreak on the international market — watching Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and Roki Sasaki all slip away to the Los Angeles Dodgers — the Toronto Blue Jays finally landed their global star. Just hours before a career-altering deadline, Kazuma Okamoto signed with Toronto, a move that not only reshapes the Blue Jays’ lineup but sends a clear message across Major League Baseball: this time, Toronto refused to lose.
Had Okamoto failed to sign with an MLB club before Sunday, he would have been forced to return to Japan’s NPB and restart the process next year — a risk he simply couldn’t afford. Toronto saw the opening, moved decisively, and closed the deal.

And in doing so, they may have altered the balance of power in the American League.
Okamoto’s free agency unfolded under conditions rarely seen. The Japanese slugger wasn’t choosing between luxury destinations or bidding wars — he was choosing between the future he wanted and the one he feared being delayed. Toronto’s willingness to act quickly, clearly, and decisively proved pivotal.
“Hello Los Angeles Dodgers, I’m Kazuma Okamoto,” he had said earlier in the process. “I will become an outstanding player and give everything until my legs can’t run and my hands can’t hold the bat.”
Those words resonated across the league — but it was Toronto, not Los Angeles, that ultimately made the commitment.
Contrary to popular belief, not every Japanese star is destined for Dodger blue — and in this case, the Dodgers never truly entered the race.

Okamoto projects primarily as a corner infielder at the MLB level. Los Angeles, however, already boasts Freddie Freeman and Max Muncy anchoring those positions. Internally, the Dodgers did not view Okamoto as an upgrade over either, nor a necessity for a roster that just captured back-to-back World Series titles.
Given the Dodgers’ elite track record scouting NPB talent, their silence spoke volumes. This wasn’t a miss. It was a choice.
And it hardly signals a decline in their international influence.
For Toronto, the signing is far more than symbolic. The Blue Jays were one out away from a World Series title in 2025, and there’s a growing belief inside the organization that they were already close enough to contend without a blockbuster offseason.
Now? The equation changes.
Okamoto posted a jaw-dropping 210 OPS+ in NPB last season, thriving even in Japan’s dead-ball era. Unlike fellow countryman Munetaka Murakami, who recently joined the Chicago White Sox, Okamoto profiles as a contact-first hitter — disciplined, adaptable, and far less prone to strikeouts.

That skill set is invaluable for a Blue Jays lineup still navigating uncertainty around Bo Bichette’s future. Okamoto isn’t expected to replicate NPB numbers immediately, but his ability to put balls in play and punish mistakes could stabilize the heart of Toronto’s order.
That remains the central question.
Toronto has already added Dylan Cease, fortifying a rotation built to survive October. Adding Okamoto feels like a victory lap — one Blue Jays fans have earned after years of international disappointment. Still, free-agent splashes alone don’t guarantee championships.
The Dodgers have proven that lesson time and again.
Whether Toronto can finally slay the dragon will depend on roster depth, health, and the decisions yet to come. Spending aggressively helps — but execution wins titles.
Until proven otherwise, the Los Angeles Dodgers remain the team to beat.
They return most of a championship core, fixed their bullpen weakness by signing Edwin Díaz, and remain dangerously efficient rather than flashy this winter. Age may creep in, but experience and roster balance remain firmly on their side.
Toronto can add Okamoto. They can even chase names like Kyle Tucker or retain Bichette. But deep down, GM Ross Atkins knows what this really is: an all-hands-on-deck effort to dethrone a dynasty.
For now, the Dodgers sit atop baseball’s mountain.
But for the first time in years, the Blue Jays didn’t blink — and that alone makes 2026 feel different.
Very different.
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