Davis Schneider

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Davis Schneider

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Biographical Information[edit]

Left fielder-second baseman Davis Schneider was never considered a top prospect, having been drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 28th round of the 2017 amateur draft out of a high school in New Jersey. However, he forced his way into the team's plans by hitting well in the minor leagues, improving a little every year, especially after being forced to sit out the 2020 season when the minor leagues were shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, he batted .231 in 46 games for the Vancouver Canadians, but in 2022 he improved to .283 in 46 games for the AA New Hampshire Fisher Cats, earning a first look in AAA. In 2023, he was batting .275 in 87 games for the AAA Buffalo Bisons, with 21 doubles and 64 RBIs, when he got the call to Toronto.

Davis made his major league debut for the Blue Jays against the Boston Red Sox on August 4, 2023, batting seventh and starting at second base, and in his first career at-bat, he hit a home run off James Paxton into the Green Monster seats at Fenway Park, helping to lead the Jays to a 7-3 win. It was Toronto's first win of the year against Boston, after losing the first seven meetings between the two teams. His production did not end there, as he had a total of 9 hits, including a second homer, in helping lead Toronto to a three-game sweep. No player had ever started his career with such numbers in a three-game series before him. He was just getting started, as he got off to the best start of anyone in major league history in term of OPS: in his first 20 games, he hit .385 with 7 doubles and 7 homers, with an OBP of .512 for an OPS of 1.358. By the time he made his return to the Rogers Centre on September 8th, he had become a folk hero, with hundreds of fans sporting fake mustaches and glasses to reproduce his very distinctive look. He did not disappoint them as he went 2 for 2 with both hits being doubles, and 2 walks, in a 5-4 win over the Kansas City Royals, sending his OPS even further into the stratosphere. However, he went onto a prolonged slump shortly thereafter, made worse by the fact the Jays faced very few lefties, so that he could not get any at-bats to work his way out of it. He finished at .276 in 35 games, with 8 homers and 20 RBIs, for an OPS+ of 175. His most common position was second base and he did not appear in the postseason, when the Blue Jays made a quick exit.

He made the Jays' Opening Day roster in 2024, prompting the team to trade Santiago Espinal to the Cincinnati Reds to make room, and homered in his first game of the season on March 31st. He followed that with a more spectacular homer on April 2nd, as it came against Houston Astros closer Josh Hader with two outs in the 9th and the Jays trailing 1-0; the two-run blast gave Toronto a completely unexpected win, and broke a skein of more than 17 innings without a run, punctuated by having been no-hit by Ronel Blanco the night before. He began to be the Jays' regular leadoff hitter in May when an unproductive George Springer was moved down to a lower spot in the line-up. On May 31st, he hit the first walk-off homer of his career, and it came in the 14th inning of what was quickly becoming a marathon game against the Pittsburgh Pirates (it was in fact the longest game for the Jays since the introduction of the tiebreaker rule). He had gone 0 for 5 until then, with a painful hit-by-pitch in the 12th when he took a fastball from Carmen Mlodzinski just below the ribs, but with two outs in the 14th, his blast to right field off Kyle Nicolas ended the game and scored designated runner Cavan Biggio as well for a 5-3 win. It was the first homer he had hit to the opposite field in his major league career. After getting up to a strong start and hitting his 10th homer on June 22nd, he went into a deep slump, not hitting another homer until mid-September and seeing his batting average fall to .190. He broke out of it on September 14th when a solo homer off Kyle Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals marked the start of a three-hit game, when he had not collected as many as two hits in a single game since July 10th, and three since the end of May. He ended the year at .191 in 135 games, with 13 homers and 46 RBIs and an OPS+ of 77. Defensively, he split his time between left field and second base.

He started the 2025 season in Toronto but his struggles from the second half the previous year continued as in his first ten games, he went just 1 for 15. He was optioned to Buffalo on April 17th but did not light the International League afire either, as he hit .226 with 4 homers and 18 RBIs in 38 games. It was a string of injuries that brought him back to Toronto, first to second baseman Andres Gimenez, followed by ones to OFs Anthony Santander and Daulton Varsho. That forced the Jays to poach the Bisons' roster for anyone who could breathe and brought him back to Toronto on June 1st. Once back, he started to hit and finished the year at .234 in 82 games, with 11 homers and 39 RBIs, for an OPS+ of 119. He was used as the starting left-fielder against all lefties and some righties. He saw less action when the postseason started, because Santander was finally back after a long lay-off, and then Bo Bichette came back as well. But again injuries opened up a spot for him, as Santander had to be scratched with a back issue and George Springer sat down a few games with a pulled muscle. Davis' big opportunity came when he started Game 5 of the World Series with lefty Blake Snell on the mound for the Los Angeles Dodgers on October 29th. He made the most of his chance, homering on the first pitch of the game to put Toronto in the lead, after which Vladimir Guerrero Jr. did the same, and the Blue Jays were on their way to a 6-1 win.

He had a rough start to the 2026 season, however, as he was hitting just .125 at the end of April and was still at .127 after 38 games on May 24th, his playing time having gone down significantly in the meantime. The Blue Jays had a surplus of outfielders at that point, and he was sent down to AAA in the hope that he would find his hitting stroke in Buffalo. It did not really work, as he hit .188 in 14 games for the Bisons with only one extra-base hit, although his OBP was .550, the result of drawing a whopping 24 walks in just 60 plate appearances. The Blue Jays probably would have like to see him collect a few more hits before calling him back, but an injury to Varsho prompted his return on June 12th.

He is not related to Blue Jays manager John Schneider.

Further Reading[edit]

  • Nick Ashbourne: "Blue Jays rookie sensation Davis Schneider's patience should keep him rolling: The newest Blue Jays folk hero has grabbed fans' attention by hitting home runs, but his patience could give him staying power.", Yahoo! Sports, September 11, 2023. [1]
  • AJ Cassavell: "Schneider leads back-to-back barrage -- and Dad filmed the fam's reaction!", mlb.com, October 30, 2025. [2]
  • Craig Forde: "Welcome to The Show! Prospect homers in first AB with Blue Jays", mlb.com, August 4, 2023. [3]
  • Craig Forde: "Rookie's historic series carries Blue Jays to crucial sweep: Schneider the first in MLB history to compile nine hits with two HRs through three games", mlb.com, August 6, 2023. [4]
  • Keegan Matheson: "Babe in the 14th! Schneider delivers walk-off blast in extras", mlb.com, June 1, 2024. [5]
  • Keegan Matheson: "Finally off the Schneid: Davis slugs first HR since June", mlb.com, September 14, 2024. [6]
  • Keegan Matheson: "Davis Schneider comes off bench to play hero in Blue Jays' win yet again", mlb.com, April 15, 2026. [7]
  • Jon Paul Morosi: "Success coming into focus for specs-sporting Schneider", mlb.com, March 11, 2024. [8]

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