After a flurry of moves earlier in the offseason, the New York Yankees have been dormant for almost a month. According to Joel Sherman of the New York Post, the
The New York Yankees are already flirting with MLB’s top competitive balance tax threshold, set at $301 million for 2025. That means some steep financial penalties, so the organization is trying to stay below that number.
The New York Yankees should be spending more of their money, according to one MLB insider. ESPN reporter Jeff Passan joined The Michael Kay Show and ripped the Yankees' lack of spending this offseason.
The New York Yankees have responded nicely to the crushing blow that was Juan Soto departing for their crosstown rivals by acquiring players like Max Fried, Dev
Negotiations between the New York Mets and Pete Alonso are at a standstill and there is no agreement in sight in the short term, but the options remain active because the team know
The Mets have officially lost out on one of the more intriguing utility options in free agency, as Jurickson Profar signed with the Atlanta Braves on
Jeff Passan of ESPN said on Wednesday that he cannot believe the New York Yankees are not pursuing free agent Alex Bregman, given the team's infield needs.
Are the New York Yankees, who have long been MLB’s financial powerhouse, now playing “third fiddle” when it comes to spending money on players? The very concept seems strange, but that was the judgement of one of baseball’s most knowledgeable “insider” journalists,
During a January 24 episode of the Fenway Rundown podcast, MassLive.com insider Chris Cotillo predicted that the Boston Red Sox would be the team to sign former
Yankees Chairman Hal Steinbrenner has not had the same urge to spend as his father George. Back in May, Steinbrenner said to The Athletic's Chris Kirchner "Look, I’m gonna be honest, payrolls at levels we’re at right now are simply not sustainable for us financially."
The Toronto Blue Jays boosted their starting rotation Thursday by agreeing to terms with future Hall of Fame pitcher Max Scherzer, according to a new report.
Mad Max is flying north.The Toronto Blue Jays have agreed to a one-year, $15.5-million contract with veteran right-hander Max Scherzer, sources told ESPN's Jeff Passan.Completion of the deal is pending a physical,