

After getting to the World Series in 2025 and after spending nearly $350 million in guaranteed money to get back there again this offseason, the focus for the Toronto Blue Jays is squarely on the major league roster.
However, the organizational depth and roster building presented by the farm system is still important, though the Jays are not regarded as having a particularly deep system right now.
Most of the top talent is concentrated in young players that are years away from the big leagues. With that, MLB Pipeline put out their most recent Top 30 organizational rankings for the Jays on Monday.
Here's what you need to know:
How the prospect eligibility works:
It's worth noting that -- for these purposes -- prospects are players with no more than 130 at-bats, 50 innings pitched or 45 days on a Major League roster, with one major exception. Foreign professionals -- players who are at least 25 and have been professionals in a foreign league for at least six seasons -- do not count, so you will not see offseason signings such as Tatsuya Imai or Kazuma Okamoto in these rankings.
1) RHP Trey Yesavage
2) SS JoJo Parker
3) SS Arjun Nimmala
4) LHP Johnny King
5) LHP Ricky Tiedemann
6) RHP Gage Stanifer
7) INF Juan Sanchez
8) RHP Jake Bloss
9) OF RJ Schreck
10) OF Yohendrick Pinango
There just isn't much immediate help coming from this group. Yesavage will, of course, begin the season in the starting rotation but he will quickly fall off the list, leaving questions abound. Parker, Nimmala, Sanchez and King are all projected for 2028 or 2029 debuts while Tiedemann and Bloss have battled arm issues.
Tiedemann missed all of last season with Tommy John surgery and can't be counted on for significant innings while Bloss underwent his own procedure last year and won't contribute until later in this campaign.
Schreck and Pinango are projected to debut this year, but the Jays have a glut of outfielders already and don't necessarily need to force things.
There's a reason why the Jays had to go out and spend money on Dylan Cease and Okamoto this offseason: They don't have immediate internal answers.
Once Yesavage graduates off the list, the next man up is outfielder Jake Cook, also expected not to debut until 2028.
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The Blue Jays open up the regular season on March 27 against the Athletics.
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