On December 21, the New York Yankees signed former St. Louis Cardinals first baseman and 2022 NL MVP Paul Goldschmidt to a one-year, $12.5 million deal. This si
The New York Yankees could use another versatile infielder before the 2025 regular season starts. Could Ha-Seong Kim be a realistic target?
It has been a fairly underwhelming offseason so far for the Detroit Tigers after an excellent campaign in 2024. The Tigers entered the winter with some high expectations after snapping a lengthy playoff drought.
New York among potential suitors for Vladimir Guerrero Jr., KeBryan Hayes could be a fit, a snag in Marcus Stroman trade talks.
Murakami, who will turn 25 next month, hit 56 homers in 2022, breaking Sadaharu Oh’s 1964 record. He has 224 homers and has slashed .272/.395/.543 over seven seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball. He hit a walk-off two-run double in the semifinal against Mexico and a home run against Team USA in the final at the 2023 World Baseball Classic.
The New York Yankees are continuing to sort out their infield. Could this Gold Glove third baseman be the answer they are looking for at the hot corner?
Roki Sasaki appears ready to announce the MLB team he will sign with in the near future. The Japanese star reportedly told the Mets and Yankees it will not be with them.
The New York Mets came just short in 2024 of a 'Subway Series' World Series against the New York Yankees. The Mets ended up losing in the National League Champi
LeMahieu could be the current favorite to start at third base for the Yankees, Joel Sherman of the New York Post reports. Sherman said Monday on the Pinstripe Post podcast that he believes the ...
The Chicago Cubs have been on the prowl for big, young arms, who also have plenty of controllable years and an affordable salary. But, really, which team isn’t looking for that?
Others, meanwhile, are selling it in the personage of prospects who could make the difference over the coming years. CBS Sports will spend the next month examining the top three prospects in each organization.
By now one would hope Pete Alonso has finally gotten the memo: The New York Mets never wanted him back. That’s why they never budged off their three-year offer in the $70 million range to him when he and his agent Scott Boras continued to push,