The Toronto Blue Jays are proving that patience can pay off. After striking out on Shohei Ohtani, Corbin Burnes, Juan
MLB.com's Mark Feinsand has picked a favorite in the Max Scherzer sweepstakes and it might not be the team you expect.
Juan Soto signed with the New York Mets, not only leaving the Orioles' division, but their league too. Corbin Burnes signed with Arizona and Roki Sasaki is a Los Angeles Dodger.But the O’s on Monday saw one of their own sign with another club and also stay in the American League East when outfielder Anthony Santander agreed to a five-year deal
Juan Soto, the best free agent on the market, signed a record-setting $765 million deal with the Mets back in December. Pitchers Corbin Burnes (Diamondbacks), Blake Snell (Dodgers) and Max Fried ...
The Toronto Blue Jays were running out of time to boost their rotation ahead of a do-or-die 2025 season, so GM Ross Atkins took a risk with future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer.
The Mets should end their offseason by sending Jeff McNeil to the Diamondbacks in a trade with the Diamondbacks
Spring training is just weeks away, but there is still plenty of MLB offseason business to tackle. A handful of notable players remain on the free-agent market, including Alex Bre
As the MLB offseason gets deeper, the potential destinations for free agent first baseman Pete Alonso continue to dwindle. Many of the top-tier free
The Toronto Blue Jays have had an offseason in which they swung and miss on a bunch of top free agents. From Juan Soto to Corbin Burnes to Roki Sasaki. But the
Trading for Michael King would make the Mets' rotation incredibly formidable, removing perhaps the biggest question mark surrounding them.
Two notable relief pitchers were traded this week, as Ryan Pressly was dealt from the Astros to the Cubs and Taylor Rogers went from the Giants to the Reds. Yet the trade market -- at least for the bi
MLB Network's Jon Heyman reported Thursday that the Blue Jays are signing right-handed pitcher Max Scherzer to a one-year deal worth $15.5 million. At 40 years old, Scherzer was one of the top remaining starting pitchers available in free agency.