
The Toronto Blue Jays have clawed their way back to baseball’s biggest stage, the World Series. For a team once written off mid-season, their turnaround speaks volumes about the myths we hold in sport. Many believe perfectionism wins games: no mistakes, no hesitation, total control. It feels like discipline and dedication. However, demanding perfection often kills creativity, trust, and growth, which are arguably the very things that helped the Jays get here.
In the high-stakes world of Major League Baseball, decisions that scream ‘avoid failure at all costs’ are common. A starting pitcher gives up a hit? Hooked. A lineup falters? Reshuffle. Every choice becomes reactive. The message becomes: “Don’t mess up.” But what about development, trust, and rhythm?
Early in the season, the Blue Jays made several moves that sparked debate. Starters were pulled earlier than expected, the lineup shifted frequently, and questions about manager John Schneider’s job surfaced as early as May. At first glance, these decisions exemplify a quest for perfection: chasing control, minimizing risk, avoiding failure. In April, Kevin Gausman was pulled from a strong outing after just 76 pitches, drawing criticism from analysts who argued he deserved another inning. Yet, rather than give in to pressure to overhaul everything, the Jays held firm. They trusted their process and their people. Over time, that trust paid off. The result is a team that has grown more connected, resilient, and unified. From the outside, the Blue Jays are no longer a collection of players chasing flawlessness, but a club grounded in confidence, cohesion, and a commitment to player and team development.
How Perfectionism Undermines the Game

Many people assume perfectionism is the secret ingredient for success in sports. In other words, they believe that athletes who demand flawless performance from themselves and others will inevitably play better and win more games. At first glance, it sounds like a recipe for success: obsessing over every detail, staying intensely focused, relentless self-criticism, and refusing to accept anything less than perfection. But research shows this is a myth.
Perfectionism often shows up as fear of failure, overthinking plays, doubting oneself, or feeling that nothing is ever good enough. It can drain confidence, increase stress, and quietly erode enjoyment of the game. Importantly, it also distorts decision-making and destabilizes team unity.
The Perfectionism Social Disconnection Model explains why. When people feel they must be perfect to be accepted, they become hypersensitive to judgment and pull away from others. In sports, this can isolate players, increase pressure, and decrease the trust that drives collaboration and performance. On the field, this disconnection can play out in subtle but powerful ways:
- Yanking a pitcher after a rough inning, sending the message that any imperfection equals failure
- Overhauling lineups after a brief slump, disrupting relationships and team rhythm
- Pushing players to be flawless rather than trusting them to recover and learn, quietly splintering the team
Studies show that perfectionistic concerns (i.e., fear of failure or believing others expect flawlessness) increase anxiety, self-criticism, and burnout. Athletes may play cautiously, obsess over errors, or withdraw from teammates, which lessens trust, team cohesion, and even physical performance. Even when perfectionists achieve goals, they often undercut their success or immediately move on to the next challenge instead of taking pride or celebrating. In short, chasing perfection quietly undermines individual growth and team success.
Excellence vs. Perfection: The Blue Jays’ Turn
Contrast demanding flawlessness with striving for excellence: high standards yes, but combined with flexible striving, trust, a growth mindset, team solidarity, and taking pride in one’s performance. The Jays seem to be embracing this approach. They are trusting the process. More and more, they are letting players play through mistakes, support one another, and build together. The clubhouse seems to have shifted from “no mistakes allowed” to “we’ve got each other’s backs.” You can see that in veteran leadership, bullpen chemistry, and post-game celebrations. The Jays’ season shows how a team can move from micromanaged perfectionism to dynamic excellence, with leadership decisions, pitcher management, and lineup moves feeling less reactive and more intentional.
The Bigger Takeaway
We’re not just talking about baseball. We’re talking about sport culture. When organizations treat performance like zero-error mode, they fuel perfectionism. They weaken trust, silence learning, and fracture teams. But when culture allows for growth, supports players after mistakes, and trusts the process, development happens. Teams become real teams. Players feel connected. Performance improves.
Fans play a critical role too. By cheering effort and resilience, being patient with lineups and coaching decisions, and recognizing that mistakes are part of learning, fans can help create an environment that supports excellence rather than chasing flawless performance. For the Blue Jays, this season is a case study: a shift away from chasing perfection to building excellence. Their evolution reminds us that in sport, demanding perfection rarely wins, but chasing excellence often does.
Fan Checklist for Supporting Excellence:
Cheer effort and resilience, not just results- Be patient with coaching decisions and lineup changes
- Celebrate player growth and teamwork, not only flawless plays
- Keep the boos in check; view mistakes as part of the learning process
- Invest in the long game: Trust that development and teamwork lead to success
Cheer effort and resilience, not just results
Psychologically, being watched can alter how we see ourselves. When we know we’re being observed, we become more self-conscious, more controlled. We second-guess our choices, monitor our behaviour, and attempt to manage how we are perceived. For many young people, this constant awareness contributes to a growing need to be flawless in how they perform, and in who they appear to be.
Because kids aren’t born perfect, and they are not meant to be. Growth requires room for missteps, reflection, and second chances. Today’s teens are coming of age in a world where even small mistakes can be captured, shared, and permanently stored. However, that wasn’t the world most adults grew up in. Before smartphones and social media, us adults had the safety of forgetting. The freedom to make poor choices without an audience. The chance to learn who we were without being constantly observed.