
"To quickly recap from August 1 through September 3, the Blue Jays bullpen had an ERA of 4.98. In 103 innings pitched they allowed 65 runs (57 earned runs), 11 home runs a 4.34 FIP, and allowed a .312 BABIP. Those were worrisome numbers for a team that made the bullpen their biggest priority at the trade deadline. They acquired two relievers in Seranthony Dominguez and Louis Varland to be middle-to-late inning options."
"Blue Jays pitching has a whole as been quite efficient allowing just 15 runs in those seven games, giving up more than three runs in just one of those contests. The Blue Jays bullpen has bounced back over the past week#LightsUpLetsGo pic.twitter.com/ycfOPGyN26- Sportsnet Stats (@SNstats) September 10, 2025 The bullpen has been responsible for covering 19.2 innings over those seven games and they have an ERA of just 0.92. They've given up just two earned runs, while striking out 19 batters and allowing only seven hits."
From August 1 through September 3 the Blue Jays bullpen posted a 4.98 ERA over 103 innings, allowing 65 runs (57 earned), 11 home runs, a 4.34 FIP and a .312 BABIP. The team acquired relievers Seranthony Dominguez and Louis Varland and starter Shane Bieber to bolster the rotation and bullpen depth. Early outings from Dominguez and Varland were shaky and a six-man rotation briefly reduced bullpen flexibility, contributing to late-inning collapses. Since the Cincinnati series the relief corps has been strong, covering 19.2 innings over seven games with a 0.92 ERA, two earned runs and 19 strikeouts, though walks remain elevated.
Read at Jays Journal
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