The Yankees signed Fried to an eight-year, $218 million deal as their first move after losing free-agent slugger Juan Soto to the New York Mets. The 30-year-old is coming off a successful eight-year stretch with the Braves in which he went 73-36 with a 3.07 ERA, including two top-five finishes in the NL Cy Young race.
The San Diego Padres have usually been highly aggressive buyers in the free agent market each MLB offseason. Two of the 10 largest free agent contracts in history were handed out by the Padres — 10 years and $300 million to Manny Machado in 2019,
The Yankees continue to watch potential infield targets land elsewhere, with the latest being veteran switch-hitter Jorge Polanco. According to The Athletic’s
The worst part about this quote is that even if Steinbrenner is right, and the Yankees are marginally better, the team that just knocked them out in five games is substantially better. The Dodgers have left no stone unturned when it comes to building their roster, while the Yankees are sitting back satisfied despite losing out on Soto.
The New York Yankees made several moves this offseason. Of course, their No. 1 priority entering the offseason was to sign Juan Soto.
New York keeps letting infielders fly off the market, and their penny-pinching owner is to blame.
One MLB executive believes that Juan Soto's decision to leave the New York Yankees for the New York Mets in free agency on a 15-year, $765 million deal
The Yankees are walking a financial tightrope, sitting slightly above the fourth luxury tax threshold at $301 million. Their plan to get under that number is
Juan Soto’s record-breaking 15-year, $765 million contract with the New York Mets shocked the baseball world, but could it actually be a win for the Yankees in the long run? According to an MLB executive,
A trade pitch has the New York Yankees dealing Marcus Stroman to re-acquire an infielder in a three-player deal.
The Yankees traded Narvaez to the Boston Red Sox for minor-league pitcher Elmer Rodriguez-Cruz in December, thus exhausting the Yankees of their second and third catchers on the depth chart once Trevino was dealt nine days later.
Yankees legend David Cone shares his perspective on Juan Soto's departure to the Mets, offering a clear message to disappointed fans about the team's future direction and the emotional aspects of the move.