Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
Sports

'A part of something:' The mental health benefits of being a Blue Jays fan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2025 09:24 AM
  • 'A part of something:' The mental health benefits of being a Blue Jays fan

The Toronto Blue Jays have given Robert Stanton something to look forward to every day. 

“After the World Series is over, I'm not really sure what I'm going to do,” Stanton said, sitting on a park bench in downtown Toronto as a spatter of October rain drizzled on his blue cap embroidered with a vintage Jays logo. 

The 70-year-old retired supply chain manager has been a baseball fan since he was five and he’s been entranced by the Cinderella story of the Jays' most recent evolution, on their way to the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers. 

Hundreds of kilometres away in St. John’s, N.L., Matthew Robbins, also a big baseball fan, said he feels like he’s had a spring in his step since earlier this week, when the Jays clinched their first World Series spot since 1993. 

Watching more than 100 baseball games a season is usually a solitary activity for Robbins. But lately, his brother-in-law and sister have joined him and the online baseball discussion boards he contributes to have been lively. 

That feeling of others appreciating the sport he loves has felt glorious, he said. It’s cut through the monotonous nature of life at this time of year, as the chill in the air deepens and the sky darkens earlier.

“I feel a part of something,” Robbins said. 

The unifying pull of Jays fandom stretches coast-to-coast as Canada’s only Major League Baseball team, and experts say it’s actually very healthy, despite the Loonie Dogs, beers and cheesy nachos synonymous with watching the ball game. That collective identity creates a sense of belonging, which can mitigate isolation and loneliness at a time when those feelings are all too common.

Even Hal Johnson, host and co-creator of the BodyBreak segments that frequented Canadian television in the 1990s and encouraged viewers to be active in daily life, said he occasionally puts his health hat aside for the Jays and buys a bag of Ruffles barbecue chips.

“One of the great things about the Jays, about sporting events and about getting together, is not necessarily from the physical perspective, but from the emotional, mental-health perspective. It's a way of how we feel good together,” Johnson, now 69, said from Muskoka, where he lives with his wife and fellow BodyBreak host Joanne McLeod. 

When he was travelling last week, Johnson saw someone wearing a Jays hat and felt a connection with this stranger. 

“It's another great thing to unite us as Canadians,” he said. 

Beyond that warm feeling of connection, registered psychologist Zarina Giannone said research shows being immersed in a sports community can actually improve a person’s sense of well-being. 

”The adoption of a group identity can fulfil our innate need for belongingness and social connection,” Giannone said.  

Earlier this year, a study on football fans in Italy found a positive association between fandom and subjective well-being as a result of fostering a social identity with fellow fans. It adds to numerous studies that have examined whether being a sports fan is good or bad for your health.

That includes a 2017 study that found the heart rate of Montreal Canadiens fans more than doubled during live games, equivalent to vigorous physical stress. Research out of Japan in 2018 also found an increased risk of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests on days of professional baseball games. 

In the context of mental health, Giannone said watching a game alongside other fans can actually be a way to escape daily life stressors by simply existing together, immersed in the shared experience, escaping an epidemic of loneliness that’s resulted from living in silos, rather than together. 

“That can be a really powerful psychological experience. By stepping away from the external world where there's loss and tragedy, and I think it could just be so nourishing and restorative.” 

Seconds after George Springer’s three-run homer Monday night, Michael Greer knew exactly where he wanted to be. 

He dashed out the door of his apartment and took the subway to the Rogers Centre, where a sea of fans jumped in a mosh pit of joy celebrating outside the dome. 

“It brings a sense of community, is the word for it.” 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Hannah Alberga

MORE Sports ARTICLES

IPL 2025: Rickleton, Rohit fifties, Suryakumar and Hardik cameos power MI to 217/2

IPL 2025: Rickleton, Rohit fifties, Suryakumar and Hardik cameos power MI to 217/2
Jaipur, May 1 (IANS) Ryan Rickleton and Rohit Sharma smashed attacking fifties, while Suryakumar Yadav and captain Hardik Pandya provided finishing touches with unbeaten cameos of 48 to power Mumbai Indians (MI) to a massive 217/2 in their 20 overs against Rajasthan Royals (RR) in Match 50 of Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium here on Thursday.

IPL 2025: Rickleton, Rohit fifties, Suryakumar and Hardik cameos power MI to 217/2

IPL 2025: Chahal’s hat-trick flattens CSK after Curran’s masterclass at Chepauk

IPL 2025: Chahal’s hat-trick flattens CSK after Curran’s masterclass at Chepauk
Chennai, April 30 (IANS) Chennai Super Kings (CSK) were blown away in the death overs by Yuzvendra Chahal’s brilliant hat-trick, crumbling from 184/6 to 190 all out in a space of seven deliveries. It was a stunning turnaround, given the platform set by Sam Curran’s dazzling 88 off 47 balls and a gritty half-century by Shivam Dube.

IPL 2025: Chahal’s hat-trick flattens CSK after Curran’s masterclass at Chepauk

India fined for slow over-rate in first match of Sri Lanka Women's Tri-Series

Dubai, April 29 (IANS) India have been fined five percent of their match fee for maintaining a slow over-rate against Sri Lanka in the first match of the Women’s Tri-series in Colombo on Sunday. Vanessa de Silva of the ICC International Panel of Match Referees imposed the sanction after India were ruled to be one over short of the target after time allowances were taken into consideration.

India fined for slow over-rate in first match of Sri Lanka Women's Tri-Series

IPL 2025: DC’s Starc picks 3-42; Axar and Nigam take two each as KKR post 204/9

IPL 2025: DC’s Starc picks 3-42; Axar and Nigam take two each as KKR post 204/9
New Delhi, April 29 (IANS) Left-arm pacer Mitchell Starc picked 3-42, while Vipraj Nigam and captain Axar Patel took two wickets each as Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) posted 204/9 in their 20 overs against Delhi Capitals (DC) at the Arun Jaitley Stadium here on Tuesday.

IPL 2025: DC’s Starc picks 3-42; Axar and Nigam take two each as KKR post 204/9

IPL 2025: Gill, Buttler fifties propel GT to 209/4 in Jaipur

IPL 2025: Gill, Buttler fifties propel GT to 209/4 in Jaipur
Jaipur, April 28 (IANS) The dangerous top order of Shubman Gill (84), Sai Sudharsan (39) and Jos Buttler (50 not out) continued their terrific form as Gujarat Titans (GT) scored 209/4 in 20 overs, in match 47, of the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium on Monday.

IPL 2025: Gill, Buttler fifties propel GT to 209/4 in Jaipur

IPL 2025: Batters falter again as Harshal Patel claims four as CSK stumble to 154

IPL 2025: Batters falter again as Harshal Patel claims four as CSK stumble to 154
Chennai, April 25 (IANS) Chennai Super Kings batters faltered again as Harshal Patel claimed four wickets to his name, alongside two wickets each by skipper Pat Cummins and Jaydev Unadkat, to restrict the hosts to 154 all out in 19.5 overs at the MA Chidambaram Stadium here on Friday. For the batting side, Dewald Brevis’ 25-ball 42 was the highlight of the innings.

IPL 2025: Batters falter again as Harshal Patel claims four as CSK stumble to 154