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Remembering former Toronto Blue Jays who passed away in 2025


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Nelson Anderson
December 31, 2025  (10:05)
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Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Jim Clancy
Photo credit: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/

As the year comes to a close let's take a moment to remember some of the former Toronto Blue Jays who passed away in 2025.

Clancy established himself as a top-of-the-rotation starter in 1980 when he went 13-16 with a 3.30 ERA and threw a career-best 15 complete games.
He also tossed 250-2/3 innings and was voted the Blue Jays Pitcher of the Year.
Over the next eight seasons, Clancy became a staple in the Blue Jays' rotation, a quiet workhorse who was a calming influence on the team.
The 6-foot-4 right-hander had six 200-inning seasons for the Blue Jays and two others where he hurled at least 193 innings.
Q: Who was the first Blue Jays pitcher to record 100 wins? A: "Diamond Jim" Clancy, who we lost today at the age of 69. Watch our career celebration video on Dave Stieb's teammate from 1979-1988.
In 1982, he topped the American League with 40 starts and set career highs with 16 wins and 266-2/3 innings.
For his efforts, he was named the Blue Jays' representative in the All-Star Game played at Montreal's Olympic Stadium.
Clancy still ranks near the top of most of the Blue Jays' all-time pitching categories, including second in starts (345), innings (2,204-2/3) and complete games (73) and third in wins (128), strikeouts (1,237) and shutouts (11).
Coleman spent five months as a reliever with the Blue Jays in 1978 after being purchased from the Oakland A's.
Coleman settled into a middle relief role with the Blue Jays where he'd pitch two or more innings in 15 of his appearances with the club.
On August 15, he threw a season-high five innings out of the pen in a 9-1 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers. In total, in 31 appearances for the Blue Jays, he went 2-0 with a 4.60 ERA in 60-2/3 innings.
Coleman became a free agent after the 1978 season and signed with the San Francisco Giants.
Dotel signed a one-year, $3-million contract with the Blue Jays on January 4, 2011.
In his first regular season outing with the club on April 8, 2011, the veteran reliever tossed a scoreless seventh inning, striking out two of the three batters he faced, to pick up the win over the Los Angeles Angels.
That first appearance was the high point of Dotel's tenure with the Blue Jays. For the next two months, he was inconsistent and by mid-June his ERA had ballooned to 5.19.
But he found his form after that and didn't allow a run in 14 of 15 appearances between June 17 and July 23, lowering his ERA to 3.68.
However, with the Blue Jays hovering around the .500 mark and out of contention in the American League East, he was dealt to the St. Louis Cardinals that July as part of the package for outfielder Colby Rasmus.
The Blue Jays were one of 13 major league teams Dotel pitched for during his 15-season big league career that spanned from 1999 to 2013.
Dotel died on April 8 at the age of 51 after the roof of a popular night club he was in in the Dominican Republic collapsed during a concert.
Most remember Parker as an intimidating 6-foot-5, 230-pound, five-tool right fielder with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
From 1975 to 1979, he was one of the best players in the majors. During that stretch, Parker won two batting titles (1977, 1978), the 1978 National League MVP Award, three Gold Gloves and a World Series ring with the «We Are Family» Pirates in 1979.
Parker also enjoyed successful tenures with the Cincinnati Reds, A's, Brewers and Angels before spending his final 13 big league games as a designated hitter for the Blue Jays in 1991.
The first-place Blue Jays had picked up Parker after September 1, so he was not be eligible for post-season play.
Parker became the Blue Jays' primary DH for the rest of the season. He'd make his first start and go 2-for-5 against the Seattle Mariners at the Kingdome on September 16. It was his first of three, multi-hit games with the Blue Jays.
In all, the veteran slugger went 12-for-36, good for a .333 batting average, with the Blue Jays.
Parker passed away on June 28, less than one month before he was to be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame, at the age of 74.
The Toronto Blue Jays join the baseball community in mourning the loss of the legendary Dave Parker. «The Cobra» finished his Hall of Fame career with Toronto in 1991. Our thoughts are with his loved ones during this time.
Hargan joined the Blue Jays in 1977 after he was selected from the Rangers in the MLB expansion draft.
But things got off on the wrong foot between the two sides. The Blue Jays offered the veteran right-hander a two-year deal that Hargan felt was below market value and he became the club's first spring training holdout. A couple of days later, the two sides agreed on a two-year contract.
After arriving in Dunedin, Hargan did not allow a run in his first eight Grapefruit League innings. It was enough to earn him a spot in the Blue Jays' bullpen to begin the season.
On April 11, Hargan tossed 2-1/3 scoreless innings in relief to earn the win in the Blue Jays' 5-3 victory over the Tigers.
He was then moved into the rotation and made five starts for the Blue Jays - the last of which was a complete game in a 4-1 loss to the Twins.
Two days later, he was traded back to the Rangers, along with infielder Jim Mason and $200,000 for third baseman Roy Howell.
He passed away on October 30 at the age of 83.
The younger brother of tennis legend Billie Jean King, Moffitt spent 10 seasons with the Giants and one with the Houston Astros before signing with the Blue Jays on February 15, 1983.
At the 1983 All-Star break, the 34-year-old Moffitt was 3-0 with a 1.53 ERA with six saves and was the Blue Jays' closer.
Unfortunately, like most of the rest of the Blue Jays' bullpen, Moffitt struggled in the season's second half. His ERA in the final three months was 6.11 ERA and he only made two appearances in September.
Despite his second-half woes, Moffitt finished the season with a 6-2 record and a respectable 3.77 ERA in 45 appearances.
Following that campaign, he signed a minor league deal with the Brewers but he retired after pitching just one game for their triple-A Vancouver Canadians in 1984.
Moffitt passed away on August 28 at the age of 76.
Signed out of Toronto's Leaside Baseball Association by the Cleveland Indians, Taylor (Toronto, Ont.) hurled 11 scoreless innings against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on April 11, 1962 in his MLB debut.
Later that year, Taylor was dealt to the Cardinals, where he assumed a key bullpen role on the Cards' 1964 World Series-winning squad.
Five years later, he found himself in a crucial relief role again with the New York Mets in the 1969 World Series.
With two outs and two men on base in the ninth inning of Game 2, Taylor was summoned to face Brooks Robinson, who grounded to third base to end the game.
In helping the Mets emerge victorious in that Fall Classic, Taylor became the only Canadian to win a World Series with two different teams (Cardinals 1964, Mets 1969).
Upon retiring from baseball, he returned to Toronto, where he earned a degree in medicine from the University of Toronto and eventually became the Blue Jays' team doctor.
He was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 1985.
Taylor passed away on June 16 at the age of 87.
Source: Cooperstowners in Canada
Credit: Kevin Glew
Remembering the former Toronto Blue Jays who died in 2025
POLL
DECEMBRE 31   |   132 ANSWERS
Remembering former Toronto Blue Jays who passed away in 2025

Of All the former Blue Jays who passed away in 2025, which one do you remember most?

Jim Clancy8463.6 %
Dave Parker2015.2 %
Octavio Dotel96.8 %
None1914.4 %
List of polls

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