When Anthony Rizzo squeezed the final out of the 2016 World Series, the Chicago Cubs celebrated their first title in 108 years and 29 teams turned their attention towards unseating them from their newly captured throne.

The clock is ticking as Major League teams have five days to extend qualifying offers to eligible pending free-agents, who will then have a week to accept the offer of a one-year deal at $17.2 million or be free to sign with any team.

If a player that has turned down a qualifying offer does sign with another team, the Club that loses that player receives a draft pick in compensation.

Prior to last season, no player had ever accepted a qualifying offer before Colby Rasmus (Houston Astros), Matt Wieters (Baltimore Orioles) and Brett Anderson (Los Angeles Dodgers) all broke the trend.

Here are five players that could be in line for qualifying offers from the Toronto Blue Jays:

Jose Bautista (2016: $14M)*
2016: G- 116, HR- 22, RBI- 69, AVG- .234, OBP- .366

Edwin Encarnacion (2016: $10M)
2016: G- 160, HR- 42, RBI- 127, AVG- .263, OBP- .357

Michael Saunders (2016: 2.9M)
2016: G- 140, HR- 24, RBI- 57, AVG- .253, OBP- .338

R.A. Dickey (2016: $12M)
2016: G- 30, W-L- 10-15, ERA- 4.46, IP- 169.2, K- 126

Brett Cecil (2016: $3.8M)
2016: G- 54, W-L 1-7, ERA- 3.93, IP- 36.2, K- 45

*All salaries from Cot’s Baseball Contracts

The Blue Jays also hold an option on free-agent reliever Jason Grilli, while Scott Feldman, Joaquin Benoit and Dioner Navarro were all acquired during the season and therefore cannot be extended qualifying offers.

Darwin Barney and Josh Thole are both arbitration eligible.