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41 year-old former Toronto Blue Jays infielder plans to play in 2026


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Nelson Anderson
November 10, 2025  (11:30 PM)
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Jun 28, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Justin Turner (2) hits a single against the New York Yankees during the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images
Photo credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

Despite having a tough year with the Chicago Cubs in 2025, former Toronto Blue Jays infielder Justin Turner plans to play again in 2026.

Between that rough showing and Turner's looming 41st birthday later this month, some have wondered whether he'll continue playing.
Agent Greg Genske of Vayner Sports tells Jon Morosi of MLB Network that Turner indeed is intent on playing in what would be his 18th major league season in 2026.
Free agent Justin Turner plans to play in 2026, according to his agent, Greg Genske. Turner, who turns 41 month, posted a .759 OPS against left-handed pitching for the Cubs this year.

Turners 2025 season saw a big decline in offensive metrics other than hitting left-handed pitching

The 2025 season was the first below-average season Turner has had at the plate since establishing himself as a big league regular.
He hit .259/.354/.384 between Boston and Seattle in 2024 and was 16% better than average at the plate in both '23 and '24, by measure of wRC+.
This year's downturn in production was steep, but it came in a relatively minimal sample and wasn't accompanied by a glaring uptick in punchouts Turner's strikeout rate did climb from 17.6% to 19.4%, but his contact rate, specifically his contact rate on balls within the strike zone was largely unchanged.
Virtually all of Turner's struggles in 2025 came against right-handed pitching. He tallied 109 plate appearances versus lefties and delivered a solid .276/.330/.429 batting line (112 wRC+).
Against right-handed opponents, he was one of the worst hitters in MLB: .141/.232/.155 in 82 plate appearances (a gruesome 16 wRC+). At least some of that is attributable to a .179 BABIP against righties, though his struggles can't be blamed solely on poor fortune.
Turner's 39.7% ground-ball rate was his highest since 2014, and he posted career-worst marks in pop-up rate, line-drive rate and hard-hit rate.
Based on Turner's age and last year's lack of production, anything more than a modest one-year deal seems unreasonable.
Turner's one-year deal with the Cubs paid him a guaranteed $6MM, and he'll almost certainly need to take a pay cut on that sum.
Last year's struggles will make a club reluctant to offer him regular at-bats, but a team with payroll concerns and a left-handed option at first base/DH could view him as an affordable veteran roll of the dice who brings plenty of clubhouse benefits to the fold.
Source: MLBTR
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41 year-old former Toronto Blue Jays infielder plans to play in 2026

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