Blue Jays won but the internet is obsessed with Max Scherzer's 'Canadian heritage moment' | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Anisha Dhiman
Publication Date: October 17, 2025 - 10:54

Blue Jays won but the internet is obsessed with Max Scherzer's 'Canadian heritage moment'

October 17, 2025

U.S. media, fans and the internet just can’t get enough of one of the most defining moments from the game after the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Seattle Mariners last night.

HANG IT IN THE LOUVRE ,” said the Canadian baseball team on X when describing the exchange between firebrand Jays pitcher Max Scherzer and the team manager John Schneider at T-Mobile Park in Washington.

During the game, Scherzer, also known by his nickname Mad Max, was visited by his manager in the fifth inning. The manager wanted to take him out but the 41-year-old veteran player was having none of it and insisted he stay in the game. The brief exchange shared widely on social media sees Scherzer walking up to Schneider and yelling at him in what is perceived as his insistence to stay in the game.

A clip of the Jays’ dugout shared on Reddit showed the team’s reaction after Scherzer refused to leave. “The Blue Jays dugout couldn’t believe what they just witnessed,” the Reddit group boasting 5 million subscribers posted. The video shows players laughing, clapping and some imitating Scherzer’s denial to leave. Another group on Reddit took a screenshot of Scherzer’s face from the exchange and wrote: “ A Part Of Our Heritage .” X user Nick called the moment “a Canadian heritage moment .”

I thought he was going to kill me ,” Schneider joked after the game. “It was great. He locked eyes with me, both colours, as I walked out. It’s not fake. He has this Mad Max persona, but he backed it up tonight.” The payoff came in the way of Scherzer striking out Seattle Mariners’ Randy Arozarena immediately after the viral exchange.

Alongside a video of the highly-charged exchange, ESPN’s sportswriter Jeff Passan said, “Max Scherzer asked very nicely to stay in the game” on X.

American baseball analyst Rob Friedman was more direct in his summary and said “ Mad Max is still insane .” The insanity refers to Scherzer’s “high-adrenaline” personality on-field, wherein he “goes out there” with his “hair on fire” and tries to get outs, Scherzer said, as reported by Sportsnet earlier this month. “And so, that’s a recipe for me,” he said.

The Blue Jays dugout couldn’t believe what they just witnessed as Max Scherzer refuses to come out of the game by u/WiscoHighlights in baseball

Scherzer, on the other hand, laughingly cleared the air after the game and said he was caught off guard and that he just wanted the ball. “I basically told him that in a little bit different language,” he said on-air after the game concluded.

With this win, the Jays will play their fifth game against the Mariners in Toronto on Friday.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Toronto’s cooling condo market is pushing out investors and opening the door for first-time buyers as prices drop and power shifts to buyers.
October 23, 2025 - 07:00 | Prisha Dev | Global News - Ottawa
Who’s ready for a recession? Almost no one, of course. Certainly not the millions of Canadians—more than half the country—living paycheque to paycheque. Nor those, likely many of the same people, who’ve collectively sunk $2.5 trillion into consumer debt, $122 billion of which is owed to credit card companies. Canada has weathered recessions before, but the forecast today looks severe, darkened by problems like record-high youth unemployment. If the downturn comes, it may not be a passing squall we can just ride out. It’s little wonder the Bank of Canada is trying to calm fears. In...
October 23, 2025 - 06:30 | David Moscrop | Walrus
He was a Trappist and a chatterbox, guestmaster at the little orchard house in Georgetown, aging man of paradox if not comedy. Father Canisius welcomed us with hours of talk on silence and the use of mantras. He had a history of chat: twenty-five years a garrulous Jesuit before his leap to Benedict and the cheese-maker monks, Oka’s most unsilent man. He nearly burst. An abbot pitied all the pent-up words, sent him to this daughter-house as greeter to talk at will, just not to his chanting brothers. Novice SJs, high on Merton, we drove from Guelph to see these monks and their apple trees...
October 23, 2025 - 06:29 | Richard Greene | Walrus