The Toronto Blue Jays show mixed results as two days rest. Since 2014, they're 53-49-0 against the spread—a 0.0% win rate with an ROI of -0.8%. While not a strong standalone angle, this data provides valuable context when combined with other factors.

⚖ Neutral
Record53-49-0
Win Rate0.0%
Sample Size102 games
ROI-0.8%
Units Won-0.8u
Time Period2014-2024

Year-by-Year Performance

SeasonRecordWin %ROI
20143-5-00.0%-28.4%
20156-3-00.0%+27.3%
20164-5-00.0%-15.2%
20174-5-00.0%-15.2%
20184-6-00.0%-23.6%
20196-2-00.0%+43.2%
20207-7-00.0%-4.5%
20215-5-00.0%-4.5%
20224-5-00.0%-15.2%
20235-3-00.0%+19.3%
20245-3-00.0%+19.3%

Why This Trend Exists

The Blue Jays' slight underperformance on two days rest stems from their organizational philosophy emphasizing player health and rotation management. Toronto's front office has consistently prioritized long-term player development over short-term gains, leading to conservative approaches when dealing with compressed schedules. This manifests in altered lineups, strategic rest for key position players, and modified bullpen usage that can create temporary roster imbalances. The team's hitting-heavy identity becomes particularly vulnerable during these scenarios. When fatigue sets in across multiple position players simultaneously, the Jays lose their primary competitive advantage - offensive depth. Their pitching staff, historically less reliable than their offense, struggles to compensate when the lineup can't provide typical run support. Additionally, Toronto's home ballpark dimensions favor well-rested hitters who can turn on pitches, making fatigue more pronounced in their offensive approach. The recent uptick in performance suggests improved conditioning programs and better roster depth management under current leadership. Bettors should focus on the opposition's rest advantage and whether Toronto's starting pitcher has extra rest to offset lineup concerns. This trend carries most weight during summer months when accumulated fatigue peaks and in series where the Blue Jays face well-rested opponents coming off scheduled off days.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Toronto Blue Jays's ATS record as two days rest?

The Toronto Blue Jays have an ATS record of 53-49-0 when playing on two days rest from 2014-2024. This translates to a 52.0% ATS win rate over 102 games.

Is betting on the Toronto Blue Jays as two days rest profitable?

Betting on the Toronto Blue Jays with two days rest has not been profitable, showing a -0.8% ROI from 2014-2024. Despite covering the spread slightly more than half the time, the negative return indicates poor betting value.

How does this compare to the league average?

The Blue Jays' 52.0% ATS rate with two days rest is slightly above the typical 50% baseline expected in spread betting. However, the -0.8% ROI suggests this edge hasn't translated to meaningful profitability after accounting for betting juice.

ANALYZE This Trend

This trend is near break-even. Combine with other factors and compare odds before placing any bets.

Compare Sportsbook Odds

Methodology

All trends in The Archives are calculated from official game results and closing point spreads from 2014 to 2024. ROI assumes a flat $100 bet at standard -110 juice. Win rate is calculated as wins divided by total decisions (pushes excluded). A minimum of 10 games is required for a trend to be published. Data is sourced from The Odds API and verified against official league records.