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MLB, Baseball Herren, USA Playoffs-New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays Oct 4, 2025 Toronto, Ontario, CAN Toronto Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk 30 celebrates with center fielder Daulton Varsho 5 after hitting a home run in the eighth inning against the New York Yankees during game one of the ALDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Rogers Centre. Toronto Rogers Centre Ontario CAN, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xNickxTurchiarox 20251004_jhp_bt2_0207

via Imago
MLB, Baseball Herren, USA Playoffs-New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays Oct 4, 2025 Toronto, Ontario, CAN Toronto Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk 30 celebrates with center fielder Daulton Varsho 5 after hitting a home run in the eighth inning against the New York Yankees during game one of the ALDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Rogers Centre. Toronto Rogers Centre Ontario CAN, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xNickxTurchiarox 20251004_jhp_bt2_0207

The postseason has started, and the division series are off to a hot start. The Brewers just swept the Cubs, and the Dodgers came from behind to beat the Phillies. The other series that had many eyes on it was the New York Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays. They have been fighting the whole season, and this is the right place to go all out. And guess what, the Blue Jays did go all out, and Yankee fans are not happy.
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Game 1 of the ALDS between the Blue Jays and the Yankees was a one-way affair, and the Yankees had nothing to show for in this game. After winning their first postseason game since 2016, the Blue Jays celebrated, and this did not make Marty Mush, a hardcore Yankee fan, happy. In a post he put out, Mush said, “Hey, Blue Jays fans, not sure if you have the same number system in Canada. You gotta win three, you won one game, who cares?… We have Max Fried going against an absolute bum tomorrow… I’ll see you in a couple of days when we’re going to the ALCS.”
The Yankee fan stream was fuming, convinced Toronto had thrown a parade for winning one game. But inside Rogers Centre, the Blue Jays earned every roar, beating the Yankees 10–1 with the kind of relentless offense that silenced doubt. Kevin Gausman’s five shutout innings, followed by Louis Varland’s 101 mph strikeout of Giancarlo Stanton, flipped the script from 2022’s heartbreak into a statement win that finally felt overdue.
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Not sure the Blue Jays fans know you have to win 3 games pic.twitter.com/jmD8Rbzwhb
— Marty Mush (@martymush) October 4, 2025
As Alejandro Kirk launched two homers and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. smashed his first playoff blast, the Yankees simply vanished. Their lineup managed only a single run and barely threatened after the sixth inning, while the bullpen unraveled under pressure. The first game of any series sets the tone, and if New York falls again tomorrow, even the most loyal Bronx believers will feel the ALCS slipping away.
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Now the noise moves to tomorrow, where Max Fried and that “bum” will settle debates. The Yankees can mock celebrations all they want, but scoreboard silence tells its own story. If Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Alejandro Kirk keep swinging like this, the Bronx might never recover.
Blue Jays fans lose it after a Yankee fan calls them out for celebrating a win
Some fans celebrate like it’s the World Series, others pretend they’ve been there before. But when the New York Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays collide in October, etiquette takes a backseat. What started as a simple playoff win turned into a full-blown fan feud, with Blue Jays supporters firing back after one Yankee loyalist couldn’t handle the sight of Toronto finally enjoying its long-awaited moment.
One fan cut through the noise with a jab that stung more than a fastball: “Pretty embarrassing that the only run you got in Game 1 was from a walk.” It wasn’t wrong either, considering the Yankees failed to produce anything against a supposedly “struggling pitching staff.” The Blue Jays’ arms looked anything but weak while New York’s bats stayed frozen in the October air. That single walk summed up the Yankees’ entire night—hesitant, hollow, and hard to defend.
That was just one of the Yankees’ struggles, though. Luke Weaver was usual; Fernanadi Cruz was not good either. What is more, Luis Gil continued to pitch badly, cementing the questions around why the Yankees started him in the first place were warranted. The Pinstripes further burned long man Paul Blackburn, who needed 36 pitches to cover 1 1/3 innings.
And the expected star of the show, Aaron Judge? Well, he struggled as well. The 33-year-old swung through a Kevin Gausman splitter for a crucial strikeout. New York settled for one run, a squandered opportunity that ultimately made the Canada franchise a victor. Rogers Centre continues to be a sight of horrors for the Yankees, who have lost seven of their eight games north of the border this season.
That is why the Toronto Blue Jays fans are not holding back: “Yeah, we understand the number of wins…” It was a perfect mix of humor and heat, turning the Yankee fan’s arrogance on its head. The line about “an idiot in the U.S.” had Rogers Centre faithful howling with pride. In that moment, Toronto fans weren’t just defending a win—they were defending their baseball identity.
One fan didn’t mince words, writing, “So Blue Jays fans aren’t allowed to be happy with the first postseason win since 2016.” The jab highlighted the hypocrisy many felt from Yankees supporters criticizing celebrations they themselves indulged in for decades. Toronto’s victory finally ended a nine-year drought, making every cheer feel well-earned and righteous. It was more than a game reaction; it was a statement against undeserved criticism from across the border.
A Blue Jays fan delivered a sharp observation, writing, “Must be tiring having to post the same type of video after each playoff series.” The remark cleverly mocked the predictable outrage from Yankees supporters who complain after every Toronto victory. It highlighted that celebrations by the Jays are genuine, while criticism has become repetitive and tiresome. In essence, the comment turned the spotlight back on the complainants, exposing their ritualistic negativity.
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One Blue Jays fan fired back with pure venom, writing, “Shut your blobfish a*s face up and let us celebrate.” The comment humorously dismissed the predictable complaints from Yankees fans after every Toronto victory. It captured the frustration of a fanbase finally ending a nine-year postseason drought. In those words, joy, defiance, and playoff relief all collided in one perfect response.
Yankees fans can gripe all they want, but Toronto’s celebration was earned and undeniable. If New York can’t match this intensity tomorrow, even the Bronx might start fearing October is lost.
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