On Friday, the Mets added another trusted high-leverage relief pitcher when they agreed to terms with former Atlanta Brave rival A.J. Minter. However, this was not the original plan the Mets had to improve their bullpen. It worked out pretty well in the end, but another deal was in the works before falling through in the Winter Meetings.
The Seattle Mariners are still looking to put together the final pieces of the offseason in an effort to take advantage of their league-best pitching rotation a
“The Mets are bringing back Jesse Winker, pending physical, league sources say,” Martino reported on social media. New York Post insider Jon Heyman reported, “Winker deal is for about $8M for 2025 including a $1M signing bonus, pending physical.”
The 39-year-old Longoria last played in 2023 with the Arizona Diamondbacks. He spent 16 years in the big leagues with the Rays, San Francisco Giants and D'Backs, hitting .264 life
With spring training a month away, reports indicate the New York Mets want slugging first baseman Pete Alonso to agree to a new contract or they will move on.
After signing the biggest deal in baseball history this offseason, New York Mets outfielder Juan Soto is projected to join an elite group in baseball history in 2025. Per Sarah Langs of MLB.com: Juan Soto is projected for 137 walks per ZiPS that’d be his 5th season with 120+ walks most career seasons with 120+ walks: Barry Bonds: 11 Babe Ruth: 10 Ted Williams: 8 Eddie Yost: 8 Juan Soto: 4 Soto signed a 15-year deal worth $765 million which could tether him to the Mets for the rest of his career.
With the New York Mets set to re-sign outfielder and designated hitter Jesse Winker, the hopes for bringing back franchise star Pete Alonso are dwindling, according to SNY's MLB insider Andy Martino.
Despite some underwhelming results when it comes to their record over the last two seasons, there is one thing the Washington Nationals have done better than ev
The Mets are, therefore, extending their relationship with Winker for one more year. The agreement, announced on Thursday, will give the player $8 million for one year of his contributions.
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,
Over the last year, there had been speculation around MLB that the Dodgers had a possible handshake agreement in place with pitcher Roki Sasaki.