New York Mets made headlines by signing Dominican athlete Juan Soto with a record $765 million, 15-year deal, surpassing Shohei Ohtani's $700 million with the Dodgers. Fans noted the sum of 9 Atlanta Braves players' contracts equals Soto's.
An interesting New York Mets rumor suggests during negotiations with homegrown star Pete Alonso, the team looked to pad the
Flaherty is projected for a three-year, $63 million deal by Spotrac, which is $12 million less than the Mets gave Sean Manaea to return to Queens. But there hasn't been much noise about the offers Flaherty has been fielding, so that might not be enough to get the deal done.
NL MVP finalist Francisco Lindor gave his best efforts to take the New York Mets into the postseason and then an underdog run to the NLCS, where it took the mighty Los Angeles Dodgers six games to eli
The New York Mets made the biggest move of the offseason when they signed New York Yankees right fielder Juan Soto to a mind-boggling, 15-year, $765 million contract on December 9 — the largest contract in MLB history.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are Major League Baseball's newest Evil Empire. They spent over $1 billion last offseason on Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Gl
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.
Hey at least they didn’t get Juan Soto. Somehow the Los Angeles Dodgers, who did get pitchers Roki Sasaki and Tanner Scott in their latest star additions, will have to try and repeat their World Series title without Soto.
Mets fans let owner Steve Cohen and president of baseball operations David Stearns know how much they want Pete Alonso back
After missing out on Juan Soto to the New York Mets, the New York Yankees are turning to former pitchers to reinforce their MLB roster for the 2025 season.
According to one report Friday, the New York Mets were interested in a free agent outfielder before he signed with a division rival.
The low point of the New York Yankees' offseason was superstar slugger Juan Soto rejecting their 16-year, $760 million contract offer in favor of a 15-year, $76