The MLB offseason has seen a major shift in terms of spending after the LA Dodgers inked Shohei Ohtani to a 10-year, $700 million deal last offseason and the New York Mets signed Juan Soto to a 15-yea
Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani, New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge and megastar Juan Soto got a special shoutout from K-pop star DK of SEVENTEEN during his US tour this fall.
Only great Yankees All World reliever, Mariano Rivera, was unanimously elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. That’s it. Nobody else. Both Babe Ruth, and Honus Wagner received 95.13% of the vote when they were elected to the Hall.
The Dodgers have been spending a lot of money on stars like Shohei Ohtani and Roki Sasaki and other teams are frustrated by it.
New York Mets owner Steve Cohen was transparent with the Mets' fan base chanting for Pete Alonso to be re-signed, saying contract talks have been worse than Juan Soto's.
In December, the New York Mets made the biggest splash of the Major League Baseball offseason, signing 26-year-old phenomenon Juan Soto to a record breaking 15-year, $765 million contract.
The Blue Jays had a group of players meet with Roki Sasaki before he picked the Dodgers but it did not include Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
Rubenstein has little margin to raise this concern since he has the capital to be able to afford the players he truly covets.
The Dodgers introduced their latest big-ticket free agent signee on Thursday. Team president Stan Kasten was among those in attendance at the press conference to celebrate Tanner Scott joining the club on a four-year free-agent deal.
Since winning the World Series in 2021, the Braves have struggled to get back to the top of the sport. They've made the playoffs in the past three seasons but haven't made it past the division ...
We’re less than a month away before New York Mets pitchers and catchers report to Port St. Lucie, reminding all of us that baseball season is just around the co
Of course, they aren’t the biggest spenders this off-season, those would be the New York Mets. Together, those teams have spent nearly as much ($1.3 billion) on free agents as the other 28 teams combined ($1.