The Blue Jays announced that outfielder Nathan Lukes has been reinstated from the 10-day injured list. As a corresponding move, infielder/outfielder Davis Schneider has been optioned to Triple-A Buffalo.
It’s Schneider’s first time getting optioned to the minors in about a year. He got out to a slow start in 2025 and was sent to the minors for about six weeks from mid-April to early June. Once he came back up, he was a key part of the Toronto lineup. He slashed .249/.364/.468 for a 135 wRC+ after that recall. His 25.2% strikeout rate was a bit high but he offset that with a big 15% walk rate.
He continued to be a key part of the club into the postseason, getting 24 plate appearances as part of the club’s World Series run. His 37.5% strikeout rate wasn’t great but he drew walks at a 16.7% clip and hit a home run, leading to a .200/.333/.400 line and 110 wRC+.
Here in 2026, his profile has leaned even further to the extremes. He is drawing walks at a huge 19.1% clip but has also been punched out at a gruesome 34.8% pace. A .205 batting average on balls in play hasn’t helped but his .127/.295/.211 line isn’t pretty regardless of the caveats.
His demotion speaks to his struggles but also the strong showing from Yohendrick Pinango, who had no major league experience prior to this season. Some injuries pushed him up to the big leagues and he has responded with a .313/.352/.418 line in his first 71 career plate appearances. Some of that is due to a .370 BABIP he won’t be able to sustain but the Jays will ride the hot hand for now.
Sticking with Pinango over Schneider gives the Jays a bit less ability to maximize platoon situations. Schneider’s right-handed bat would ideally be complementing lefties like Pinango, Lukes, Jesús Sánchez and Daulton Varsho. Since Schneider can play second base, there have also been situations where the Jays have been able to have righties Schneider and Ernie Clement in the middle infield, protecting lefty-swinging shortstop Andrés Giménez.
With no Schneider, the outfield now has four lefties, with Myles Straw the only righty bat in the mix. Lenyn Sosa now seems to be the righty-swinging second base option, despite having a .189/.187/.284 line since joining the Jays.
For Schneider, the move may impact him from a career perspective. He came into this season with his service time count at two years and 29 days. If he had spent the entire 2026 season in the majors, he would have pushed that to 3.029. Getting to three years would have meant qualifying for arbitration and put him on pace for free agency after 2029. If he stays in the minors for the rest of the season, then he wouldn’t qualify for arbitration and his path to free agency would be pushed by a year, though he could keep those things on the table if he is recalled relatively quickly.
Photo courtesy of William Liang, Imagn Images
